Woah woah woah. Who's talking about banning anything? The way I see it, people are merely asking for more responsible gun laws.
The dreaded term.FallenMessiah88 said:responsible gun laws.
Its actually easier to monitor ports than it was even 3 years ago. Every shipping container is marked from where it came from, what ship it got on and where it got off to the exact second it got on the ship, off the ship and stacked. My cousin works for the port authority in NY and they can tell what is in every bin because its monitored thoroughly from the load up to the offload to when it leaves the facility. Japan has a similar system in place. Most of the contraband that comes into the US comes across the US-Mexico border, in Japan they have to watch their water routes and they do a damn good job at that with China being awkward next-door neighbors.ElPatron said:Yes, lets ignore the fact that Canada is a country high higher standards of living and less poverty.Nimzabaat said:The most interesting point that I saw is that Canada has a gun ownership almost as high as the United States and less then half the homicide rate per 100k. In Canada, handguns are highly regulated and assault weapons are restricted to police and military. So this is a solid argument towards tightening control over handguns and, well, guns that are only intended to kill people.
Assault weapons are only used in about 1% of the crime in the US. Their restriction in Canada is a moot point.
Besides, in Canada it is possible to own assault weapons such as AR15 or the VZ58 even if you're not in the police.
Japan is also the country where a woman was killed because criminals modified an airsoft gun.Leadfinger said:Japan. Only 22 killings involving firearms in 2007. 22 for the entire country. See, strict gun control laws do work.
Japan is also a country with a shit-ton of suicides.
How about not comparing totally different countries and cultures while pretending that a metric ton of other factors are irrelevant?
No it's not. Busy ports can have millions of containers moving around every year. It would be impossible to check more than a few of them.JWAN said:Don't forget they live on an island. Its easy keeping contraband off of an island.
I dunno, I haven't really been following this whole pro guns/anti guns thing, so nope, sorry can't help you. I don't know enough about this subject to even attempt to make any kind of statement about it.ElPatron said:The dreaded term.FallenMessiah88 said:responsible gun laws.
You can't pass "responsible"/"sensible" gun laws. Those terms have been used for what... two decades? And it has been used by the Brady Campaign, Rosie O'Donnell, etc. The hypocrites, the fat cats that want your "cheddar" and the emotionally damaged people who despise guns because a murderer used one to kill a relative instead of any other weapon.
What do you think would allow for "responsible gun laws"?
>can't ban anything that is legal now
>cannot infringe the second amendment
Heck, if you can actually think of a law that is actually effective and simple enough to prevent bureaucracy you might be on to something big.
So, in all the above examples you can use those items for docile purposes, cars can drive you around, knives can cut food, forks hold it for cutting, pointy sticks make charming fences, dangerous chemicals can make scientific advances, public transport gets you aroundJWAN said:We should totally ban cars. Cars can drive into crowds of people at any moment in time and kill people by the dozens. Imagine if a bus crashed into a pedestrian mall?
Knives
Forks
Pointy sticks
all dangerous chemicals
public transportation, trains can crash and planes/boats too. Everyone should have to ride bikes or pull wagons. Or use oxen to plow fields, but the plows have to be dull because sharp plows can hurt people.
First one is valid-ish, in the same way a Bow and Arrow are fun for shooting targets with, but both functions are solely weaponised functions. Not getting into the deterrent side of things because that's not the point of what I was saying.Buretsu said:Shoot inanimate targets for fun/points. Deter crime without even firing a shot, just with their mere presence.CaptainMarvelous said:What exactly do guns do other than shoot things to inflict an injury?
Helps to fight carnivores and pests?CaptainMarvelous said:What exactly do guns do other than shoot things to inflict an injury?
Buretsu said:Do they need to?CaptainMarvelous said:First one is valid-ish, in the same way a Bow and Arrow are fun for shooting targets with, but both functions are solely weaponised functions. Not getting into the deterrent side of things because that's not the point of what I was saying.
No-one's asking for "Stricter knife control" (though in some places there already is strict knife control) because knives are used for preparing food, whittling wood, a range of things, guns are used for shooting things and that's all they do. Even as a deterrent the deterrent is "I will kill you", do guns serve any purpose other than the use of/threat of lethal force?
well americans love money more than anything, i suppose the government could buy back the guns, kind of like recycling cans... then again the government is broke so i guess a corporation could do it for long lasting tax cuts, sort of a reward program for the corp that gets the most guns out of civilian hands.Jonluw said:Introducing gun control to a country like the US is a gradual process.Suki_ said:Well what if you want to use the gun to kill a mouse and are to tired to properly put it away. What if you are a crazy American who thinks guns are useless if kept in a locker because how are you gonna shoot somebody for looking at you the wrong way if its locked up.
You can't just suddenly ban all guns. That would leave a shitton of guns on the market, none of them legal.
You need to restrict what kinds of guns can legally be produced and sold and slowly increase the difficulty of getting a license to buy a gun.
Banning magazine sizes greater than what's needed for hunting, etc.
After a while you may ban handguns entirely.
You don't change the public's attitude towards keeping guns locked up overnight.
Well airport security has unquestionably made flying safer; the amount of aircraft bombed in the sky or hijacked has dropped dramatically since the post 9/11 measures were introduced.Owyn_Merrilin said:We should ban banning things and otherwise imposing sanctions that do nothing but create a false sense of security. Things like the ridiculous airline rules that went in after 9/11, or AMC theaters' new costume ban. You know, pointless rules that give an illusion of safety to idiots, but only annoy the rest of us because they don't actually make us safer. They inconvenience innocent people, calm stupid people, and that's about it.
[citation needed]blueb0g said:Well airport security has unquestionably made flying safer; the amount of aircraft bombed in the sky or hijacked has dropped dramatically since the post 9/11 measures were introduced.Owyn_Merrilin said:We should ban banning things and otherwise imposing sanctions that do nothing but create a false sense of security. Things like the ridiculous airline rules that went in after 9/11, or AMC theaters' new costume ban. You know, pointless rules that give an illusion of safety to idiots, but only annoy the rest of us because they don't actually make us safer. They inconvenience innocent people, calm stupid people, and that's about it.
I am not forgetting anything. The only issue here is that you have no clue what you're talking about. Yes, there have been times where the net was slipped but aircraft bombings and hijacking have dropped - no question. Yes they were rare, but they're a lot rarer now. (Actually, hickajings weren't really that rare at all). In the 70's, 80's and 90's, quite a lot - certainly, a number that would surprise you - of airliners were bombed. The number has dropped. The security has worked. That's indisputable, and if you argue, you're going up against hard facts.Owyn_Merrilin said:[citation needed]blueb0g said:Well airport security has unquestionably made flying safer; the amount of aircraft bombed in the sky or hijacked has dropped dramatically since the post 9/11 measures were introduced.Owyn_Merrilin said:We should ban banning things and otherwise imposing sanctions that do nothing but create a false sense of security. Things like the ridiculous airline rules that went in after 9/11, or AMC theaters' new costume ban. You know, pointless rules that give an illusion of safety to idiots, but only annoy the rest of us because they don't actually make us safer. They inconvenience innocent people, calm stupid people, and that's about it.
You're forgetting the underwear bomber and the shoe bomber. The only reason neither of them were successful was because they messed up their own plan and got the mixture on the chemical explosives wrong. Hilariously so in the case of the underwear bomber, who did little but burn his own crotch. Besides, airplane bombings and hijackings were rare to begin with. The last decade or so has been pretty much par for the course.
blueb0g said:I am not forgetting anything. The only issue here is that you have no clue what you're talking about. Yes, there have been times where the net was slipped but aircraft bombings and hijacking have dropped - no question. Yes they were rare, but they're a lot rarer now. (Actually, hickajings weren't really that rare at all). In the 70's, 80's and 90's, quite a lot - certainly, a number that would surprise you - of airliners were bombed. The number has dropped. The security has worked. That's indisputable, and if you argue, you're going up against hard facts.Owyn_Merrilin said:[citation needed]blueb0g said:Well airport security has unquestionably made flying safer; the amount of aircraft bombed in the sky or hijacked has dropped dramatically since the post 9/11 measures were introduced.Owyn_Merrilin said:We should ban banning things and otherwise imposing sanctions that do nothing but create a false sense of security. Things like the ridiculous airline rules that went in after 9/11, or AMC theaters' new costume ban. You know, pointless rules that give an illusion of safety to idiots, but only annoy the rest of us because they don't actually make us safer. They inconvenience innocent people, calm stupid people, and that's about it.
You're forgetting the underwear bomber and the shoe bomber. The only reason neither of them were successful was because they messed up their own plan and got the mixture on the chemical explosives wrong. Hilariously so in the case of the underwear bomber, who did little but burn his own crotch. Besides, airplane bombings and hijackings were rare to begin with. The last decade or so has been pretty much par for the course.
What countries were those planes flying out of, though? I mean, 1969 shows 86 hijackings. There is no way those were all out of the US. There were not 18 hijackings a year on American airliners prior to 9/11, and it was not the entire world that cracked down after 9/11, it was primarily the US and other countries that had a lot of airline security to begin with.Buretsu said:http://aviation-safety.net/statistics/period/stats.php?cat=H2Owyn_Merrilin said:[citation needed]blueb0g said:Well airport security has unquestionably made flying safer; the amount of aircraft bombed in the sky or hijacked has dropped dramatically since the post 9/11 measures were introduced.Owyn_Merrilin said:We should ban banning things and otherwise imposing sanctions that do nothing but create a false sense of security. Things like the ridiculous airline rules that went in after 9/11, or AMC theaters' new costume ban. You know, pointless rules that give an illusion of safety to idiots, but only annoy the rest of us because they don't actually make us safer. They inconvenience innocent people, calm stupid people, and that's about it.
Drops from an average of 18 per year for the 10 years prior to 9/11, to an average of about 4 per yer for the 10 years afterwards.
[citation granted]
Except that article was written by a person who is working for page hits and far from being an expert.FallenMessiah88 said:However, I did stumble upon an interesting article just recently which I think may shed some light on why did whole debate seem to have reached a deadlock.
I love engineering and mechanical devices.CaptainMarvelous said:First one is valid-ish, in the same way a Bow and Arrow are fun for shooting targets with, but both functions are solely weaponised functions. Not getting into the deterrent side of things because that's not the point of what I was saying.
No-one's asking for "Stricter knife control" (though in some places there already is strict knife control) because knives are used for preparing food, whittling wood, a range of things, guns are used for shooting things and that's all they do. Even as a deterrent the deterrent is "I will kill you", do guns serve any purpose other than the use of/threat of lethal force?