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Neph's POLITE Gun Debate
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12. August 2006 @ 02:55 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
I live in the UK & the gun laws are incredibly tight. If you have a criminal record (violent crime etc) you have no chance of owning a gun. You need land to shoot on, have a good reason for owning a gun (main reason is vermin control for a rifle, clay pigeon & vermin control for a shotgun). You then have to apply for each calibre & type of weapon, i.e. bolt action or SLR. The forms to fill in are quite extensive, you need 2 referees to confirm who you are & your competency. If you have depression you cannot own a gun.
After all that you then have an interview with the local firearms officer. This is to get a general feel of you as a person & to see how much you know about firearms, ballistics, ricochet problems etc! He speaks to you for about an hour, he then lets you know if you are OK to own firearms.
The reason I know this, is because I was OK'd last week to own a shotgun, a .22 SLR & a .223 bolt action. I was refused a .243 as I have too little experience (if I get some experience & re-apply in 6 months or so he said I should be OK).
I installed my gun cabinet last week. just waiting for him to come round, inspect my cabinet & give me my certificates!
You are not allowed handguns or fully automatic rifles (so no AK47s or M-16s!). You are also limited as to the amount of ammunition you can buy & possess. Conversely, you are allowed as many shotgun cartridges as you wish & you can keep them under your bed!
This is all due to a couple of incidents where innocent people (one incident saw many school children die) died & tighter gun control legislation was rushed through Parliament. As always, it was the innocent & law abiding gun owner that suffered.
Laws are required, otherwise any bonehead could get hold of a weapon, but I feel the laws are too tight.

Gif by Phantom69


This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 12. August 2006 @ 02:57

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gerry1
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12. August 2006 @ 03:40 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
@pulsar ... personally, I think you should count your blessings; had we had the sense to do that here long ago, we wouldn't have the same problems we have now. Many here say that if that were the case, only criminals would have handguns ... the UK and Canada prove that, for the large part, that argument is without merit.

A handgun is the perfect weapon for the would-be thief ... theft and robbery without a fight. It is a multiple daily occurance here in Philadelphia to simply shoot and kill the innocent pedestrian and go through his pockets. Now over 250 killed with handguns in seven months; eleven last weekend alone. I myself have come close twice: once in a drive by shooting where I owe my life to a concrete trash can on the street and a second time where I failed to become a dead hostage by having the good fortune of leaving the bank five or ten mins before the incident. (That gave me the most bizarre feeling...like having accidentally missed being on a flight that crashed). We've had a number of murders because some "stole" what another considered "his" parking space on the street. In Philly, you don't want to wear expensive clothes because people have been murdered for their learther jackets and even fancy sneakers. My friends 21 year old grandson got killed about three weeks ago for being in the wrong place at the wrong time ... the same as my two close calls only fate didn't look upon him quite as kindly.

Philadelphia is only the fifth largest city in the US but but has the highest handgun murder rate of the big five. As I write these words there is a petition being circulated in the city and advertised on TV to take hand gun control laws our of the hands of the capital and into the hands of area residents. You can bet I signed it! I think they're on the verge of doing something now; they've moved state police into the city streets and there is a lot of talk about activating national guard troops. You know, the real shame is that no one cared that Philadelphia hoods were preying on the innocent residents because most of the city is dirt poor; it raised eyebrows though when the wealthy suburban business commuters and tourists started to fall victim as well ... I guess killing them can hurt the bottom line. After all, kill all you want....just don't kill those that matter. Regarless of democrat or republican, no one cares about the little guy and bows to the power of the wealthy and big interests. The NRA has far more money than community groups and while I doubt that members of the NRA have been lost to gun violence, they literally make national policy while community groups that have lost so many accomplish mothing. Both political parties in the US have bowed to this and if I can credit the republican party with one thing, its at least honest in its public relations that they just don't give a sh** while our other political party simply "pretends" to care.

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 12. August 2006 @ 04:17

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12. August 2006 @ 05:54 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Gerry, with utmost respect I have a couple statistics to point out...

About 100,000 people die each year due to medical mistakes versus 10,000 due to gun accidents and homicides.

There were 16,694 alcohol-related fatalities in 2004 ? 39 percent of the total traffic fatalities for the year.

SO should we make medical practice illegal? Or driving cars? Or alcohol? What about tobacco?

I feel your pain living in Philly. "The City of Brotherly Love" is the greatest oxymoron in America. I lived in LA for a while, and I am familiar with the street violence you live with. However, it is not the guns that instill the violent tendancies, nor is it the guns that commit the murders and/or violent crimes. I have several guns and I have never killed anyone, nor have I ever commited a violent crime (well aside from fistfights as a kid). These people weilding the guns with disdain for human life would simply weild another weapon if they could not get their hands on a gun.

In 2002 FBI statistics show that 1/2 (7,136) of all murders were commited by handgun, with less then 1000 by rifle, shotgun, or other firearm.Knives or cutting instruments, Blunt objects (clubs, hammers, etc.), Personal weapons (hands, fists, feet, etc.), Poison, Explosives, Fire, Narcotics, Drowning, Strangulation, Asphyxiation, and Other weapons or weapons not stated being the other methods. The bottom line is, if they want to kill, they will do it, and many times over do kill with or without the gun.

I only wish I could find a statistic on how many crimes were averted by firearm... I am willing to bet it is a hell of alot more then the 2002 murder rate.


This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 12. August 2006 @ 05:56

gerry1
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12. August 2006 @ 08:31 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
@sandt38...as an ex-marine, I'm familiar with weapons (somewhat at least) as well as their use, the need for them and their function in society; I do not deny they have a useful function ... I'm hardly a pacifist. If I may introduce a theological principal (as you did without reazlizing it)....the very essence of "temptation" issues from the fact that for everything good, there is an evil use of equal proportion. While not a terribly religious person (as "religious" is defined by most), there is a great deal of wisom in that precept: in fact, I would go so far as to say that the truth of it is self-evident. Medicine, the example you used, is a good example indeed: it saves so many (not to mention it has saved my life on a handful of occasions) and, indeed, it kills many but (in this country and similar ones)"death" was not the objective although medicine can indeed be used to kill in very insidious ways. But for the sake of the general public, we control medicine and its practitioners ... sure, lots of doctors get rich on unnecessary operations etc., but the control standard work quite well more often than not...we try to control the circumstances by which people become "victims" of medicine and while more progress is necessary, we do it with a good deal of success all the same. There is debate as to whether marijuana has a medical use but it had many uses for many years from making rope to use as a natural insect repellant when planted amidst other crops. Someone recently said that alcohol (booze) had no practical medical purpose but nothing could be further from the truth; it has been used medically since before recorded history ... as an anesthetic, tribal desert people use a week alcohol solution in their water as it lowers body temperature, Europeans went so far as to turn it into an art-form, but from initially fully practical purposed ... but we do have controls in place to protect the public from getting sick from poorly made alcohol, we restrict who can buy it and, like medicine, it can kill and mame and does so with an unfortunate regularity, but that it is not the objective of its use (or abuse) but the consequence unlike firearms which have but one purpose ... which can also be a good purpose, or an evil one but unlike medicine and other things, we make no attempt to promote the good use while controling the evil.

I disagree with you (to some degree) about how people would just find another way to kill. People go for the easy route ... the route with the least possible consequences. Someone with a knife, a club, a garotte or whatever cannot hide behind a bush and blow my brains out from fifteen feet away before taking the five bucks from my wallet or the sneakers from my feet; people think differently when there is a fight that will ensue ... the criminal and the junkie are self serving and prefer to stay nice and safe. In a different thread, we spoke of a disabled Iraq Vet and his wife who got mugged...its because he's an easy target; your common junkie, mugger, petty thief generally fear danger...the go for the disabled, the elderly etc. for that purpose. A gun makes it all moot.

"Self-preservation" is probably the strongest of all human emotion and reaction and it is indeed self-preservation which is behind both sides of the same arguement; I think that's what makes discussion of this subject so interesting. To the one, self-preservation is a very strong influence in wanting the ability to possess a handgun while to the other, it is that selfame sense of self-preservation that makes him opposed to them. Its a matter of what best serves that sense of personal safety which is the one thing we certainly all have in common. That want of personal safety is evident amoung the police. There aren't many big city cops who don't PRAY for stricter gun control laws.
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12. August 2006 @ 08:55 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Gerry1 you have very valid points. I'm very much for the rights to own hand guns, rifles etc. The major problem is there's no enforcement of the laws onthe books both federal and state where the stricter of the two is supposed to be inforced. The judges and lawyers that let these scumbags off with light sentences to do the crime over and over again is ridiculous.Michigan supposedly has a law three strikes and your out, I have yet to see any enforcement. The stooges get sent to prison for 5 to 15 years and are out on parole in 2 1/2 years within 6 months are busted are sent back another 10 months. and come back out again.If the enforcement was there Detroit wouldn't have the gun related crime rate it has today.the disrespect allowed in our society adds to the breeding ground. Sorry for this bag of wind ., but I enjoy the sport of shooting and reloading. Some how our streets have to be taken back and employment and economy enriched.My 2 cents and Neph if I over stepped the rules I appologize . Chris This was in no way meant as a flame at Gerry1 or any one else just how I see things.

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 12. August 2006 @ 09:07

aabbccdd
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12. August 2006 @ 09:35 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
sandt38, your right on the money also.

Its NOT a gun control issue in Philadelphia ,its a criminal control problem. disarming good people isnt the answer

disarming good people isnt the answer because they the ones that will lose the bad guys will always find a way to get them.

you have to look at the root cause why Philly is a bad city the guns didnt make it that way. its the break down of the family,poor morals etc.





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12. August 2006 @ 10:28 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Since the gun laws were tightened up, it would seem that more & more people are being killed by handguns. The only people who have them now are the criminals. The new regs appear to have have had little or no effect on gun crime, we seem to have gone backwards. The problem, I believe, is not the guns, but the attitude of the people who have them. Kids nowadays have no respect for others or other peoples' property.
The rights of the criminals are being too greatly exploited. the general feeling here is that, if you get robbed, it is your own fault for being in the wrong place at the wrong time!
The whole thing has being completely twisted round. It makes me sick that we are unable to defend ourselves without the fear of being arrested ourselves.
Earlier this week a 70yr old grandmother was arrested for assault after she poked a teenager in the chest. This was after she had been pushed to the floor by said teenager! The police seem to have little interest other than arresting the easiest person possible. This is all after the Government said that we need to stand up for ourselves. If we do, we get arrested! (The parents of these thugs do not care & are rarely brought to task).
The law abiding person in the street has no chance, we simply cannot win. Either way, we are royally screwed...

Gif by Phantom69


gerry1
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12. August 2006 @ 10:38 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
@Chris...no, that has been why this thread Neph started has been so interesting; no one has been flaming at all. There is nothing wrong with disagreement in part or even totally. No one has been calling the other names or demeaning them because they disagree which is really cool; somewhere in this thread, Neph himself says that he's enjoyed this thread a great deal because of this and didn't want anyone ruining it by becoming a jerk.

It would be foolish of me to try to deny the logic of what you're saying. In fact, everyone here is waiting to see what happens regarding a certain gun shop here that recently got busted; I don't know the specifics but philly has had over 250 handgun murders in its first one half year and they recently busted this shop because they were able to tie this one store to 60 of those murders. Everyone is wondering what is going to happen to those who ran the store (I think it will be a blood-hungry crowd) and from what I've read, everyone is expecting this one case to become a big national thing when it comes to trial and because its civilian, I don't think it will get snuffed out because of political embarrassment. (I say that because a few years ago, the FBI stormed the building I work in and arrested all sorts of people because the department of licensing was selling gun permits to people who didn't pass background checks ... but you never heard about it again!)

@aabbccdd...you are also right which is what makes this issue as complex as it interesting. Philadelphia is way different from the other big cities in one big way: there is very little socioeconomic divergence in the city...it has disappeared over the last twenty years. Expansion into the environs of the city has been so huge that municipalities as far away as 100 miles from the city are trying to restrict the growth. Former rural areas are now suburban; suburban areas are getting more and more urban because of flight from the city. This started with the wealthy but more and more of the middle class has joined the flight. While everything around the city grows, the city's population shrinks in direct proportion. Twenty years ago, philly had just under four million residents, now it's just over two million. There are literally city blocks that are now deserted...mostly large areas of the old middle class neighborhoods. With the majority of the working class moving out, industry has moved out with it. With the exception of a few areas, the city is falling into slum after slum....both William Penn and the U.S. Founding Fathers buried here must be turning in their graves. Unlike New York, LA, Chicago and (hell, I forgot which city is #4 lol!) but Philly, with the exception of a few areas, is a city comprised of the very poor. While the other big cities are considerably bigger than us, none of them come close to Philly's dubious high statistic of having 25% of its residents collecting some flavor of welfare ...not necessarily all cash welfare assistance, but welfare of some sort whether its food stamps, medical help, homeless shelters and the like. There isn't even a close second. So you're right in that respect, aabbccdd. One needn't be a sociologist to know that extreme poverty goes hand and hand with crime and the violence associated therewith. A huge portion of the city's residents are seriously dysfunctional and when industry moved out, it has slowly compounded the problem as there are no jobs here; they're all out in the burbs to which the city's poor who do want to work can't get to. It's really a huge mess. Usually, when people come to Philly, they see center city because that's where all the historical stuff is as well as all the business, skyscrapers and fancier apartment buildings and condos so it looks rather impressive but what they see, or what people see in the new or movies is a tiny part of the city. There are huge areas of the city that literally look like a city in a WWII movies after sever bombing.

Its a real pity. Philly used to be the wealthiest city in the US and when you go into some of the citys worst slums, you can tell just by one look at the collapsing architecture that it must have been really beautiful at one time. It will really take a genius to get Philly out of this mess back into even an "average" citizenry.
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12. August 2006 @ 11:45 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Poverty & street crime are inextricably linked in the UK. Poor areas suffer from lots of robbery & street crime. High wealth areas suffer from burglary (usually from people outside the town/village).

Gif by Phantom69


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12. August 2006 @ 11:52 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
One thing about gun laws, they can make more laws, and ban more guns but until enforcement of the laws that are on the books from the 1920's is a waste of time. As a one time BTAF license holder and seller of guns and ammo,the experience of the gray areas really gives a lot of loop holes.One instance that made my last dealings as a gun dealer was the day I refused a sale of a shotgun. The yellow sheet was filled out properly but this person to me was unstable and I refused the sale within a weeks time I had a Visit from ATF to go over my books and question why I refused the sale to this individual. I stated about my feelings and if I had sold it to him and he went out and killed some one the sale wasn't worth it.At that time I was told because of the gray area of the law I couldn't refuse a sale on that basis. and the next best one as a licensed dealer I couldn't sell a pistol to a 18 year old with permit and paperwork in order. But this same 18 year old could buy a pistol from any one off the street,all nice and legal.I hope Gerry1 that if that gun shop you mentioned is indeed back dooring guns that they prosecute and give them prison time the same as a murderer. Chris
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12. August 2006 @ 13:20 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
When laws are created, it is inevitable that it is only the good people that abide by them. Criminals tend not to abide by the law, hence the name, criminal!
You can deduce then, the only people affected by these laws are the good people!

Gif by Phantom69


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13. August 2006 @ 02:53 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
I got armor piercing bullets in my Taurus '92
It's fully locked and loaded and it's waiting just for you
A nickel plated magnum with the custom fitted grips
A fully auto AK with the big banana clip
A .45 baretta with an extra magazine
A sawed of riot shotgun and the mighty M-16
A back up Colt .380 that I keep inside my sock
All my guns are so much fun I love them like my ____





Possunt Quia Posse Videntur.
gerry1
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13. August 2006 @ 05:13 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
@jizmak ... LMAO! Are you the NRA's poet laureate?

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 13. August 2006 @ 05:14

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13. August 2006 @ 05:41 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Quote:
@jizmak ... LMAO! Are you the NRA's poet laureate?
No..sir.
Those are lyrics from X-cops song "third leg".
I overlooked this little jewel for some time,
It was only due to Neph that I aquired the CD.
I thank him for that and that is also how it pertains to the thread.

(Chorus)
My Third leg is my savior,
My Third leg's like a son,
My Third leg is my master,
My Third leg is my gun.






Possunt Quia Posse Videntur.
gerry1
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13. August 2006 @ 06:01 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
@Jizmak...lol...reminds me of the marine corps. If one used the word "gun" instead of "weapon" they'd make you stand for a couple of hours grabbing your crotch or your weapon and yell over and over again ...this is my weapon, this is my gun. THis one's for killing and this one's for fun"
The_OGS
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13. August 2006 @ 10:32 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Hi gerry1, y'okay down there? Sounds like the Wild West or Chicago in the 1920's, it's Philly in the 21st... could be some kind of turning point.
That's too bad about Philly though, and it's a bit of a secret as we never hear a peep about Philly (unless Flyers, LoL).
Toronto is huge, ~4 million in the GTA which is ~800 square miles, but Downtown is where it's at! We studiously headed off the downtown decay that afflicted our close neighbor Detroit in the 1960's and 70's. The huge ancient mansions on Church and Jarvis streets are now Lawyer Firms and Commercial establishments (5-star restaurants etc.) and the farther downtown you go, the costlier it gets.
But what's the story - a lot of people out of work down there in Philly?
Handguns not good in that environment obviously, but what're you gonna do? It's a tough one...
Regards

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13. August 2006 @ 14:39 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Gerry, as one who lives right next door to Philly, I can tell you that your city's problems are of your own doing, not the big, bad NRA and the usual litany of excuses. You guys elected a mayor who does not give a shit. You guys elected a mayor who wants to blame guns not gangs. You elected a mayor who is more interested in kicking out the Boy Scouts - one of the few potential positive influences inner-city children have - rather than cracking down on drug dealers. Part of the problem - and it's not solely a Philly problem, but endemic in quite a few large cities - is that you don't give a shit who you put in office, as longm as he has a (D) after his name. I'm sure if Osama bin Laden ran as a Democrat, he could win in Philly.

As far as your whining about the NRA's money, you seem to forget that the gun control lobby is much better-funded and relies on people who can't thing for themselves to believe in it. If the average American (or foreigner) knew the reality about gun control, most would be against it. That Britain and Australia, who enacted some of the world's most strict gun control laws in 1996 and 1997, respectively, now suffer the industrialised world's highest crime rates. (1) Or how Or that some members of the media have openly advocated and practiced the suppression of pro-gun arguments and research, while giving hundreds of millions of dollars of free press to pro-gun control extremists. (2)


(1)International Crime Victimization Survey, 2000 Sweep, See also The Telegraph, "A Quarter of English are Victims of Crime", http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/02/23/n...

(2)See Thomas Winship (former editor of the Boston Globe) Editor-and-Publisher Magazine, April 24, 1993.)
A fair-use except can be found courtest of Reason Magazine:
http://reason.com/0006/fe.ks.loaded.shtml


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13. August 2006 @ 16:05 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Hey Dunker, while a I generally agree with what you're saying the delivery was bit rough. I enjoyed the article from your second link because it illustrates some thing I've felt for a long time. One statement in the articlecovered how the progun groups are often referred to in derrogatory terms,
Quote:
When reporters and opinion writers do quote them, they tend to use unfriendly terms of attribution such as "claims," "whines," or "would have us believe."
I noticed you referred to Gerry as whining about the NRA and that was a bit unfair. Gerry's a great guy who happens to have a different opinion of the gun issue. I'm not trying to deny you your opinion and sure hope you stay with us here but we've had a great discussion on the issue without getting mean spirited and I'd sure like to keep it that way :)




A great point that been made is the correlation between poverty and crime. When folks have it hard and have little hope of improving things it sure seems easy to victimize not only your neighbors but also those that have it better than you and, as Gerry noted about the shootings in his city, don't give a shit about you or your neighbors getting shot - basically you and your neighbors don't count.


I see alot of folks claim the NRA is a special interest group that represents a minority of gun owners but the fact remains that the NRA is very well funded by that "minority", most of which are blue collar folks making a middle class living which means there are an awful lot of folks donating reach the level of funds the NRA has at its disposal.

One thing's for sure - if that gun shop owner knew what those guns were being used for he needs to rot in a jail cell for life. Some thing similar happened here last year where the officials did an audit of the guns used in crimes and they stores they came from. The was a shop here that had an inordinate amount of guns traced to them and the funny thing is I'd been in there several times and never cared for it - the clientele were generally really creepy doomsday separatist types that I didn't feel comfortable around and the owners were real shysters. The shop has since closed for reason I don't know but it makes me wonder.



My killer sig came courtesy of bb "El Jefe" mayo.
The Forum Rules You Agreed To! http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/2487
"And there we saw the giants, and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight" - Numbers 13:33

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 13. August 2006 @ 16:16

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13. August 2006 @ 16:15 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
i do not think this was posted here,if it was..sorry

National Rifle Association
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The National Rifle Association, or NRA, is a 501(c)(4) group for the promotion of marksmanship, firearm safety, and the protection of hunting and personal protection firearm rights in the United States, established in New York in 1871 as the American Rifle Association. It sponsors firearm safety training courses, as well as marksmanship events featuring shooting skills and sports. The NRA is sometimes said to be the most powerful single non-profit organization in the United States. It is the oldest and largest civil rights organization in the U.S., considering gun ownership a civil right protected by the Second Amendment of the Bill of Rights.

GO HERE TO READ IT ALL,ITS A GOOD READ
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Rifle_Association
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13. August 2006 @ 17:10 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Good link ireland :)

That article got me to thinking about the bad press the NRA generally gets. Alot of folks see the NRA as wanting to make sure every criminal has the right to get a gun but nothing can be further from the truth. NRA has spent literally millions lobbying, promoting and eventually getting passed many common sense gun laws bring tougher punishment on those who use guns in the comminsion of crimes. Instead of hoping that banning guns from everyone might work the NRA is helping to target those that actually misuse them. NRA consist of millions of everyday folks that don't feel they should be punished for the acts of a cruel few. I abide by the laws but the minute I'm told I can't have a handgun is the minute I willfully become a lawbreaker. I'll be damned if I'm made to be defenseless against the criminals that apparently ranked lower on the list of problems than me and my legally purchased and used handgun.


Another point I'd like to make that doesn't get hardly any coverage is the NRA's Eddie Eagle program for teaching kids about the dangers of guns and what to do if they find one. I hear so many of the anti gun groups screaming that we need to ban guns to save the children yet I don't recall any of the anti gun groups taking the time, effort and money to do something comprehensive to actively protect children.

*** The NRA allotted extra money this year to supply gun safety program materials at no cost to any police department and makes it available at a nominal cost to any group or organization that wants to start the program in their community.

http://www.nrahq.org/safety/eddie/



***The Brady Foundation, one of the most vehement antigun groups, gives you flashing body counts on their site and a refridgerator magnet,

http://www.kidsandguns.org/entryhall/safetytips.asp

Pretty tacky if you ask me.



My killer sig came courtesy of bb "El Jefe" mayo.
The Forum Rules You Agreed To! http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/2487
"And there we saw the giants, and we were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight" - Numbers 13:33

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 13. August 2006 @ 17:14

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13. August 2006 @ 18:20 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Quote:
Another point I'd like to make that doesn't get hardly any coverage is the NRA's Eddie Eagle program for teaching kids about the dangers of guns and what to do if they find one.
What's vastly worse is that many prominent gun control advocates and organizations have come out against education programs such as these, leading to more tragedy. NY Governor George Pataki and former Maryland Governor Parris Glendening come to mind.

So much for gun control being about safety.

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This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 13. August 2006 @ 18:24

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14. August 2006 @ 03:57 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Very good Neph, Gerry certainly didn't need to be blamed for what's going on in Philly. Hell it's happening in every large city. Marines don't whine!!


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14. August 2006 @ 04:41 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Neph's right and it's fair enough to criticize me for being too brusque, and I apologize for that. However, I do blame the voters in cities like Philly in large part for the problems there, because the voters and residents often aren't willing to change things. That's a major part of the resaon why there's so much crime in large cities. That's a major part of the reason for the decline of cities like Philly. And that's a major part of the reason why residents and businesses re lining up to get out of some cities. I'm not any happier about it than Gerry, espcially in the case of Philly, which I love intensely, but it's the reality of what's going on there.

But ok, sorry, Gerry, and I will try to tone it down. :)

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gerry1
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14. August 2006 @ 05:00 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
@Dunker....I just stopped posting to this thread after your last senseless post a couple of weeks ago; it was truly enjoyable until you came along. Now I find that its lost it's appeal for exactly the same reason after someone revived it a few days ago. Where do you live? You spoke in your last post of mayor Street's large personal security entourage ... Street has only one security guard (albeit he's the size of an entourage)...I walk by the mayor often on his way to work in the mornning. (While I'm not supporter of the mayor, I get A kick out of the fact that he walks to work like the rest of us). Like any big city, there has been crime here all along but it went through the roof long ago after industry left the city long before John Street or Ed Rendell were mayor; the escalation began in the mid 1980s. You speak of blaming guns instead of gangs .... Philly DOESN'T HAVE STREET GANGS!!! Unlike the other big cities, we managed at least to solve that problem twenty five years ago. I'm certainly not about to address fiction. Your comments about the UK and Australia don't warrant much comment either: you'd be hard pressed to come up with a city in the UK or Australia that nears 1,000 murders a year like a couple of our biggest cities ... I even rather doubt that there are that many a year in the entire coutries of Australia or the UK but I suppose I could be wrong.

@everyone....When reading what the others have been posting, it's interesting that it always comes down to the old chestnut that people kill, not guns, yet aside from being an exercise in the obvious, it doesn't address the problem and there is, indeed, a big problem with so many innocent people being shot dead for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. While there is a certain truth in blaming city handgun violence on bad people skills, that approach isn't an approach approach at all ... its sociological thinking but not a practical approach to the problem and some sort of solution is needed desperately. With the exception of one, this has been an insightful crowd, surly you've read how handgun crime (and violent crime in general) has been spreading outside the boundries of the big cities; the new crime statistics were all over the news a couple of weeks ago because they were rather alarming. With poverty on the rise in the burbs now and a lot of the middle class shrinking quickly, the statistics of rising violent crime rates outside the city show a direct correlation to the rising poverty and socioeconomic decline from which it issues. In short, this particular cancer, regardless of the cause, is spreading.

Well, this thread has been fun. As I said before, there are good points on both sides of this which is what makes it interesting. Its also interesting how our opinions are formed by the circumstances in which we find ourselves ... before moving to Philly, I lived my life in very rural areas of new england and would have been on your side of this fence at the time. I'm glad Neph started this thread and its been both fun and enlightening. Pity some people don't know what was meant by "Neph's POLITE Gun Debate" as the thread is named. See you in the other threads and forums! ... Gerry

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 14. August 2006 @ 06:34

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14. August 2006 @ 15:37 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Dunker,

I am not too sure why you feel the issue lies with the voters or the mayor. It is impossible to lay blame on any politician because the people of their constituency behave in a manner that represents a lack of respect for a weapon, or human life. This shortcoming falls on the parents, who in most cases involving violent crimes are not an important or worthwhile part of the criminal's life. Even when the parents are involved in the criminal's life, you usually hear the same thing... "I never let him/her around a gun... I never kept one or suffered one be kept."

If parents were involved in their children's lives, and taught them to respect human life, and how to properly use, maintain, and weild a firearm we would see these sad statistics decreasing. It is not up to ANY politician to attempt to undo what has been done by the very people that raise these animals.

Gerry,

I hope for our sake you continue to join us in this conversation. Your counterpoints are very interesting, and well thought out... besides, I wish to respond to your last post.

You seem to feel that by simply banning firearms the world will be a better/safer place to live in. But I suggest that the guns are still out there. They are with the criminals, and the gangs that weild them with utter lack of consideration for human life... and they will continue to be passed down in these criminal circles. The only thing you will be doing is simply removing them from the law abiding citizen, who uses them for legal protection, and/or sporting, and/or hunting, thereby making self-defense non-existant.

Tell me something, if Philly suddenly changed their laws today to remove firearms from the streets and they had a collection (including payment for the return of the guns), how many law abiding citizens would return their guns? Now answer me this... how many gang bangers will be in that line? I'll tell you what, I would be leaving Philly in a heartbeat, because it would be a free-for-all on the law abiding citizen...

Social programs may be the way to quell violence by firearm, but I think it really is more of an issue with parents... Maybe we should hold them as responsible for the violent crimes of their children who perpetrate the actual crime.

Maybe we should let parents legally punish their kids. My gramma kicked my ass on a regular basis while my mother didn't attempt to. You know what? I didn't misbehave around gramma, but I had NO fear of my mother.

I can think of dozens of other ideas to nip the problem in the bud, but removing firearms from the hands of people using them for self-defense is definately NOT one of them.


This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 14. August 2006 @ 15:39

 
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