Seth wrote:In other words, you're full of shit and you lose again.
OK.. so that's argument settled right? Anyone want to go for Thai? No? No that's cool. See yall tomorrow?Blind groper wrote:Why do you persist with bullshit?
Seth wrote:In other words, you're full of shit and you lose again.
OK.. so that's argument settled right? Anyone want to go for Thai? No? No that's cool. See yall tomorrow?Blind groper wrote:Why do you persist with bullshit?
I don't. Why do you?Blind groper wrote:Seth
Why do you persist with bullshit?
I'm applying Ockham's Razor to the question of where 8 million guns last year went. I find it implausible that every single one of them was bought by a current owner. I've been to too many gun shows and watched too many clueless newbies buying guns like they were going out of style (which they might be) to give your notion any credibility.You just said yourself that you do not know if the number of gun owners has increased or dropped. Yet, in spite of your self admitted ignorance, you are jumping to unsupported conclusions.
Horseshit. Irrelevant red herrings. Doesn't matter what the "world wide" crime rate is doing, it ONLY matters that the crime rate in the US, including specifically the handgun murder rate, is DECLINING while the number of guns in our society is rapidly increasing.There is a world wide drop in violent crime. That drop is happening in the USA, Canada, Australia, NZ, Britain, Europe and more. All those nations (except the USA) with falling crime rates have close to zero civilian hand gun ownership. It is clear that hand gun ownership, increasing or falling, has nothing to do with the global drop in violent crime.
That is as it may be, but the fact still remains that as more and more handguns flow in to the hands of the law-abiding, and they are allowed to actually carry them in public for self-protection, murders CONTINUE to DECLINE. They are NOT going UP with the addition of handguns, which categorically disproves your thesis. Are you really that stupid that you can't make this simple rational mathematical conclusion?It is equally clear that the high level of hand gun ownership in the USA is the main reason (along with the sick gun culture) why America is the murder capital of the western world.
Nope, not in the US.More hand guns means more murders.
Over the past few hours Seth has posted three times in this thread, but failed to reply to the above challenge. Coincidence? I doubt it.Hermit wrote:Yes, that 18 year span is to be found within a 40 year span. What is the relevance of that observation to your assertion that tens of millions more handguns in the US in the last 40 years lead to a 49% decrease in violent crime during that period? There is no factual support for it, Seth. Despite the tens of millions more handguns in the US in the last 40 years, violent crime has not dropped by 49% in that time span. In fact, it has not even decreased by 2.5%, and the rate of rapes has actually increased.Seth wrote:Is that 18 year span to be found within a 40 year span? I didn't say it dropped uniformly each year. Crime is down. That's a fact.Hermit wrote:Yes, firearm-related homicides declined 39%, from 18,253 in 1993 to 11,101 in 2011 and nonfatal firearm crimes declined 69%, from 1.5 million victimisations in 1993 to 467,300 victimisations in 2011, but that is over a period of 18 years, rather than the 40 year period you have mentioned. Fact is - and you steadfastly ignore it - that over that 40 year period, the incidence of violent crime per 100,000 of population has not decreased by 49%. It has decreased by less than 2.5%. Furthermore, nowhere in the articles you quoted has an increased private ownership of firearms even been mentioned as a possible reason for this vastly smaller decline in violent crime. That is why I regard your outpourings as the result of you living in a fact-free zone.Seth wrote:What part of the following is unclear?Hermit wrote:I guess a lie repeated sufficiently often becomes regarded as the truth. Isn't that what the propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, said? At any rate, the blips you quoted from the Bureau of Justice do not even remotely claim anything in support of what you are asserting. Until you provide data that do that, I stand by my opinion that your ideology is plainly immune to any influence by facts.You can read and you do understand the meaning of the word "declined" don't you?Firearm-related homicides declined 39%, from 18,253 in 1993 to 11,101 in 2011.
Nonfatal firearm crimes declined 69%, from 1.5 million victimizations in 1993 to 467,300 victimizations in 2011.
Firearm violence accounted for about 70% of all homicides and less than 10% of all nonfatal violent crime from 1993 to 2011.
From 1993 to 2011, about 70% to 80% of firearm homicides and 90% of nonfatal firearm victimizations were committed with a handgun.
Males, blacks, and persons ages 18 to 24 had the highest rates of firearm homicide from 1993 to 2010.
About 61% of nonfatal firearm violence was reported to the police in 2007-11.
More guns, less crime.
Come back when you have credible evidence that demolish those facts.
You're pettifogging. I'll just retract the "40" and "49%" and replace it with the quote from the BJS above. Now fuck off.Hermit wrote:Over the past few hours Seth has posted three times in this thread, but failed to reply to the above challenge. Coincidence? I doubt it.
Oh, a faux retraction. As for me fucking off, that's not going to happen. I find the topic interesting, and my motivation to participate in the discussion is to provide a bit of perspective that the prejudices of both the pro-gun and the gun-control advocates lack.Seth wrote:You're pettifogging. I'll just retract the "40" and "49%" and replace it with the quote from the BJS above. Now fuck off.Hermit wrote:Over the past few hours Seth has posted three times in this thread, but failed to reply to the above challenge. Coincidence? I doubt it.
Oh, come on, don't be such a wuss.Hermit wrote:Oh, a faux retraction. As for me fucking off, that's not going to happen. I find the topic interesting, and my motivation to participate in the discussion is to provide a bit of perspective that the prejudices of both the pro-gun and the gun-control advocates lack.Seth wrote:You're pettifogging. I'll just retract the "40" and "49%" and replace it with the quote from the BJS above. Now fuck off.Hermit wrote:Over the past few hours Seth has posted three times in this thread, but failed to reply to the above challenge. Coincidence? I doubt it.
Well, it's clear cut for Australia anyway...or is it? The evidence seems to indicate that the gun ban and massive seizure of private arms did fuck-all to solve violent crime or homicide.We have a fairly clear-cut, real-world social laboratory case regarding the effects of gun-control in Australia, and the statistics available are - to say the least - so ambivalent that they support neither side. Homicides, armed and unarmed robberies have been decreasing at the same rate in the years before as well as after the 1996 National Agreement on Firearms that resulted in the banning of any automatic or semi-automatic rifles. Assaults, rapes and suicides have been increasing at unchanged rates before as well as after that agreement.
New Australian Study Shows More Guns, Less Crime
Monday, 4 March 2013, 9:51 am
Press Release: WiSH
New Australian Study Shows More Guns, Less Crime
New research shows there are more guns but less gun crime in New South Wales, Australia. Although the number of legally owned firearms has increased substantially over the past decade, firearm crime has decreased.
The study, in press with an international peer-reviewed journal, found that the number of murders with a firearm, shoot with intent to murder offences, and armed robbery with a firearm have all declined steadily despite ongoing rises in legal firearms ownership.
The author of the study, Dr Samara McPhedran, said “Typically, Australian firearms legislation has been based on a ‘less guns, less crime’ view, which assumes that reducing the number of legally owned guns in society will lead to reductions in firearm misuse.”
“However, the results from this study suggest there is little, if any, relationship between the number of legally owned guns in Australia’s most populous jurisdiction, and levels of gun crime in that state.”
“In other words, more guns does not mean more crime.”
The study found no evidence that rising levels of legal firearm ownership are linked with increasing levels of firearm theft; the opposite was observed, with ongoing declines in theft occurring over a period of years.
The study concludes targeted law enforcement interventions that disrupt criminal activity, along with community-based crime prevention initiatives, may be the most appropriate and effective focus for violence reduction strategies.
AUSTRALIA: MORE VIOLENT CRIME DESPITE GUN BAN
April 13, 2009
It is a common fantasy that gun bans make society safer. In 2002 -- five years after enacting its gun ban -- the Australian Bureau of Criminology acknowledged there is no correlation between gun control and the use of firearms in violent crime. In fact, the percent of murders committed with a firearm was the highest it had ever been in 2006 (16.3 percent), says the D.C. Examiner.
Even Australia's Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research acknowledges that the gun ban had no significant impact on the amount of gun-involved crime:
In 2006, assault rose 49.2 percent and robbery 6.2 percent.
Sexual assault -- Australia's equivalent term for rape -- increased 29.9 percent.
Overall, Australia's violent crime rate rose 42.2 percent.
Moreover, Australia and the United States -- where no gun-ban exists -- both experienced similar decreases in murder rates:
Between 1995 and 2007, Australia saw a 31.9 percent decrease; without a gun ban, America's rate dropped 31.7 percent.
During the same time period, all other violent crime indices increased in Australia: assault rose 49.2 percent and robbery 6.2 percent.
Sexual assault -- Australia's equivalent term for rape -- increased 29.9 percent.
Overall, Australia's violent crime rate rose 42.2 percent.
At the same time, U.S. violent crime decreased 31.8 percent: rape dropped 19.2 percent; robbery decreased 33.2 percent; aggravated assault dropped 32.2 percent.
Australian women are now raped over three times as often as American women.
While this doesn't prove that more guns would impact crime rates, it does prove that gun control is a flawed policy. Furthermore, this highlights the most important point: gun banners promote failed policy regardless of the consequences to the people who must live with them, says the Examiner.
Source: Howard Nemerov, "Australia experiencing more violent crime despite gun ban," Free Republic, April 9, 2009.
What you don't see is a significant increase in crime, or gun crime rates in either the US or NSW where more guns are available now than before.If the prognostications of the pro-gun lobby were right, we would have seen a statistically significant upturn of the rate of increase in all categories of crime. That is plainly not the case. If the prognostications of the pro-control lobby were right, on the other hand, were right, we'd expect to see a statistically significant downturn of the rate of increase, or even an actual decrease in those rates.
Right. I discount suicide as a factor in gun policy because its not criminals victimizing others, it's people engaging in voluntary conduct, which I view as a fundamental human right. The right to end an intolerable life is, as far as I'm concerned, a paramount right that all governments should protect. Many don't, and the prime reason for this is the potential loss to the workforce and economy. Suicide wasn't outlawed in the US until the Industrial Revolution, when manufacturers became frustrated that the people they were essentially enslaving in horrific working conditions were committing suicide and thereby increasing the costs of labor. Other prohibitions on suicide have traditionally been religious in nature, which should be discounted by public policy.Gun-control advocates point to the fact that in Australia the use of firearms to commit suicide has indeed dropped dramatically, but they ignore the fact that simultaneously the use of other means to end one's life has increased even more dramatically.
Yup.They also turn a blind eye to the fact that Switzerland, where military conscription for each conscript lasts until he is 35 years old, and he takes his military-grade assault weapon home during that time, the homicide rate is lower than that pertaining to Australia, where military style weapons are banned outright.
This demonstrates the fact that mass killings are not causally related to the availability of semi-automatic rifles or large-capacity ammunition magazines. The largest mass killing in US history was committed with gasoline and a match.They also ignore the fact that while since the gun control act in Australia we have not had a single massacre, neither have there been any in New Zealand in the same time span, though that country experience them before then as well. The only difference between the two countries is that it remains legal for New Zealanders to privately own assault rifles.
So, do you think that the 50,000 or so laws currently on the books that exercise rather strict controls over firearms to be adequate? What new laws would you propose to rectify some problem with current policies that you see?In conclusion, I find that the hysterical screeching from both ends of the gun discussion spectrum are utterances of pure prejudice rather than based on considerations of available data. If forced to answer a question like "Are you in favour (or against) the ability to own firearms, yes or no?" I'd answer affirmatively in regard to "in favour" and negatively to "against", but I'd insist that reasonable controls are exercised in the process.
Hermit wrote:We have a fairly clear-cut, real-world social laboratory case regarding the effects of gun-control in Australia, and the statistics available are - to say the least - so ambivalent that they support neither side. Homicides, armed and unarmed robberies have been decreasing at the same rate in the years before as well as after the 1996 National Agreement on Firearms that resulted in the banning of any automatic or semi-automatic rifles. Assaults, rapes and suicides have been increasing at unchanged rates before as well as after that agreement.
Isn't that precisely what I said? Oh wait, yes it is:Seth wrote:Well, it's clear cut for Australia anyway...or is it? The evidence seems to indicate that the gun ban and massive seizure of private arms did fuck-all to solve violent crime or homicide.
You need to take a remedial course in reading comprehension.Hermit wrote:Homicides, armed and unarmed robberies have been decreasing at the same rate in the years before as well as after the 1996 National Agreement on Firearms that resulted in the banning of any automatic or semi-automatic rifles. Assaults, rapes and suicides have been increasing at unchanged rates before as well as after that agreement.
WTF? You yourself have authored a number of posts warning us of the dramatic increase of assaults, rapes, robberies, home invasions et cetera, should there be fewer guns carried in private hands. Besides, how is it even possible to say "more guns, less crime" if the converse, "fewer guns, more crime." is not true?Seth wrote:And remember, we don't say "more guns, less crime" AND "fewer guns, more crime."
If your reading comprehension were up to it, you may have discerned from my previous post that the prohibition of gun ownership in private ownership is not it. It's also something I have mentioned during a gun control discussion in a previous thread on this forum one or two years ago. On that occasion I searched for factual backup regarding claim and counter-claim, and fundamentally changed my stance on gun control on the basis of what I found: An absence of guns does not change the underlying rates of increase or decrease of various categories of criminal events. So, I abandoned my support for gun control while maintaining that those who assert that more guns means less crime as well as those who assert that fewer guns means less crime are talking from a fact-free zone. Until, of course they provide the appropriate statistics, and by that I don't mean cherry-picked and/or misapplied figures that they think are convincing, but statistics that are bullet-proof, if you excuse the pun, to their respective cases.Seth wrote:Tell us of something new and novel that you believe would provide a statistically significant drop in firearms crime.
You may be right for all I know, but this thread is not titled "Hand Guns Because". Also, in order to backup your assertion you need to cite examples where an increase or decrease of hand gun ownership in any particular social location has had a commensurate increase or decrease in the rate of murder.Blind groper wrote:The Australian situation is different to that in the USA in that there are next to zero hand guns in civilian possession in Australia. It is hand guns that are the big problem in the USA, where fully half of all murders are delivered via hand gun. All other firearms put together kill only one sixth of those killed by hand guns.
Remove the hand guns, as has been done in Oz and all other civilised nations, and the murder rate drops dramatically.
In Oz, at least, there has never been a historical period where hand guns were widespread in the population. Possibly in the goldrush days to an extent, but with nothing like the cultural position they have assumed in the US.Hermit wrote:You may be right for all I know, but this thread is not titled "Hand Guns Because". Also, in order to backup your assertion you need to cite examples where an increase or decrease of hand gun ownership in any particular social location has had a commensurate increase or decrease in the rate of murder.Blind groper wrote:The Australian situation is different to that in the USA in that there are next to zero hand guns in civilian possession in Australia. It is hand guns that are the big problem in the USA, where fully half of all murders are delivered via hand gun. All other firearms put together kill only one sixth of those killed by hand guns.
Remove the hand guns, as has been done in Oz and all other civilised nations, and the murder rate drops dramatically.
No hand guns, no handgun murders. Indubitably. What interested me two years ago, was if the availability of privately owned firearms affected the gradient of murder, suicide and crime rates generally, and I found no evidence whatsoever in support for the right to bear arms, nor in support for its prohibition, and you have not provided any either up to this point.Blind groper wrote: Decrease in hand gun numbers versus murder rate?
I quoted this before for Japan. Hand gun murders are now pretty much zero year in and year out, which is a big drop from the days before strong anti hand guns measures were implemented. The reason is simple. It is now reported that only 77 hand guns are in civilian possession anywhere in Japan.
Seth, that's extremely poor reasoning and an obvious logical fallacy.Seth wrote:Horseshit. Irrelevant red herrings. Doesn't matter what the "world wide" crime rate is doing, it ONLY matters that the crime rate in the US, including specifically the handgun murder rate, is DECLINING while the number of guns in our society is rapidly increasing.
Those two simple facts prove that more guns = less crime. It's simply indisputable.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 14 guests