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Guns outlawed in Japan
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Guns outlawed in Japan
On Apr 17, 10:19 pm, OzOne wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 20:52:31 -0600, "Bob Crantz" scribbled thusly: http://69.55.11.240/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=184241 Despite the sad death, It's heartening to see that gun control is working in Japan and most other nations that take it seriouslyhttp://www.guncite.com/cnngunde.html Japan, where very few people own guns, averages 124 gun-related attacks a year, and less than 1 percent end in death. Police often raid the homes of those suspected of having weapons. The study found that gun-related deaths were five to six times higher in the Americas than in Europe or Australia and New Zealand and 95 times higher than in Asia. Here are gun-related deaths per 100,000 people in the world's 36 richest countries in 1994: United States 14.24; Brazil 12.95; Mexico 12.69; Estonia 12.26; Argentina 8.93; Northern Ireland 6.63; Finland 6.46; Switzerland 5.31; France 5.15; Canada 4.31; Norway 3.82; Austria 3.70; Portugal 3.20; Israel 2.91; Belgium 2.90; Australia 2.65; Slovenia 2.60; Italy 2.44; New Zealand 2.38; Denmark 2.09; Sweden 1.92; Kuwait 1.84; Greece 1.29; Germany 1.24; Hungary 1.11; Republic of Ireland 0.97; Spain 0.78; Netherlands 0.70; Scotland 0.54; England and Wales 0.41; Taiwan 0.37; Singapore 0.21; Mauritius 0.19; Hong Kong 0.14; South Korea 0.12; Japan 0.05. Oz1...of the 3 twins. I welcome you to crackerbox palace, We've been expecting you. I've seen this BS before. Gun related deaths may be less, but murder rates are much higher in many of the counrties listed. Much higher in Europe. How was Tahoe this year? Joe |
Guns outlawed in Japan-use knives for hits
"Bob Crantz" wrote in message ... http://69.55.11.240/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=184241 http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070418/D8OITPPG1.html |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote in message ... Won't be back for another couple of years now, France is calling. I'm sure you'll like it there. You can sit at the sidewalk cafes, sipping wine with your white hankie in hand, discussing your hatred for the US with the other fags, I mean frogs. Scooter |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote in message ... On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 20:52:31 -0600, "Bob Crantz" scribbled thusly: http://69.55.11.240/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=184241 Despite the sad death, It's heartening to see that gun control is working in Japan and most other nations that take it seriously http://www.guncite.com/cnngunde.html Japan, where very few people own guns, averages 124 gun-related attacks a year, and less than 1 percent end in death. Police often raid the homes of those suspected of having weapons. The study found that gun-related deaths were five to six times higher in the Americas than in Europe or Australia and New Zealand and 95 times higher than in Asia. Here are gun-related deaths per 100,000 people in the world's 36 richest countries in 1994: United States 14.24; Brazil 12.95; Mexico 12.69; Estonia 12.26; Argentina 8.93; Northern Ireland 6.63; Finland 6.46; Switzerland 5.31; France 5.15; Canada 4.31; Norway 3.82; Austria 3.70; Portugal 3.20; Israel 2.91; Belgium 2.90; Australia 2.65; Slovenia 2.60; Italy 2.44; New Zealand 2.38; Denmark 2.09; Sweden 1.92; Kuwait 1.84; Greece 1.29; Germany 1.24; Hungary 1.11; Republic of Ireland 0.97; Spain 0.78; Netherlands 0.70; Scotland 0.54; England and Wales 0.41; Taiwan 0.37; Singapore 0.21; Mauritius 0.19; Hong Kong 0.14; South Korea 0.12; Japan 0.05. All this data, and the info on Japan is interesting, Oz, but what has this to do with the USA? There are an estimated 300+ million guns in circulation here. How do you propose to eliminate them? Are you willing to accept the carnage and civil war that would ensue with a government gun grab attempt, which, by all estimates, would fail miserably. And even if a gun grab were modestly successful, what do you propose to do about the remaining 100+ million guns that would then be illegally possessed. Tragedies such as the Virginia Tech episode are most unfortunate, and are no doubt a by-product of our culture of guns and violence. But we are stuck with the problem. It's waaaay too far advanced to solve at this point with gun control or gun grabs. A more reasonable approach might be to deal with the culture of violence so prevalent in movies, TV, pop music, video games, etc. I've heard quite a bit of gun control rhetoric on TV over the past 18 hours, and most of it centers around handguns, ostensibly due to the concealability of them. In light of this it's important to note that the second worst shooting of this nature occurred in the 60s with a wacko picking 23 people off from a clock tower on a Texas college campus using a high-powered rifle with a scope. Hardly a concealment issue. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote in message ... On 17 Apr 2007 20:23:52 -0700, Joe scribbled thusly: On Apr 17, 10:19 pm, OzOne wrote: On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 20:52:31 -0600, "Bob Crantz" scribbled thusly: http://69.55.11.240/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=184241 Despite the sad death, It's heartening to see that gun control is working in Japan and most other nations that take it seriouslyhttp://www.guncite.com/cnngunde.html Japan, where very few people own guns, averages 124 gun-related attacks a year, and less than 1 percent end in death. Police often raid the homes of those suspected of having weapons. The study found that gun-related deaths were five to six times higher in the Americas than in Europe or Australia and New Zealand and 95 times higher than in Asia. Here are gun-related deaths per 100,000 people in the world's 36 richest countries in 1994: United States 14.24; Brazil 12.95; Mexico 12.69; Estonia 12.26; Argentina 8.93; Northern Ireland 6.63; Finland 6.46; Switzerland 5.31; France 5.15; Canada 4.31; Norway 3.82; Austria 3.70; Portugal 3.20; Israel 2.91; Belgium 2.90; Australia 2.65; Slovenia 2.60; Italy 2.44; New Zealand 2.38; Denmark 2.09; Sweden 1.92; Kuwait 1.84; Greece 1.29; Germany 1.24; Hungary 1.11; Republic of Ireland 0.97; Spain 0.78; Netherlands 0.70; Scotland 0.54; England and Wales 0.41; Taiwan 0.37; Singapore 0.21; Mauritius 0.19; Hong Kong 0.14; South Korea 0.12; Japan 0.05. Oz1...of the 3 twins. I welcome you to crackerbox palace, We've been expecting you. I've seen this BS before. Gun related deaths may be less, but murder rates are much higher in many of the counrties listed. Much higher in Europe. How was Tahoe this year? Joe So you think that all other murders couls push Japan up from the bottom of the list to the US's unenviable position at the top? I sincerely doubt that. Of course not. But we're not comparing equal demographics here. Japan is a tiny country, albeit heavily populated, but nowhere near the landmass or huge concentration of people found in the USA. Apples/oranges. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
* Joe wrote, On 4/17/2007 11:23 PM:
On Apr 17, 10:19 pm, OzOne wrote: On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 20:52:31 -0600, "Bob Crantz" scribbled thusly: http://69.55.11.240/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=184241 Despite the sad death, It's heartening to see that gun control is working in Japan and most other nations that take it seriouslyhttp://www.guncite.com/cnngunde.html Japan, where very few people own guns, averages 124 gun-related attacks a year, and less than 1 percent end in death. Police often raid the homes of those suspected of having weapons. The study found that gun-related deaths were five to six times higher in the Americas than in Europe or Australia and New Zealand and 95 times higher than in Asia. Here are gun-related deaths per 100,000 people in the world's 36 richest countries in 1994: United States 14.24; Brazil 12.95; Mexico 12.69; Estonia 12.26; Argentina 8.93; Northern Ireland 6.63; Finland 6.46; Switzerland 5.31; France 5.15; Canada 4.31; Norway 3.82; Austria 3.70; Portugal 3.20; Israel 2.91; Belgium 2.90; Australia 2.65; Slovenia 2.60; Italy 2.44; New Zealand 2.38; Denmark 2.09; Sweden 1.92; Kuwait 1.84; Greece 1.29; Germany 1.24; Hungary 1.11; Republic of Ireland 0.97; Spain 0.78; Netherlands 0.70; Scotland 0.54; England and Wales 0.41; Taiwan 0.37; Singapore 0.21; Mauritius 0.19; Hong Kong 0.14; South Korea 0.12; Japan 0.05. Oz1...of the 3 twins. I welcome you to crackerbox palace, We've been expecting you. I've seen this BS before. Gun related deaths may be less, but murder rates are much higher in many of the counrties listed. Much higher in Europe. Where do you get this nonsense, Joe? Do you just make it up, or are you unable to do simple research? Or do you just knowingly lie and figure no one will notice? While its true that there are a number of countries with a higher murder rate than the US, they are almost entirely in the former USSR, or in Latin America or Africa. All of Western Europe, and most of the Eastern Europe outside of the USSR has murder rates much lower than the US. In fact, its hard to find a country in Western Europe with a murder rate higher than the safest state in the US. Its hard to get consistent stats since they all use different reporting methods and different years, but the all paint essentially the same picture. Here's a link that you listed: http://www.haciendapub.com/stolinsky.html A simplified list: http://www.angelfire.com/rnb/y/homicide.htm#murd And yet another: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cr...ers-per-capita |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Maxprop" wrote in message link.net.. .. I've heard quite a bit of gun control rhetoric on TV over the past 18 hours, and most of it centers around handguns, ostensibly due to the concealability of them. In light of this it's important to note that the second worst shooting of this nature occurred in the 60s with a wacko picking 23 people off from a clock tower on a Texas college campus using a high-powered rifle with a scope. Hardly a concealment issue. Didn't the Amish Schoolhouse shooter use a 12 ga. shotgun? Isn't ozzy an idiot? SBV |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 12:39:16 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: OzOne wrote in message . .. On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 20:52:31 -0600, "Bob Crantz" scribbled thusly: http://69.55.11.240/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=184241 Despite the sad death, It's heartening to see that gun control is working in Japan and most other nations that take it seriously http://www.guncite.com/cnngunde.html Japan, where very few people own guns, averages 124 gun-related attacks a year, and less than 1 percent end in death. Police often raid the homes of those suspected of having weapons. The study found that gun-related deaths were five to six times higher in the Americas than in Europe or Australia and New Zealand and 95 times higher than in Asia. Here are gun-related deaths per 100,000 people in the world's 36 richest countries in 1994: United States 14.24; Brazil 12.95; Mexico 12.69; Estonia 12.26; Argentina 8.93; Northern Ireland 6.63; Finland 6.46; Switzerland 5.31; France 5.15; Canada 4.31; Norway 3.82; Austria 3.70; Portugal 3.20; Israel 2.91; Belgium 2.90; Australia 2.65; Slovenia 2.60; Italy 2.44; New Zealand 2.38; Denmark 2.09; Sweden 1.92; Kuwait 1.84; Greece 1.29; Germany 1.24; Hungary 1.11; Republic of Ireland 0.97; Spain 0.78; Netherlands 0.70; Scotland 0.54; England and Wales 0.41; Taiwan 0.37; Singapore 0.21; Mauritius 0.19; Hong Kong 0.14; South Korea 0.12; Japan 0.05. All this data, and the info on Japan is interesting, Oz, but what has this to do with the USA? There are an estimated 300+ million guns in circulation here. How do you propose to eliminate them? Are you willing to accept the carnage and civil war that would ensue with a government gun grab attempt, which, by all estimates, would fail miserably. And even if a gun grab were modestly successful, what do you propose to do about the remaining 100+ million guns that would then be illegally possessed. Tragedies such as the Virginia Tech episode are most unfortunate, and are no doubt a by-product of our culture of guns and violence. But we are stuck with the problem. It's waaaay too far advanced to solve at this point with gun control or gun grabs. A more reasonable approach might be to deal with the culture of violence so prevalent in movies, TV, pop music, video games, etc. I've heard quite a bit of gun control rhetoric on TV over the past 18 hours, and most of it centers around handguns, ostensibly due to the concealability of them. In light of this it's important to note that the second worst shooting of this nature occurred in the 60s with a wacko picking 23 people off from a clock tower on a Texas college campus using a high-powered rifle with a scope. Hardly a concealment issue. Max I was reading an article recently about all the changes that have been made in society when so many said "It just can't be done". Gotta start somewhere. Jon made the same point about slavery. I asked him if he was willing to see the country enter a period of civil war with hundreds of thousands dead, infrastructure destroyed, and an economy in the toilet for decades in order to grab guns and save a few dozen lives each year. So far no answer. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Scotty" wrote in message . .. "Maxprop" wrote in message link.net.. . I've heard quite a bit of gun control rhetoric on TV over the past 18 hours, and most of it centers around handguns, ostensibly due to the concealability of them. In light of this it's important to note that the second worst shooting of this nature occurred in the 60s with a wacko picking 23 people off from a clock tower on a Texas college campus using a high-powered rifle with a scope. Hardly a concealment issue. Didn't the Amish Schoolhouse shooter use a 12 ga. shotgun? I don't recall. Living here in Amish country and knowing them so well--their absolute belief in non-violence and the sanctity of life--that episode was especially painful. Amish are terribly vulnerable to such threats. The ******* could have done the same thing with a machete or a baseball bat. Every time I learn of such things, my first response is: where in hell was the armed citizen who could have stopped the killer before he wreaked havoc on an innocent population. Of course in Amish country, that "armed citizen" doesn't exist. Isn't ozzy an idiot? Oz is actually a very intelligent guy. He's just typically liberal on the gun control issue, though. Liberals get all warm and fuzzy from passing meaningless, ineffective laws. Hell, they don't really care if anyone enforces them--their work is done when the bill is signed into law. They can sleep well at night with the deluded belief that they did something "good." Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 12:43:02 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: So you think that all other murders couls push Japan up from the bottom of the list to the US's unenviable position at the top? I sincerely doubt that. Of course not. But we're not comparing equal demographics here. Japan is a tiny country, albeit heavily populated, but nowhere near the landmass or huge concentration of people found in the USA. Apples/oranges. Max Have you been to Japan? Three times over the past 25 years. Population density in cities is far beyond anything you have , a recipe for social turmoil but it just doesn't happen. Having far more land than the Japanese islands, we certainly don't experience the population density seen in places such as Hokkaido, Tokyo, and a few other cities. But sheer numbers don't lie. When you're dealing with a population of 3 billion vs. 128 million, the statistical probability of such things as shootings increases by at least a factor of nearly 24x. And that's before taking societal or cultural factors into account. The feasibility of disarming 128 million citizens is radically different than doing so with 3 billion folks. That said, people still get shot and killed by gun-wielding wackos in Japan. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
Maxprop wrote:
OzOne wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 12:39:16 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: OzOne wrote in message ... On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 20:52:31 -0600, "Bob Crantz" scribbled thusly: http://69.55.11.240/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=184241 Despite the sad death, It's heartening to see that gun control is working in Japan and most other nations that take it seriously http://www.guncite.com/cnngunde.html Japan, where very few people own guns, averages 124 gun-related attacks a year, and less than 1 percent end in death. Police often raid the homes of those suspected of having weapons. The study found that gun-related deaths were five to six times higher in the Americas than in Europe or Australia and New Zealand and 95 times higher than in Asia. Here are gun-related deaths per 100,000 people in the world's 36 richest countries in 1994: United States 14.24; Brazil 12.95; Mexico 12.69; Estonia 12.26; Argentina 8.93; Northern Ireland 6.63; Finland 6.46; Switzerland 5.31; France 5.15; Canada 4.31; Norway 3.82; Austria 3.70; Portugal 3.20; Israel 2.91; Belgium 2.90; Australia 2.65; Slovenia 2.60; Italy 2.44; New Zealand 2.38; Denmark 2.09; Sweden 1.92; Kuwait 1.84; Greece 1.29; Germany 1.24; Hungary 1.11; Republic of Ireland 0.97; Spain 0.78; Netherlands 0.70; Scotland 0.54; England and Wales 0.41; Taiwan 0.37; Singapore 0.21; Mauritius 0.19; Hong Kong 0.14; South Korea 0.12; Japan 0.05. All this data, and the info on Japan is interesting, Oz, but what has this to do with the USA? There are an estimated 300+ million guns in circulation here. How do you propose to eliminate them? Are you willing to accept the carnage and civil war that would ensue with a government gun grab attempt, which, by all estimates, would fail miserably. And even if a gun grab were modestly successful, what do you propose to do about the remaining 100+ million guns that would then be illegally possessed. Tragedies such as the Virginia Tech episode are most unfortunate, and are no doubt a by-product of our culture of guns and violence. But we are stuck with the problem. It's waaaay too far advanced to solve at this point with gun control or gun grabs. A more reasonable approach might be to deal with the culture of violence so prevalent in movies, TV, pop music, video games, etc. I've heard quite a bit of gun control rhetoric on TV over the past 18 hours, and most of it centers around handguns, ostensibly due to the concealability of them. In light of this it's important to note that the second worst shooting of this nature occurred in the 60s with a wacko picking 23 people off from a clock tower on a Texas college campus using a high-powered rifle with a scope. Hardly a concealment issue. Max I was reading an article recently about all the changes that have been made in society when so many said "It just can't be done". Gotta start somewhere. Jon made the same point about slavery. I asked him if he was willing to see the country enter a period of civil war with hundreds of thousands dead, infrastructure destroyed, and an economy in the toilet for decades in order to grab guns and save a few dozen lives each year. So far no answer. Max He's Pacific time...he's probably still lolling in bed... |
Guns outlawed in Japan
Maxprop wrote: They
can sleep well at night with the deluded belief that they did something "good." Well, that sounds a lot better than going to sleep with the abysmally apathetic defeatist attitude that nothing can be done. Cheers Marty |
Guns outlawed in Japan
In article . net,
Maxprop wrote: Of course not. But we're not comparing equal demographics here. Japan is a tiny country, albeit heavily populated, but nowhere near the landmass or huge concentration of people found in the USA. Apples/oranges. You need to stop sniffing the glue... much higher concentration per mile in Japan. g -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
Guns outlawed in Japan
In article .net,
Maxprop wrote: The feasibility of disarming 128 million citizens is radically different than doing so with 3 billion folks. That said, people still get shot and killed by gun-wielding wackos in Japan. Ummm... 300 million, not 3 billion in the US last time I counted. -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
Guns outlawed in Japan
In article .net,
Maxprop wrote: Jon made the same point about slavery. I asked him if he was willing to see the country enter a period of civil war with hundreds of thousands dead, infrastructure destroyed, and an economy in the toilet for decades in order to grab guns and save a few dozen lives each year. So far no answer. I know you have terrible weather, but I actually went sailing. A few dozen? We should be so lucky. -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
Guns outlawed in Japan
|
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... In article .net, Maxprop wrote: The feasibility of disarming 128 million citizens is radically different than doing so with 3 billion folks. That said, people still get shot and killed by gun-wielding wackos in Japan. Ummm... 300 million, not 3 billion in the US last time I counted. Right. It only seems like three billion when in the Bay Area. g Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 14:04:35 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: OzOne wrote in message . .. On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 12:43:02 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: So you think that all other murders couls push Japan up from the bottom of the list to the US's unenviable position at the top? I sincerely doubt that. Of course not. But we're not comparing equal demographics here. Japan is a tiny country, albeit heavily populated, but nowhere near the landmass or huge concentration of people found in the USA. Apples/oranges. Max Have you been to Japan? Three times over the past 25 years. Population density in cities is far beyond anything you have , a recipe for social turmoil but it just doesn't happen. Having far more land than the Japanese islands, we certainly don't experience the population density seen in places such as Hokkaido, Tokyo, and a few other cities. But sheer numbers don't lie. When you're dealing with a population of 3 billion vs. 128 million, the statistical probability of such things as shootings increases by at least a factor of nearly 24x. And that's before taking societal or cultural factors into account. The feasibility of disarming 128 million citizens is radically different than doing so with 3 billion folks. That said, people still get shot and killed by gun-wielding wackos in Japan. Max Get back to me with real numbers, Please. Sorry--a 'minor' decimal problem there. When were you last in Japan? I'm looking at a ski trip in our winter. 1998. My wife went on business and I tagged along for the sightseeing. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Martin Baxter" wrote in message ... Maxprop wrote: They can sleep well at night with the deluded belief that they did something "good." Well, that sounds a lot better than going to sleep with the abysmally apathetic defeatist attitude that nothing can be done. I never implied nothing can be done. The answers have been her all along. So have some worthwhile laws, if only they'd be enforced instead of plea bargained away every time a shooter goes to court. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 13:44:54 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: Gotta start somewhere. Jon made the same point about slavery. I asked him if he was willing to see the country enter a period of civil war with hundreds of thousands dead, infrastructure destroyed, and an economy in the toilet for decades in order to grab guns and save a few dozen lives each year. So far no answer. Max It's far more than a few dozen, Every year in the US more than 30,000 are killed by guns in murders, suicides and accidents, over 65,000 are injured. I'd think it's worth looking at. Gun control, as proposed by its advocates might result in saving a few dozen lives each year. The vast majority of gun deaths in this country are inner-city gangs and thugs shooting each other. Look it up. Gun control laws will have no effect on the inner city gangs. They possess their guns illegally as it is. Washington DC has the toughest gun control laws in the country. It also is perennially a leader in gun deaths. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
* Maxprop wrote, On 4/18/2007 7:10 PM:
It's far more than a few dozen, Every year in the US more than 30,000 are killed by guns in murders, suicides and accidents, over 65,000 are injured. I'd think it's worth looking at. Gun control, as proposed by its advocates might result in saving a few dozen lives each year. The vast majority of gun deaths in this country are inner-city gangs and thugs shooting each other. Look it up. It looks like you're taking stupid lessons from Joe. You should really look at the stats sometime. First of all, half of the gun deaths are from suicide, and the suicide rate in inner cities is actually quite low. However, I appreciate that those against gun control assume that anyone who would commit suicide by gun would find another way, but that another debate, so I'll move on. Although the large cities certainly have more than their share of murder, almost half of all homicides are in communities under 100,000 population, a full third in communities under 50,000. There were a lot a family murders - over 1800 were in the immediate family, plus 600 boy/girlfriends. Also, there were 400 fiends and neighbors. Or looking at it another way, 2000 of the victims were women who were not likely to be gang members. Several thousand were murders during a felony, half of those robberies. And the largest category is "arguments." When all are tallied, it turns out that of 14,860 homicides in 2005, only 754 were considered "Juvenile gang killings" and another 96 were "Gangland." You can argue that there are large number of "not specified" and "unknown," but there's no way you can jiggle the numbers such that the "vast majority" are inner-city gangs. http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/05cius/offens...rtable_09.html Gun control laws will have no effect on the inner city gangs. They possess their guns illegally as it is. True. Here in Boston, when the gang's arsenal runs low, they take a road trip to VA or NC. Washington DC has the toughest gun control laws in the country. It also is perennially a leader in gun deaths. True. They only have to take a subway ride to buy a gun. Here's a question for you: if guns aren't used outside of inner cities, why does everyone out of the cities need a gun for protection? |
Guns outlawed in Japan
OzOne wrote:
On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 13:44:54 GMT, "Maxprop" scribbled thusly: Gotta start somewhere. Jon made the same point about slavery. I asked him if he was willing to see the country enter a period of civil war with hundreds of thousands dead, infrastructure destroyed, and an economy in the toilet for decades in order to grab guns and save a few dozen lives each year. So far no answer. Max It's far more than a few dozen, Every year in the US more than 30,000 are killed by guns in murders, suicides and accidents, over 65,000 are injured. I'd think it's worth looking at. Are you assuming that murder rates in the USA would drop if gun laws were a lot tighter? You're dreaming. Didn't happen in Australia and we're a *lot* less violent as a cultural group than the USA. http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/...der-rate/2006/ 10/23/1161455665717.html All that happened was a substitution of implement. If you have a hate/fear reaction to guns, you're probably happy. However, the stats show that people are getting murdered just the same. Doubt it makes any difference to them. Always keep in mind what you're actually trying to achieve. For people like you, it seems that murders by other means don't count as long as the gun related murders drop. For myself, I look at the overall figures and if there's no change, its obvious that availability of guns per se aren't making a difference. But then I understand statistics and it's obvious that you either don't or won't. I'm a pragmatist. If it was possible to eliminate all firearms (including from the police/military), perhaps it would be worth it. Since it patently isn't possible, why are we even trying? Like the War on Drugs - a great waste of time & money with zero chance of achieving the stated outcome. There's an unstated assumption by people like you (see above) that a drop in firearms will result in a drop in murders etc. That's wrong straight off. Secondly, *even if it were true*, how do you achieve the drop in ownership and how much are you prepared to pay to do it, in terms of money, curtailment of civil liberties, etc? IOW, how much do you personally think we should pay to eliminate firearms from a community? Random street searches? House searches without warrant? Registration of and restrictions on ownership of lathes, milling machines, tool steel, lead, other metals? How about electricity, aluminium and plastics? http://www.lindsaybks.com - Gingery books on building a metal foundry, basic lathe, shaper, drill press & milling machine basically from scrap. The genie got out of the bottle a long time ago and it's not possible to put it back in again. The idiots on the Right have their unachievable war on drugs. You have the analog war on guns. I'll listen closely to any proposal that has a chance of succeeding. Until you can ban steel, machine tools and common chemicals, you can't prevent people owning firearms. Last time I raised this all you did was metaphorically wave your hands and say that crims would always get guns. Duh. So what are you trying to achieve? The absolute *best* you can hope for is a society where the only 3 groups with firearms are the military, police and criminals (with little difference between the last 2, in Australia). Wonderful. To get this, you'd need to completely alter society and I strongly doubt you'd like the result. People like me, no probs. I'd be in one of the intelligence or defence materiels type organisations. Think I'll get my Tasmanian gun licence to go along with my NSW one. I just bought a new milling machine on Ebay, BTW. Less than $1K AUD. Now I have 3 mills & 3 lathes scattered over 2 states. PDW - who's had his hands on a loaded 50 cal BMG mounted on a ship in a capital city port. Nobody was afraid. Now, I'm off to dry dock. This has been a very busy season, the off season is going to be worse, and I'll be heading south again in August. Don't expect me to spend much time here.... especially given that you never come up with anything on point as to what you'd actually like to see as an outcome. Is it a drop in murders, assaults etc overall, or is it merely the elimination of firearms as an end in itself? Statistically, B != A. Pity you & Jon seem incapable of understanding that. It's dead easy to throw rocks at the USA WRT firearms abuse, Oz. Pointless, but easy. The 1996 firearms laws in Australia made zero difference to the overall murder rate. Can't see why you'd assume that similar laws in the USA would have a better outcome. Don't care enough to stick around and follow the red herrings I'm sure will be next so.... ciao. Maybe someone else will bother - which is why I've x-posted my reply. |
Guns outlawed in Japan
On Apr 18, 9:14 pm, PDW wrote:
You're dreaming. Didn't happen in Australia and we're a *lot* less violent as a cultural group than the USA. Jeff makes it clear he had no need to think about protecting his family from one of Boston many armed gangs. Infact he could care less about keeping his family safe. Just look at the dangerious cat he sails. Sad sacks like Jeff are under the illusion that only other people cats flip over all the time, and when his does the USCG will save his sorry ass. He also thinks the gun toting thugs are never ever going break into his house and kill him before the cops can come and save him and his family. Besides, he'd leave a loaded gun out for the kids to play with, so don't encourage him.. Joe |
Guns outlawed in Japan
In article . net,
Maxprop wrote: "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... In article .net, Maxprop wrote: The feasibility of disarming 128 million citizens is radically different than doing so with 3 billion folks. That said, people still get shot and killed by gun-wielding wackos in Japan. Ummm... 300 million, not 3 billion in the US last time I counted. Right. It only seems like three billion when in the Bay Area. g Suggestion... stay out the Castro district. -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... In article . net, Maxprop wrote: "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... In article .net, Maxprop wrote: The feasibility of disarming 128 million citizens is radically different than doing so with 3 billion folks. That said, people still get shot and killed by gun-wielding wackos in Japan. Ummm... 300 million, not 3 billion in the US last time I counted. Right. It only seems like three billion when in the Bay Area. g Suggestion... stay out the Castro district. Not to worry. If I drop something there, I let it lay. g Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
Maxprop wrote:
"Martin Baxter" wrote in message ... Maxprop wrote: They can sleep well at night with the deluded belief that they did something "good." Well, that sounds a lot better than going to sleep with the abysmally apathetic defeatist attitude that nothing can be done. I never implied nothing can be done. The answers have been her all along. So have some worthwhile laws, if only they'd be enforced instead of plea bargained away every time a shooter goes to court. I think that's just another right wing fallacy, "We need to lock more people up for longer!" The US already incarcerates something on the order of one quarter of the total of all people incarcerated on the planet. You have 2,320,000 in jails and prisons, include parolees and probationers and the total correctional population is over 7,000,000! You lead the world in incarceration rate, 701 per 100,000, China is down at 117 with 1.51 million behind bars. These statistics are actually somewhat misleading as the rate of violent crime (homicide, rape, robbery and assault) have been *declining* steadily since 1993. Most of these folks (in the US that is) are there because of "The War On Drugs". Perhaps the violent crime is declining because so many of those who would commit the crimes to obtain money for the drugs are in the slammer? Cheers Marty |
Guns outlawed in Japan
* Joe wrote, On 4/18/2007 10:40 PM:
On Apr 18, 9:14 pm, PDW wrote: You're dreaming. Didn't happen in Australia and we're a *lot* less violent as a cultural group than the USA. Jeff makes it clear he had no need to think about protecting his family from one of Boston many armed gangs. Infact he could care less about keeping his family safe. Now I understand why Joe keeps repeating any deranged nonsense he finds on the internet. He actually lives in a fantasy land. His is a dark world, where roving street gangs terrorize suburban neighborhoods, looking for liberal bumper stickers as markers of an unarmed household. Truth is, I live in the "Safest City in the Country." IIRC, the last murder we had was the infamous "Au Pair" murder about 10 years ago. Just look at the dangerious cat he sails. Sad sacks like Jeff are under the illusion that only other people cats flip over all the time, and when his does the USCG will save his sorry ass. Yes, last year alone, three times, a gang of roving sea serpents capsized my cat while we were moored in Vineyard Haven. I hate it when that happens. He also thinks the gun toting thugs are never ever going break into his house and kill him before the cops can come and save him and his family. The statistics are pretty clear that having a gun in the house makes it more dangerous. Besides, he'd leave a loaded gun out for the kids to play with, so don't encourage him.. It wouldn't happen in my house. However, from 2000 to 2004, 1400 kids 13 years old or younger died from firearms. Does that make you feel safer, Joe? |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Maxprop" wrote in message ink.net... " I don't recall. don't you know how to Google? |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Martin Baxter" wrote in message ... Maxprop wrote: They can sleep well at night with the deluded belief that they did something "good." Well, that sounds a lot better than going to sleep with the abysmally apathetic defeatist attitude that nothing can be done. But not near as good as going to bed with a Colt .45 under your pillow. Happiness Is A Warm Gun.... Scotty |
Guns outlawed in Japan
Bushco!
"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... In article . net, Maxprop wrote: bs deleted The Amish did it!!! g -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Jeff" wrote in message . .. * Here's a question for you: if guns aren't used outside of inner cities, why does everyone out of the cities need a gun for protection? Jeff, let's clear up a popular misconception, I have lots of guns, hadguns and rifles. I don't *NEED* them for protection. That's not why I bought them. Scotty |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Scotty" wrote in message
. .. "Maxprop" wrote in message ink.net... " I don't recall. don't you know how to Google? Don't hold it against him. Gonzoles can't recall much either. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
Guns outlawed in Japan
"Scotty" wrote in message . .. "Maxprop" wrote in message ink.net... " I don't recall. don't you know how to Google? Sure, but I don't discuss such things in mixed company. Max |
Guns outlawed in Japan
* * Here are gun-related deaths per 100,000 people in the world's 36 richest countries in 1994: United States 14.24; Brazil 12.95; Mexico 12.69; Estonia 12.26; Argentina 8.93; Northern Ireland 6.63; Finland 6.46; Switzerland 5.31; France 5.15; Canada 4.31; Norway 3.82; Austria 3.70; Portugal 3.20; Israel 2.91; Belgium 2.90; Australia 2.65; Slovenia 2.60; Italy 2.44; New Zealand 2.38; Denmark 2.09; Sweden 1.92; Kuwait 1.84; Greece 1.29; Germany 1.24; Hungary 1.11; Republic of Ireland 0.97; Spain 0.78; Netherlands 0.70; Scotland 0.54; England and Wales 0.41; Taiwan 0.37; Singapore 0.21; Mauritius 0.19; Hong Kong 0.14; South Korea 0.12; Japan 0.05. A number of those countries you mention have misserable governments in power that would have not obtained power if the people were armed. That's why the wise forfathers in the U.S. made gun ownership legal. Plus, no country in their righ mind would ever invade the U.S. because they know the military arn't the only citizens with weapons. I would guess civilians alone would give an invading army a damn good fight. It's estimated that there are 40,000 AR15'S in California alone. |
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