chillzero
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2002
- Messages
- 15,547
You need to come to Biggleswade, and meet Tim.God, I'm 41 years old, I've lived in the UK all my life, and I've never even SEEN a gun outside TV or military displays and such.
You need to come to Biggleswade, and meet Tim.God, I'm 41 years old, I've lived in the UK all my life, and I've never even SEEN a gun outside TV or military displays and such.
Fair enough. We do have plenty of Brits on these forums and I'd like to see what they have to say about their own gun laws.
Ha! Can't beat the colonials #27 Australia: 0.00293678 per 1,000 peopleFor once it's nice to see the UK at the bottom of the table!
No, really, we don't.We have a lot of guns here. I'd guess they have a lot of guns in the UK too in spite of no Second Amendment.
We have a lot of guns here. I'd guess they have a lot of guns in the UK too in spite of no Second Amendment.
What is different is that we don't kill as many of our fellow citizens with them and it's probably just a coincidence:
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_mur_wit_fir_percap-crime-murders-firearms-per-capita
# 8 United States: 0.0279271 per 1,000 people
# 20 Canada: 0.00502972 per 1,000 people
# 32 United Kingdom: 0.00102579 per 1,000 people
We can work our way up, though, if you'd like.
However our "very few" is significantly lower that your "very few", and the posters here are suggesting that a large part of that revolves around the availability (or otherwise) of legal firearms.
Wouldn't it be better therefore that even if a person is A, 2 or c (or a combination of them) they didn't have a gun to hand?
I think so much of the trouble in the USA is directly related to the very immature attitudes - the ye-haw gun-totin mindset that's really just a childish fixation on toy guns which hasn't been put aside, like childish things should be. If you can have the guns but not the mindset, you may not encounter so much trouble. However, I think it's hard to have the guns without the mindset occurring in at least a proportion of people.
If the laws don't actually affect how many people have guns, then why bother with them in the first place?
Was the gun the guy opened up on your step-dad with legal? Did he have a carry permit or whatever?
And I don't even disagree with the attitude. It's just that it seems locked into an unhealthy obsession that "They" are out to get you, that criminals are paused at every window and door, every night, and only the thought of you having a gun keeps them away.
IIRC it was a legal gun and the shooter had no previous criminal history..
Because the gun laws affect the kinds of guns that you can have.
The laws that were passed after the Port Arthur massacre only affected semi-automatic rifles and shotguns which most Australians don't have, and many of those that did were farmers who could get an exemption because of it.
That's what I meant by "what a tragic waste of a life". Man loses it when challenged by cop over dropping litter. Not usually fatal. Man loses it when challenged by cop over dropping litter, with gun in sock, outcome, death.
And yet the premise of the OP is that we would want to be like this because it's somehow safer. All the evidence stacks up the other way.
Eh, as the story was presented, I'm not really fealing the "tragic" part.
A Man died. Any Man's death is a loss to the world.
That's your opinion, and you're welcome to it. I don't happen to subscribe to that philosophy.
Certain people only care about other people as long as they follow laws. Why, I have never understood.A Man died. Any Man's death is a loss to the world.
There's that also, of course.And the cop had to live with having killed someone, essentially, for dropping litter.
And the cop had to live with having killed someone, essentially, for dropping litter.
Certain people only care about other people as long as they follow laws. Why, I have never understood.