Isn't it more that the thread was started on the premise that the US is the magical utopia and that the UK should follow suit wrt gun laws; and the UKers in the main are saying that we are quite happy with our status quo?
Yes. I've stated (more than once, I believe) that the OP was ridiculous. I just don't think that turning that same silly attitude around the other way is any less ridiculous.
I'm not participating in this thread to change anyone's mind on gun control. People in the UK seem happy with their gun laws, and those laws seem to be working for them. But, I have seen some misconceptions and factual errors presented that I thought needed to be pointed out.
Apologies if it comes over that way, but I think you're misinterpreting our comments.
I hope so. I would be happier to be wrong than right in this instance.
In Western Europe, the concept of "guns for guns sake" is compeltely alien.
Yes. I understand and respect that.
Sport shooting in the UK, for example, is limited to clays (shotguns) or hunting (rifles and shotguns). There is no place in either sport for autmatic weapons, and hence no pressure for their legalisation.
There may be some confusion here. The vast majority of "assault rifles" in the US are not automatic weapons. I think that, technically, that makes them not actually assault rifles,
per se, but what is colloquially referred to by that name are semiautomatic weapons, and are less powerful than, say, most hunting rifles.
The response from many US pro-gun posters seems to take the tact that (say) assault weapons aren't really all that dangerous, because they represent a comparatively low proportion of gun deaths. At this point we tend to fall into the "why the hell do you need any of the damn things?" and it all gets a bit tense.
I'm not taking a position regarding whether we "need" to own assault rifles, but outlawing them wouldn't have much effect. They aren't owned by that many people, and are involved in crimes and accidental deaths at miniscule rates compared to handguns. They are not the common weapon people turn to for home defense, as was implied in Safe-Keeper's post. If he had railed against handguns instead of "huge assault rifles", I wouldn't have even responded.
The other thing that I think I can safely say completely puzzles us is the argument (not yours, IIRC) that more guns actually serve to reduce crime rates. Frankly, it's just bizarre.
It doesn't seem completely crazy to me that,
in a country where gun ownership is already established, knowing that potential victims are more likely to be armed might provide a strong disincentive to some would-be attackers. On the other hand, perhaps it would serve as an incentive for other criminals to arm themselves. The question would be, where would the balance lie? Unfortunately, the data I've seen, so far, has been inconclusive. Some places have seen reductions in violent crime rates when passing, say, concealed carry laws, but it's very difficult sorting out correlation vs causation.
Either way, I don't think it would have a net positive effect in a country that currently has very few guns.
On a final note, I am willing to wager a bottle of finest malt whisky that the murder rates for howitzers in the UK and the US are broadly similar.
I didn't know you had such issues with howitzer crimes.
