I never said we should tolerate such an environment. My point is that throwing guns at the situation will not solve the problem of violent crime.
When it comes to my cousin, are you saying that he should have been armed while going round the pubs and clubs? If not, then I don't see what you are trying to say.
'Petty' refered to theft (like in car stereos) and 'opportunistic' referred to getting beaten up in the street (i.e. no prior planning). All crime is traumatising.
Believe me if you see someone with a gun you call the police pretty quick no matter wher you live.
Did you see 'Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends' on Monday? He was in South Africa talking to the Boars. Many of them were armed with handguns (and heavy calibre automatic weapons), and people didn't even bat an eyelid, nevermind call the police. They were all licensed, legally held weapons.
I do think if people held arms they wouldn't feel the need to form a mob as they would feel more empowered to protect themselves.
So you concede that guns will not eradicate the paedophile or his filthy actions. I'm not against the mob specifically, put the wrongful targeting of people based on rumour (in the traditional Arthur Miller style). Considering that the activity would still proceed, if people were armed with guns, wouldn't innocent people still get hurt?
Your information is interesting (saved me the trouble, I guess

).
Firearms act offences 1998/99 - 3,325 (quite a few for such "rare instances" don't you think - nearly ten a day.
Firearms act offences 1999/200 - 3,143 - a fall of a massive..... 5.5%
Firstly, ten a day isn't really that significant compared to the crimes more likely to affect you - e.g. mugging, car theft, alcohol induced violence, maybe even rape. I'll try to find out the exact figures for these. Also, a firearms offence is much more likely to be 'detected' (to use Police terminology), by its conspicuous nature. The crimes I gave above, probably have much lower detection rates (especially rape).
Another point, is that it has been to soon since the change in legislation, to make any real conclusions from any of the data given. Any change could be idiosyncratic of the statistics not of reality; maybe in ten years there will be an official report commissioned to look at the data.
In reply to your statistics describing an increase in criminality - are you saying this a direct consequence of the decrease in the number of weapons from "...418,300 in 1996 to 305,000 in 1997..."? Or that if guns hadn't been restricted, crime levels would have remained the same? I have no answer as to what has caused the increase - but there are far more factors to consider than simply the raw data. Changes in the way the police report crimes, and the policy behind 'quotas' might have an effect, for instance.
Deterrance is often used as an excuse to justify household gun ownership - I personally believe that having one gun per 120 people has never deterred any criminal.
I never said that prisons were successful in rehabilitation (read my post again) - I said rehabilitation was a
key idea behind the prison service. I personally think criminals should serve their sentence, unless an appeal is successful. But the key question here, I think, is whether the tax payer will pay the BILLIONS needed to build the new prisons already needed by a prison service at bursting point?
All in all the figures show me at least that the problem is the growth in power of the criminal society not the legal ownership of firearms.
Might be the case, might not. This growth in 'power of the criminal society' can't simply be attributed to the removal of 27% of guns from society. They were never widespread enough before the new legislation.
As for the refusal of licences - the police have to have very concrete grounds for removing such a 'fundamental' right (as seen by our American brothers). They gave that nutter in Dublane a license for years - very little was known by the police about his strange behaviour. That goes for all social deviants - they tend to hide it pretty well. That might also explain the low refusal rate.