Couldn't agree more, I think we are on the same page here buddy.
........
Couldn't agree more, I think we are on the same page here buddy.
Were they pink and fluffytotally forgot that I had my spare set of handcuffs in my day sack I use for work, quite embarrassing to say the least but mistakes do happen, and I am ever sympathetic to peoples 'oversights'.
Were they pink and fluffy
OK, but understand that you're not safer because of concealed carry. Fact: California has extremely restrictive gun laws, Texas has quite liberal ones.
If your thesis about an armed citizenry controlling crime is correct, them Texas should have a substantially lower violent crime rate than California.
But in fact, California and Texas have almost identical violent crime rates. So the people carrying in Texas -- still a minority of the population, fyi -- have had zero effect on crime rates.
Also FYI, Florida has very liberal gun laws -- open carry, no permits, etc., -- and it has a crime rate that is 50% higher than either California or Texas.
In other words, EDC has zero effect on crime.
I didn't say criminals are a fantasy. I've lived in plenty of very rough US neighborhoods and been in plenty of scrapes and I know the UK and the issues you face there pretty well.
What I said was the idea that EDC is going to protect you is a fantasy. As matter of fact it almost never happens that someone successfully stops an attack by pulling their own weapon.
The only area where armed citizenry prove to be a good deterrent is in the case of certain classes of home crime -- when crooks have a reasonable expectation that they'll face an armed homeowner, they go elsewhere.
On the street, you're dreaming of you think pulling out your weapon will make a difference. Street crime has an entirely different dynamic -- the crooks won't make a move unless they've got the drop on you.
This happens to even highly trained people. Nearly all cop killings -- and they're armed and trained, of course -- happen because of surprise. The bad guy pulls a gun and pops them before the cop can respond.
One of the fallacies of these discussions always has to do with the idea that the criminal behavior -- i.e. they can get guns or knives because they don't care about the law so we should be able to arm in turn -- has any bearing on whether it's fair an reasonable to limit the freedom's of law abiding people.
These are two distinct issues.
On the criminal side, the laws are valuable because they give law enforcement the means of dealing with people who are clearly carrying weapons for no good reason.
Now when it comes to limiting the freedoms of law abiding citizens the laws get pretty grating. In general I'm against most gun and knife laws because they unfairly burden law abiding citizens. However, I'm not blind to the utility of the laws.
In other words, the best argument against these laws is not "I need a the ability to carry and defend myself" because that's both statistically and specifically fallacious. People aren't getting into knife and gun fights to defend themselves (see cop example above). THAT'S the fantasy I'm talking about.
The better argument is simple: a society should not unfairly or unreasonably burden law abiding citizens in order to control criminals. There are other ways to control crime that are more effective. If you're focusing on disarmament, you're focusing on the wrong thing.
I would point out Florida's Murder rate has dropped since they changed their laws. It was worse before.
At least 1.5million crimes are stopped yearly in the US by armed citzens. As a criminal you have an almost 3-1 chance of being shot and killed by a cilvilian. With an error rate of 2%, compared to the Police's 11%.
Actual carry laws drop a states crimes by 10%. The more people who carry the better it gets.
Cite your source for that please...
If you're referring to the 1987 change in right to carry in Florida, please be aware that the dip in certain specific crimes afterwards is a matter of a lot of contention in pro- and anti-gun circles. It's pretty dangerous to use the 1987 change to make your case.
Florida has been one of the most crime ridden states in America for decades -- here's a 1989 story about it having the highest violent crime rate in the country (two years after right-to-carry passed).
http://news.google.com/newspapers?n...M8PAAAAIBAJ&sjid=9owDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5561,5429695
There's tons of material out here like this on Florida. The pro-carry crowd likes to cherry pick stats from a few years in the early 1990s to defend right-to-carry. The true picture isn't so cut-and-dried (And remember I'm not saying that from an anti-gun perspective, I'm extremely pro-gun -- I just feel we need to frank.)
FYI, Florida's crime rate (and murder rate) is on the rise again and is getting back to 1980s levels. Here's a quick article from the Florida Criminal Attorney's blog with some stats:
http://www.floridacriminalattorneysblog.com/2009/03/florida-criminal-attorneys-tre.html
And here from 2007 on Florida's massive growth in crime:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-10-31-fla-crime-rate_x.htm
Also remember that during the intervening years from 1987 there has been a significant increase in law enforcement resources in Florida too and that resulted in a drop in crime.
Further, in the economic boom of the 1990s Florida benefited enormously, also driving down crime rates since crime is tied to the economy. Once the economy softened after Sept. 11, crime started a nearly decade long increase in Florida.
The anti-gun crowd likes to say that EDC creates a wild west atmosphere. They're lying and there's not evidence to support that. The pro-gun lobby likes to say EDC makes the streets safer -- it's lying too, there's no strong evidence to support that position.
EDC simply doesn't have an impact on street crime, one way or the other.
I'll return to this important fact: California, Texas and Florida are quite similar in terms of demographic makeup and the first two have nearly identical crime rates even though Texas has liberal gun laws and California doesn't. Florida has vastly higher crime rates by a large margin even though it has extremely liberal gun laws.
Look, I love guns. But you simply cannot craft a compelling case that open carry for guns or knives has any material impact on crime rates (pro or con).
I would really like to see a definitive source for this statement.
If you're using the self-reported survey the NRA likes to brandish, you're got to be really careful because self-reported defensive use can be massively overstated.
The statistical challenge to the self-reported defensive use is familiar and pretty compelling: for years in self reported surveys the number of reports of successful defense tracks to a stable percentage (if I recall correctly it's a little less than 20 percent -- but I can't find my source on that at the moment...) of total gun owners.
And this percentage remains unchanged irrespective of changes in the underlying crime rate. In other words, about 20 percent of gun owners like to say they've used guns in protective circumstances whether they have or not. And FYI, if you hear a bump in the night outside and you grab your gun it qualifies as a protective use in these surveys...
Plus, I've yet to see such a survey which breaks out street crime vs home defense, and the issue at hand is EDC's effect on street crime.
If you've got some source not tied to the NRA, I'd love to see it. (Both the NRA and the anti-gun lobby can't be trusted with these stats -- they've got too much at stake in the argument and both tend to get pretty irrational and engage in nutty hyperbole...)
In any event, the problem with numbers like those above are obvious: no one that I'm aware of keeps a database of aborted crimes. So you're forced to rely on self reporting from people who have a vested interest in inflating the number.
Leaving aside the heavily disputed Florida numbers, where are you coming up with that stat? And are we talking street crime or all crime? And is that 10% drop in violent crime or all crime? I'd like that backed up, in other words.
Don't get me wrong, I'm in favor of non-restrictive gun laws. I worry about it some, yes, because I've been very heavily trained in firearm usage and the notion of lots of untrained people out there carrying weapons make my pupils dilate. However it's hard to back that worry of mine up with stats because there's honestly no statistical support for it.
What I DO think is wrong is rallying support for loosening gun or knife laws based on deeply flawed data advanced by people with a position to defend. There are better arguments to make.
And I DO worry about people walking around thinking that EDC is going to make any difference in street crime. It won't. EDC neither increases nor decreases crime -- all it delivers is a false sense of security.
This is especially true when it comes to EDC knives for defensive purposes -- if anyone actually thinks they're going to get into a knife fight, they're better off staying home rather than going out.
I find all defensive EDC to be a silly fantasy, but defensive knife EDC = sheer madness in my book!
My problem is, when the drugged up idiot is trying to kill me, I start unarmed. The phrase here is now, and has always been, it is better to be judged by 12, than carried by 6. So as I said before, what are my choices when the 14 year old theatens me with a knife? When the mental patient is running round playing pin the kitchen knife on the innocent passerby? Under UK law I cannot carry for defense, but a criminal can carry for offense. That makes no sense!
true
i had a drugged up idiot attack me just before xmas the first thing i knew about was when i regained conciousness covered in blood
The two safest places to live in the US, are the highest gun carry places. The safest place to live in the UK is a Car Park. Criminals avoid gun owners.
Think about it, the more people with guns the more chance a criminal is going to die, so they go somewhere else.
My problem is, when the drugged up idiot is trying to kill me, I start unarmed. The phrase here is now, and has always been, it is better to be judged by 12, than carried by 6. So as I said before, what are my choices when the 14 year old theatens me with a knife? When the mental patient is running round playing pin the kitchen knife on the innocent passerby? Under UK law I cannot carry for defense, but a criminal can carry for offense. That makes no sense!
What two places in the US are you referring to? I'd be interested in looking at their crime stats.
I don't dispute that guns can have a deterrent effect -- especially when it comes to home crime.
However, to state the above as if it's an absolute is wrong. Here's why: a huge amount of gun violence in the US is committed on bad guy vs. bad guy and their assumption is that everyone is armed.
For example, gang bangers in South Central LA shoot more of each other than anyone else -- and they're all armed. No deterrent effect there, eh?
More guns on the street doesn't equal safer streets. And the converse is true too -- there's no compelling evidence that fewer guns on the streets means less crime.
This is the argument I see posed all over in these discussions, but it's based on imaginary circumstances that almost never happen.
How do we this is a fantasy? Simple: if an armed citizen pulling out a weapon and saving the day against the "fill-in-the-blanks" street maniac happened often, the gun lobby would be crowing about it constantly as proof that carry laws work. Heck, NRA would be making TV shows about these everyday heroes and there their guns.
And in fact, the gun lobby can't deliver these poster boys (and girls) for armed defense because they can't find them.
I'm not saying it *never* happens, just almost never. The circumstances you describe above are vanishingly small in reality.
You're more likely to get hit by lightning than to encounter "the mental patient running round playing pin the kitchen knife on the innocent passerby" that you imagine above.
So you'd be wiser -- for defensive purposes -- to carry a lightening rod
Of course then again, maybe you do live in a neighborhood with mental patients -- or Gordon Ramsey -- running around with kitchen knives....
The thing is, it doesn't work, so certain people think that if limiting criminals access to weapons doesn't work, the answer must be to cut them off altogether, and the people who obey the law will just have to suffer. You see in their minds, they've taken care of the problem, no more knives must mean no more knife crime, but of course you can never take away all the knives so trying to is really doing more harm then good.
So basically there will always be crime, even if you took away every single knife, the criminals would either find a source for them (and they don't care if they're illegal, they were already using them illegally to begin with) or just start using something else! What's next, no more baseball because the bat could be used to beat someone to death? Restricting weapons doesn't work, there will always be people who are willing to hurt other people, you take their weapons away, they use a different weapon, you take those away, they use their fists, there's always a way to hurt others, so we might as well accept that and focus our attention on the criminals themselves rather than which weapon they choose to use.
Er no, nobody 'can carry' fact is violent situations usually flair up with little or no warning so it would be unlikely you would get to use any concealed weapon as a defensive implement.
Your statement makes no sense!
People mistake a weapon with being a defence when in truth the first and most effective line of defence is awareness,
after that verbal intervention,
then physical contact
and far far last a weapon/tool.
The Police don't straight away club you with a weapon nope they talk then its hands not weapons.
If your that concerned DO A SELF DEFENCE COURSE!
Hope you were ok William.
So very true, that along with the fact that I hate the idea of untrained
civillians walking with the streets with guns/knives, there is more chance of misuse than actually accurate, correct usage.
I your delusional enougt to think weapon ownership/carriage then you are exactly the sort of person who should not be allowed to carry such an item.
If we focus on the things that *start* crime -- lack of education, dysfunctional families, lack of economic opportunity, etc. -- we'll be doing something much more effective.
Actually, despite politicians promising to create a 'bill of rights', no doubt loaded with their own ideas, we here in the UK have had a Bill Of Rights for over 300 years, since 1688 in fact.The big problem with UK law is we need a bill of rights, and constitution.
Actually, despite politicians promising to create a 'bill of rights', no doubt loaded with their own ideas, we here in the UK have had a Bill Of Rights for over 300 years, since 1688 in fact.
From here: http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?activeTextDocId=1518621