The implication of your comment is that therefore, because murder still happens, we shouldn't have ineffectual laws against murder?
Yes, precisely. I am much more in favour of effectual laws against murder. Actually, the implication was that ineffectual laws serve only to maintain the illusion of public security. I will try and illustrate with the following example.
I own a few handguns that where manufactured with a 13 round magazine capacity. These handguns are second world war issue (two German and one Canadian) that have considerable historic value, not to mention the monetary value which for the Canadian model is quite considerable.
Several years ago, 1994 IIRC, Canada passed a law than no handgun was to have more than a 10 round magazine capacity (I beleive that there is a similar rule in the States as well). The intention of this rule was to limit the number of rounds that could be fired before reloading should the gun be employed with unlawful intent.
In order to comply, I had to weld a permanent restrictor block into the magazine of the pistol and then weld the base-plate permanently closed. This law has now defaced what were once was museum quality WWII artifacts (which I actually intend to have placed in a museum later in life).
So now we have an inane, ludicrous law that only a severely delusional person could believe would deter a criminal from performing a robbery or a "nutter" from shooting up a school. Does any reasonable, thinking individual honestly believe that someone planning to hold up a bank is going to be detered because the new law prohibits them from carrying out the crime with only ten rounds in their pistol magazine? Such logic is convoluted well beyond the belief of any rational human being.
When will people wake up and start dealing with the criminals instead of vilifying responsible gun owners???