Chuck Guiteau
Graduate Poster
Maybe I missed a post. It's certainly possible as this is growing into a large thread. Could you point out some of those people who have claimed that knives are deadlier than guns?Of course not, you merely stated that "No one has attempted to make the case that knives are deadlier than guns". The ethereal 'no one.
I didn't ignore it, I simply don't believe it. The UK has a very high crime rate. The per capita incident of violent assaults and robberies is one of the highest in Europe. I think your rates would reflect this.Apparently you like to ignore posts which don't comply with your preconceived notions.
I stated I would have no problem with an insurance requirement relating to knives, because, in my opinion, the risk I pose as an owner of knives would be so minuscule as to be virtually negligible and I would, therefore, expect my premiums to reflect this.
But of course, that really doesn't help your argument, so you ignore it.
What's good for the goose is good for the gander. I take it then that you'd have no problem with that same "hefty sin tax" for knives in the UK? Surely you wouldn't mind paying for the hooligans and gang members occasional indiscretions just as you don't seem to mind the law abiding citizens of the US paying for theirs, right?Suing someone is only any good if they have anything worth having.
Victims compensation funds would provide a useful way of covering the costs of damage caused by guns, and a suitable funding system financed by a hefty sin tax on new weapon and ammunition purchases would make these payouts proportional to the actual costs people face when injured by gun misuse.
Obviously not, but the state, in requiring automobile insurance, doesn't specifically presuppose that you will drive and drink, either. It does in the statute in question.I still query how motor insurance deals with the criminal offence of a DUI in the US. If you cause injury to a third party while drunk at the wheel, does the insurance company wash it's hands of the whole thing and the third party is left swinging in the breeze?
A more equitable situation would be for insurance to cover even 'criminal' gun use (not gun use by criminals) and then, after the irresponsible gun owner has paid their fine or done their time in pokey, they are not allowed to have a weapon (their 2A right is infringed). If the irresponsible gun owner accidentally injures someone he/she may lose their licence for a period but when it's reinstated (preferably after mandatory gun classes) their insurance will be sky high for any weapon theypurchaseown.
A more equitable solution would be to target the violent felons who actually commit the crimes, but that doesn't get much traction, does it? I've brought it up numerous times, but the subject always goes back to "let's target the criminals by making law abiding people pay for their excesses". Like with insurance schemes.
Curiously, on the news the other night, there was a report on Chicago, a city with a gun ban as strict, or stricter, than the one you have in the UK, yet a persons chances of being killed there are greater than in Kabul.
The Chicago Police Commissioner has begun a novel approach to the problem. No extra emphasis on assault weapons, hi-cap magazines or insurance that everyone who owns a gun has to pay (not that there are that many of them in legal hands in Chicago anyway). He's embarked on a campaign to target gangs in the inner city.
The crazy thing is, it's working. Last month Chicago reported its lowest murder rate in years and the trend seems to be holding.
Who'd a thunk it? Getting criminals off the street apparently lowers crime.