Hi
The original comment:
I'd just rather the punk doing the slapping didn't have access to a gun, doncha know....
Rolfe.
This is a point I've been making again and again, though not so much in this context. Indeed, guns are available to the determinedly criminal. But not one single ordinary lawabiding citizen is walking the streets with a gun, or is sleeping with a gun on his bedside table.
Well then! Thank God and the Government that you're
infinitesimally and
statistically insignificantly safer from armed attacks, robberies and home invasions by law abiding people!
That is
absolutely true, though, since any former law abider that did keep a handgun by his bed would now be, ipso facto, a criminal. Exactly in the same way that, when someone decides to actually go through with a crime, they cease to be law abiding.
Do you seriously think that anyone who has abstracted themselves from humanity sufficiently to consider the mass-murder of children a desirable goal will stop and say, "oh, but handguns are illegal, so I can't do it?" Some of these guys take days... weeks to assemble their gear. A few posts ago, I threw you a link from BBC news about some kid off the street that had asked for a submachine gun and it was provided for him in 24 hours.
Anyone thinking about blood on the local elementary school floor read that article, too.
This has been the point I've been making again and again: Passing laws that take firearms from law abiding people, who are not inclined to break the law in the first place, doesn't really do you any good.
If I said that the
real reason you haven't had another horrible massacre was because I had been praying for you and your nation (which, by the way, I do) would you accept that as causative? Why would you reject something that has
just as much statistical evidence behind it as the 1997 law?
So, why are we not all being overwhelmed by "home invasions" and being robbed at gunpoint in the streets and so on? I mean, that's what you believe would happen in the US if gun availability to the lawabiding was similarly restricted.
Rolfe.
Mmm... Ok.... at what point in this whole, "break into elderly peoples houses to rob and beat them senseless, sometimes to death," do you become, "overwhelmed?" The one picture of the poor old woman in the hospital, having been beaten nearly to death in her own home, pretty much overwhelmed me.
Did you check those links I posted? 10 home invasions since January of this year, all of brutal outcome, and the only reason I stopped linking was because three per month of a crime that didn't even exist before seemed enough.
In this one particular crime I
do believe that it's rarer over here because housebreakers don't know which of the little old men and women living alone have shotguns by the bed or handguns on the nightstand, and are thus inclined more to stealing the checks out of their mailboxes.
...and over here, "The Defenseless," often DO have shotguns and pistols available, and they know how to use them. My first introduction to concealed carry was a frail, elderly woman, a friend of my godfather, who carried a snub nosed .38 Special in her shoulder bag.
Anecdotally: The first ten people in line at the police station in Dallas (I think it was) the day that Texas started issuing concealed carry licenses were all female, all over 70 years old, and all from the same high-crime neighborhood. No proof. Just a story.
Home invasions, rare anyhow, dropped to ZERO in communities in the south where local ordnances required property owners to own a firearm. Other nearby communities did have a corresponding rise in their rate, though, indicating to me that the kind of people who do this sort of thing cherry-pick their targets.
Robbery at gunpoint tends to drop in communities implementing concealed carry licenses, too, for what it's worth. They just turn to an easier, safer kind of robbing.
So, yes - in any crime where the perpetrator has to come face to face with the victim in private, I DO believe that even the
possibility of running into armed prey helps to modify the bad guys' thinking.
It doesn't change their mind about the crime. It just changes their mind about the who and where part.