Just a minor correction, that happened last year, not this year.Karloff said:The Challenger raids are Greater Manchester's response to the murders of PCs Fiona Bone and Nichola Hughes, in September 2013.
Just a minor correction, that happened last year, not this year.Karloff said:The Challenger raids are Greater Manchester's response to the murders of PCs Fiona Bone and Nichola Hughes, in September 2013.
Nuts. My error. Adjusted. Thanks!Zykon TheLich said:Just a minor correction, that happened last year, not this year.Karloff said:The Challenger raids are Greater Manchester's response to the murders of PCs Fiona Bone and Nichola Hughes, in September 2013.
First, I disagree with the idea of using "gun homicides" to measure whether gun control works. How about using the overall homicide rate?albino boo said:The UK has has 0.4 gun homicides per 100000 and the US has 3.6. The fact that the UK has 900% lower number of gun homicides is clearly to do with the fact the guns are very tightly controlled.
According to crime statistician John Lott [http://johnrlott.blogspot.com/2013/10/warning-about-how-homicides-and-crime.html], if the US used the same method of counting homicides, our rate would be about 30% higher than that of the UK, instead of 400% higher.Since 1967, homicide figures for England and Wales have been adjusted to exclude any cases which do not result in conviction, or where the person is not prosecuted on grounds of self defence or otherwise.
Which includes people who are forced to follow the law by law enforcement. The UK law enforcement is pretty good (not perfect, though) at stopping illegal weapons use (with the notable exception of Northern Ireland).Kalezian said:thaluikhain said:They can make it hard enough that many won't, though.Zeren said:It's just proof that gun laws don't stop people from getting guns no matter how strict they are.
Which only will affect people who follow the law.
So in essence, what you're saying is that strict gun control makes little to no difference and the way to combat violent crime, especially those that involve firearms, is to address inequality and provide decent care/quality of life for your citizens who in turn will be happier and less prone to turning to crime? I totally agree.DVS BSTrD said:Well that's because they actually take care of each other over there so fewer people are driven to violent crime in the first place.
The UK is more the size and nature of a state, however - have you got the figures for those? On mobile at the moment so it's awkward. Sources would be good too.DVS BSTrD said:But guns it a hell of a lot easier to commit those crimes.GoaThief said:So in essence, what you're saying is that strict gun control makes little to no difference and the way to combat violent crime, especially those that involve firearms, is to address inequality and provide decent care/quality of life for your citizens who in turn will be happier and less prone to turning to crime? I totally agree.DVS BSTrD said:Well that's because they actually take care of each other over there so fewer people are driven to violent crime in the first place.
albino boo said:The UK has has 0.4 gun homicides per 100000 and the US has 3.6. The fact that the UK has 900% lower number of gun homicides is clearly to do with the fact the guns are very tightly controlled.
As evidence by the fact it took 30 rounds and a FUCKING grenade to kill 2 people... In the US that would have been a whole gang of people at a *insert latest location of random act of violence*. Damn brits need to spend some time at the firing range.CriticalMiss said:Either that or we have shit aim.albino boo said:The UK has has 0.4 gun homicides per 100000 and the US has 3.6. The fact that the UK has 900% lower number of gun homicides is clearly to do with the fact the guns are very tightly controlled.Zeren said:It's just proof that gun laws don't stop people from getting guns no matter how strict they are.
The image in the news is the trigger componment (saw the news this morning and they explain what that image is).Ultratwinkie said:... that's a gun?
Is my paperclip a part of a more complex home made gun too? Maybe its part of a multi-platform super weapon floating in space, waiting to strike with laser-based fury.
Hell, isn't the reciever the thing that's legally a gun?
you can avoid metal detection fairly easily, and it's not really an issue when we can detect plastic just as well these days, a modern scanner is a fairly scary thing:Scarim Coral said:The image in the news is the trigger componment (saw the news this morning and they explain what that image is).Ultratwinkie said:... that's a gun?
Is my paperclip a part of a more complex home made gun too? Maybe its part of a multi-platform super weapon floating in space, waiting to strike with laser-based fury.
Hell, isn't the reciever the thing that's legally a gun?
Either way the new development in firearm would mean the authority should now start thinking of a new way to counteract it since one of the benefit of a plastic gun is that it will avoid metal detection (if the bullet is plastic too). Sure you could say they could make a device to melt it but something tell me it will take alot of heat to melt that.
It's a mod for the 3d printer put out by the company that makes them.frobalt said:I believe the radio report on the story did mention that it turned out not to be gun parts but, I think, parts for models. Or something like that.
Erm...Zeren said:It's just proof that gun laws don't stop people from getting guns no matter how strict they are.
Looks like a sear, part of the trigger assembly. [http://www.samachine.com/images/Sear%20Nose%20Bad%201.jpg] (Sorry for the large picture, it's the best one I could find. It's a slightly different design, but you can clearly see both the mounting hole and the nodule for the trigger spring. Admittedly, not necessarily part of a firearm, but if you find something like this and gunpowder in the same box, it's a reasonable guess it's not just part of a glue gun)Ultratwinkie said:... that's a gun?
By that logic: Why do we use locks for houses and cars?Kalezian said:Granted, as long as agencies are proactive in law enforcement instead of just saying "these weapons are now illegal, now don't have one. we are just going to turn our backs to you now" will decrease crime considerably. However, even in places where firearms restrictions are so, well, strict crimes that would of been committed with a firearm are shifted to other weapons.
For example in China where a man wielding a butcher knife, which you can buy in any half decent supermarket or store, killed several children in school.
Akin to the Sandy Hook Shooting, he only killed I believe seven to eleven children instead of the twenty-eight or thirty that the Sandy Hook shooter killed, but it remains that if he had a firearm, he would of used one. He didn't, so he used the next best thing.
But using the guy as an example who killed the two police officers in the UK, he wasn't following the law. He didn't care about laws, legalities of firearms, or explosives for that matter [which by the way, was it an actual fragmentation grenade? that's beyond crazy. Here in the US we have people that will use pipebombs or such other homemade devices, but not a fricking M67, or the UK equivalent]. He set out to do one thing, and circumvented laws regarding firearm purchases and restrictions.
I'm not going to say owning a firearm will make you safer than someone who doesn't, but where I live it takes the Sheriff's Department a good ten to fifteen minutes to arrive. A lot can happen in just five minutes, and to protect myself until law enforcement arrive, I will more than likely have to use my rifle.
Saying [not you, but a majority of gun control advocates in the US] that I shouldn't be allowed to defend myself with my rifle because:
A: it holds more than 10 rounds in a magazine
B: has a pistol grip [which makes it more deadly than the exact same rifle with a traditional rifle grip]
C: can fold up [but not be fired] into a size less than 16 inches
is beyond stupid.
I would even say it's retarded.
I will even say this. Plastic isn't as strong as metal, while eventually 3d printed firearms might be a cause for concern, right now you might just get calls from annoyed corner store clerks who are reporting for the fifth time this week someone tried to rob them and the weapon exploded in their hand and if they could send an ambulance because there is a line forming behind the dumbass.
I'll agree, a few raids don't mean that all gun crime has stopped, permanently, forever. But that hardly means the whole thing is a pointless waste of money. At the end of the day, guns and drugs are out of the hands of people who, let's face it, don't exactly have them for educational purposes. That is, in my mind, lives saved. Which I'm sure you'll agree, is hardly a waste of anything.Ultratwinkie said:A few raids doesn't mean its stopped.
America raids drug caches every day. yet there are always more.
We also raid pedophile sites, but those are still around.
We raid a lot of things, but they still exist and grow exponentially.
There comes a point when crime escalates beyond what we are able to to counter. Drugs in America meant there was no way in hell we can counter any gang because of how much money they can throw around.
How can you stop gangs that pay our under paid soldiers thousands just for a rifle and a few mags? Not that thousands are hard to come by with drug money. With the military accepting more and more gang members its getting even easier.
Just because you are raiding things doesn't mean it won't over power you or grow. America learned that the hard way with booze, and drugs.
Failed logic is fail.Zeren said:It's just proof that gun laws don't stop people from getting guns no matter how strict they are.
Bad example. Obamacare is a failure because it doesn't do what the proponents of the bill say it was going to do. People are being dropped from coverage due to the AHCA, losing their chosen doctor, their plan. The people it was supposed to help are actually not qualifying for it, or if they do the pricing is much higher than their income can afford even WITH subsidies. The website was barely beta-tested and rolled out with major traffic issues, let alone the cost of the website was enormous (more than any website on the web today).Deshara said:You obviously haven't been listening to republicans claiming obamacare is an abject failure and is destroying this nations economy for years, even though sign-up just started earlier this month...