Why shouldn’t we have the right to pack heat?Christopher White Wednesday 4 August 2010 It’s almost blasphemy to say this, but it needs to be said: Britain’s gun laws should be massively relaxed.After a summer in which not one but two armed men caused chaos in northern England, it would have been easy for the Lib-Con coalition to react to the media attention by announcing some new restriction on guns. Derrick Bird, the Cumbrian taxi driver who shot 12 people in a killing spree on 2 June, has long since slipped from the media’s attention. But Monday’s funeral of Raoul Moat, who in July shot three people and then went on the run for a week before shooting himself, was a big story in this week’s papers.
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Any further tightening of the UK’s already corset-like gun laws is looking increasingly unlikely as the two inquiries into recent shooting events near completion, and a planned debate on the subject was not considered important enough to squeeze in, as promised, before the start of the parliamentary recess. And with good reason: extending what are already amongst the strictest laws in the world would take aim unfairly at 200,000 perfectly peaceable firearm owners, and more than half-a-million shotgun certificate holders, on the basis of one individual snapping perhaps once a decade. Our new prime minister quite correctly said that you can’t legislate for a switch going off in someone’s head.
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The evidence used to argue this case is invariably specious. The Gun Control Network puts itself in the line of fire with a particularly deceptive example. Its website has a graph claiming to show a strong link between gun ownership and gun deaths across several countries. A clue to why it is misleading can be found in that word ‘deaths’, for it includes suicides as well as murders. To add insult to gunshot wound, it overlooks other types of homicide. Murders specifically from firearms are bound to go up where they are readily available, but may well be nothing more than a substitute for the stabbings, poisonings and bludgeonings that might otherwise have occurred.
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Even evidence taken solely from the US shows gun bans could be counterproductive as well as illiberal. Take Florida, one of the most gun-totin’ states in the union and a ‘shall issue’ jurisdiction: this means that the granting of permits to carry a concealed weapon is subject only to meeting a set of minimum requirements, including a background check and training on handgun safety. It changed the law on concealed carry in 1987, allowing its citizens to carry a weapon in public as long as it was out of sight, four years before the peak in crime rates that saw American civilians increasingly reaching for guns so that they could demand that evil-doers reach for the skies.
By the time taxi driver Derrick Bird had wreaked havoc upon sleepy English villages, Florida had issued more than 1.8million permits to carry a firearm. In the 23 years since first allowing its residents to pack heat in public, the Sunshine State has revoked only 167 licences on the grounds of gun violence: legally carried weapons are overwhelmingly not used to commit crimes. The same can be said of firearms that remain in the home, or on the firing range or hunting ground: estimates of gun-related crimes in which the weapons involved are legally owned are around one to two per cent.
There’s more. Of the top 70 most crime-ridden US cities, Miami also has one of the lowest per capita rates of rape. This may be simply a coincidence, or it may substantiate a saying popular around those parts: God made man and woman, but Samuel Colt made them equal. Figures from 50 freedom-of-information requests on the incidence of violent crime and numbers of concealed-carry permits for the biggest US cities reveal that, when unemployment rate, population density and public spending are accounted for, the crime rate stays more or less flat with increasing numbers of permits, suggesting a feedback between the two and a small deterrent effect. emphasis added Christopher White is a London-based writer and journalist. http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/9385/ Let's dump the Second AmendmentAugust 2, 2010When the Second Amendment was added to the Constitution back in the 1700s, this country consisted of a few states along the Eastern Seaboard.
All of the country west of that area was heavy forest inhabited by wild animals, savage Indians and numerous bandits. Food was obtained by growing it yourself and hunting for animals for meat.
Them days is gone forever.
The actual purpose of the Second Amendment was to create a state militia or National Guard. This we have done with excellent results.
It's time our legislators woke up to this fact. If no one had guns, no one would need guns.
I have made a study of this situation. Here is one example, out of many, that proves my point:
Sometime back in the 1990s I contacted the Japanese Embassy in Washington because I had heard that Japanese civilians were not permitted to own firearms. As a result, there were about 97 murders with firearms.
That same year, we suffered some 16,700 murders. This situation is true for the several other countries who boast of the same limitation.
What we need to do is void the Second Amendment and start collecting guns from all the residents of this country. No one but the military and peace officers should be permitted to carry them. All those weapons should be melted down and made into railroad track. It is not possible to make this happen in a year to two, but the longest journey begins with but a single step in the right direction.
One of the first acts will be to wipe out the NRA, or as I have always referred to it, "Murder Inc."
Come on, USA, let's join the world of intelligent, life-valuing people and dump that Second Amendment. Now!
BERNARD ASH
Concord
http://www.concordmonitor.com/article/lets-dump-the-second-amendment