Panjabster
Registered Member
Ban all guns, they kill people. Even police in England only use sticks, not guns. We are no longer the wild wild west: we now actually cook our food and avoid endogamy.
As Dirty Harry said,More guns means more shootings, whichever way you look at it.
Screw the home invader. As far as I'm concerned, if a criminal is shot dead in the process of committing a crime, that's the ideal outcome. Society is saved thousands of dollars in court costs and incarceration costs. And a dangerous criminal is removed from society. It's a win-win.By the way, there is no "benefit" to shooting even a home invader - certainly not to the home invader himself.
RAMPANT GUN OWNERSHIP?Head for the hills!!!!! LOL.No. Australia has never had the kind of rampant gun ownership that you have in the US.
So you've addressed that specific issue, but what about all the rest? What about Australia's overall much higher violent crime rate? What about the fact that, in the US, gun ownership is inversely proportional to crime. Those states with the most liberal (there's an ironic word for ya, remember when liberals supported the right to bear arms?) gun laws have the lowest crime rates. Conversely, those with the most stringent gun control have the highest.In Victoria, there are very few gun homicides. If there is, say, 1 gun homicide in Victoria in one year, and 3 in the next year, that's a 300 percent increase.
As for our gun laws being ineffective, since they were passed back in the late 90s, guess how many mass spree killings (such as Virginia Tech) we have had in Australia? Zero. Not a single one.
How many has the US had in the past 10 years?
Last time I checked, worldnetdaily.com was not an Australian publication. Perhaps the guys who wrote this should have actually spent some time in Australia and been more careful about their selective quoting of statistics. Then, you would not have been so misled by them.
That was back before the wingnut righties got hold of the US media and started inventing propaganda definitions for common words.madanth said:Those states with the most liberal (there's an ironic word for ya, remember when liberals supported the right to bear arms?)
As for our gun laws being ineffective, since they were passed back in the late 90s, guess how many mass spree killings (such as Virginia Tech) we have had in Australia? Zero. Not a single one.
Except, of course, this one:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monash_University_shooting
Which, for those of you who don't know, featured a mentally disturbed Asian college student shooting up a bunch of his classmates over imagined wrongs. Had he not been tackled when he paused for his first reload, the outcome might well have been as bad or worse than at VT, given that he was comparably well-armed. The only real difference, aside from the lucky outcome, is that the shooter had to go through the formality of joining a shooting club first.
Given that this incident occured in the capitol of the state you live in, and directly resulted in the strengthening of the gun legislation you're so proud of, it's odd that you'd omit it. It begs the question of whether you're dishonest or just ignorant. Unless, of course, you don't consider shooting 7 people to be a "mass spree killing?"
Wrong again. Virgina Tech was legally a "gun free zone". No one was allowed to carry guns there. Yet the criminal went ahead and used a gun anyway. Who'd have thunk it?Compare the Virginia Tech shootings, for example. There, carrying a gun was not illegal, since it is every American's right to do so. You could walk into class with 5 hand guns on open display and nobody would have a right to take them away from you, would they?
Virgina Tech was legally a "gun free zone". No one was allowed to carry guns there.
Isn't that a restriction of 2nd amendment rights?
It's private property, James. One is permitted the freedom to say what and who can come into their own, private homes.
Baron Max
You're essentially correct, although the death toll there was 2 people, so we might argue about whether this amounted to a "mass spree killing".
The offender here was armed with 5 hand guns. Why not a rifle of some kind? Why no automatic or semi-automatic weapon? Answer: he was prevented by law from obtaining one.
We might well wonder what the death toll might have been had this offender had access to an automatic rifle, don't you think?
And what are the chances he would have been tackled and taken down so quickly after he started shooting?
Compare the Virginia Tech shootings, for example. There, carrying a gun was not illegal, since it is every American's right to do so. You could walk into class with 5 hand guns on open display and nobody would have a right to take them away from you, would they?
Ban all guns, they kill people. Even police in England only use sticks, not guns. We are no longer the wild wild west: we now actually cook our food and avoid endogamy.
Did you know in the UK they banned the term "police force" because the term force was too agressive?LOLIn 1982, I was working part time for a Gun Distributor in Texas, and we received a contract through the U.S. Government, from the British Government, for 5,000 handguns for the Police Services, the guns in the contract consisted of the Smith and Wesson Models, 10, 13, 15, and 36, a few years later they bought the Model, 19, and 66, in .357 magnum to keep up with the terrorist, and even later they started buying Semiautomatics.
Oh look. Another shooting in the US. This time it is 7 dead.
http://www.sciforums.com/showthread.php?t=72266
Probably has nothing to do with guns.
You're right in a direct sense, quadraphonics. But what if the whole mentality of gun use was changed? What if this US obsession with guns wasn't there?
What would have changed? as a police office he still would have had access to the firearms that were used to commit the murders, and he still would have had the same jealous rage, and guess what he still would have killed 7 people.
You seem far more obsessed with guns than most Americans I know - to the point you recommend giving the US government quite extraordinary powers simply to reduce by some unspecified amount the mere legal possession of some kinds of them.james said:You're right in a direct sense, quadraphonics. But what if the whole mentality of gun use was changed? What if this US obsession with guns wasn't there?