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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
Hardly, this happens every time that there is a mass casualty event. Eventually, once the hysteria dies down, things go back to normal.
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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
Oh don't worry he didn't really mean it to come out like that - he was just retorting the same logic back at Papa Smurf.
Hugh is a brave man. To live in Yorkshire and know how to use sarcasm...even I had to read it twice today morning, lol. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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There is no universal law that holds you as a human being have the right to possess a lethal firearm against the possibility your life may be endangered. Your constitution was framed and amended by men in a specific historical context, with a particular agenda, and the way in which it is fetishised and venerated by so many of you, some 3 centuries later, is frankly a tad disturbing. Your founding fathers asserted rights in the way that best served their purposes: Create a nation state by union of the colonies; keep the Brits out. That’s really all there is to it. Asserting that a self-evident right to bear arms exists (via the negative formulation, that it not be infringed) served that agenda. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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I suppose that you could have weapons for trade purposes but for the most part a gun does not serve an originating metric / mechanism that is different than what a criminal would use it for. (I.e to fire the gun). The reasoning behind it is different, the desired outcome is intended to be different and the entire purposes and philosophy is different but both time the use of the machine / appliance (in this instance, the gun) is the same. Now you tell me whether it is justifiable or not to prevent all of us who do not intent to use it for criminal purposes to be prevented from possessing it, altogether. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/597170...y-forest-gate/ How is that any proof that the ban on guns lowers even gun crime? Leave alone crime in general just gun related crime. Just 6 months (this year):
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Re: Another day, another mass shooting
l am certainly not lauding anything up or looking down my nose at Americans or anybody else Chloe as l am just giving my own thoughts on the matter as you and others are.
l never said that l had the answers but other then those personal uses for guns under strong licensing laws which l mentioned in a previous post there is no justification in a civilised country for having widespread personal ownership of firearms. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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For starters, if you want to compare the UK and the USA, bald percentages are useless. They take no account of starting points and they don’t allow for differing definitions of ‘gun crime’. The simpler and clearer way of doing it would be to take a simple, comparable metric -e.g. people criminally injured or killed by firearms - and then compare those statistics per 100,000 of population. Second, a number of the gun crimes in your list feature firearms that may be legally bought and owned in the UK. If you’re wanting to compare the UK and the USA, you have to compare like with like. Pick something that’s legal in the USA but banned here and determine whether there’s a statistically significant difference in the number of people criminally killed or wounded by those items, again, per 100,000 of the population. That way, you may begin to determine whether the ban makes a difference. Third, in any case your list is a collection of headlines that you’ve managed to Google up in the time available to you when making your post. Neither the size of the list nor the severity of the incidents on it have any useful statistical value. What they do have is shock value, which lends some superficial credibility to your argument. Fourth, the claim of a 20% upswing in lethal firearms ‘fired’ since 2012 is problematic. Why 2012? There was no significant change in legislation that year, except for exemptions granted to allow certain Olympic events to function. Pistols except .22 calibre were banned by the Major government after Dunblane and the rest were banned by Blair a couple of years later. Without having read into it, I suspect we would find that 2012 either corresponds to some police budgeting or staffing issue, or else it might have been a historic low point. Either way, I’d bet that the year was chosen for political reasons, to maximise the apparent severity of the problem. A 20% increase on a historic low, for example, sounds awful but without proper historical context may be highly misleading. Finally - and assuming the 20% statistic is useful at face value - we still know nothing of causality. The figure is very carefully presented as shots fired, not guns in circulation. The author appears to suggest that guns already in circulation are being used more often, not that more guns are getting into the country. There are various reasons why shots fired may increase but the most likely scenario I can see is that criminals are emboldened by the belief that they can get away with it. As the average British citizen is unarmed, this can only be due to perception of police resources, and not the likelihood of a potential victim firing back, which would be a factor in the USA. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...s-gun-violence |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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You do have to justify it, to obtain a license. Being a member of a shooting club for target shooting is an accepted reason. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
Yeah, as in give them a valid reason for wanting it.
I meant Den didn't have to justify his right to have it. Quote:
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The AR 15 is banned in the UK but not in the US but it hardly proves that banning it in the UK has meant that there are no mass atrocities in the UK involving that gun, because banning it was the correct thing to do. Conversely double barrel shotguns are legal in the UK. Moat used one, killed a person and injured a couple more a few years ago. Makes zero difference as to whether the weapon is banned. Quote:
I didn't google the ones that I knew about anyway - Moss Side wasn't too far from where I grew up so when I heard about it the other weekend I thought "yup, another success in Britain's gun ban". As for the rest - some remind me of you because you are just north of Watford - a lot of them (Kingsbury / Queensbury etc) are very close to you (locality wise / other side of Stanmore). Thanks to the irritating "Google trending" options that you can't disable on older phones every time you tap the app on a 6.0 or older phone, you get the latest sensationalist stuff from there. I.e. gun crime stories. It is not so much that I use a google search of stuff as much as the sensationalist headlines are much more in tune with gun control. Quote:
We can look into the 2012 stats when we get a bit more time, yes - for now this is kind of a rushed reply (and it might show lol). Quote:
This likely does warrant a longer response that I don't have the time for now (was going to reply later on this week / next) but a lot of the discussion here is different from the way it started off with "let them kill each other / here come the NRA". Plus it went from philosophy to empirical statistics, which will likely take some time to get into further / with some depth. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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While I can carry a concealed weapon most places in Arizona (don't even need a permit) I definitely can not do so in California or New York. If I lived upstate New York I could, with an appropriate permit, carry my firearm most places. However, when I enter New York City that changes and I'd need a completely separate permit to carry there. The laws regarding carrying a firearm in public vary dramatically across the country and have caused a great number of otherwise law abiding people to unwittingly run afoul of the authorities. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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You seem like a perfectly pleasant individual so perhaps I am interpreting this incorrectly, so my apologies, if I am. The way I am reading what you are writing though is that just because you see no need for an armed populace, you think of those who are as less civilized, per your metric definition. I don't have all the time to get into it now but as when I do, I'll get back to this and am happy to listen to whatever rationale you meant by what you said. |
Re: Another day, another mass shooting
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Why does a country need a armed populace? unless individuals need a gun for the reasons l have stated in earlier posts through strict licensing gun laws. |
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