Author Topic: Longest Signature Block Competition!  (Read 2831 times)

Offline Toad

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« on: December 07, 2002, 07:28:20 AM »
OK, Beetle, now that I have you in here, I'll answer you first. I'm sure Nashwan will be along shortly when he tips to the thread title.

The "official" stats show that our gun homicides and "knife" homicides are both higher than yours So undoubtedly our rate per 100,000 of each is higher than that respective rate in E/W/S.

A bit slanted of you to address only the gross number of homicides, isn't it? I mean you're totally ignoring the "correction" that almost every country has adopted to correlate the stats to population. The old "rate per 100,00 of population"? You aren't rally comparing apples to apples at all are you? Rather obvious attempt to twist the stats, I'd say, old boy.

I certainly would not deny that the US has a higher rate of homicide per 100,000 population than UK/Wales/Scotland. It's on the order of 3X higher here in the US, isn't it?

Did I say 3X? Why, that's almost the multiplier that applies to the difference in UK gun and "sharp instrument" homicides. "Sharp instruments" kill 3X as many of your citizens as guns do.

And while you're so caustically critical of the US homicide rate being 3X that of E/W/S, you just ignore the same huge disparity between your own gun and "sharp instrument" homicide rate?

My goodness. If I have a plank in my eye.... the other end of it must be in yours!

Let me know when you get blunt instrument rates per 100,000 for the US and for E/W/S. Then we can have an unslanted discussion on it. Perhaps it's time that we both register/license/ban/confiscate golf clubs?

Be careful cutting that roast beef..........

Oh, for the topic of your after dinner discussion may I propose:  "Why the US has a higher homicide rate per 100,000 than England in any comparison of any "instrument used" category?
« Last Edit: December 07, 2002, 09:12:50 AM by Toad »
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen!

Offline eskimo2

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« Reply #1 on: December 07, 2002, 07:47:08 AM »
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Offline Toad

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« Reply #2 on: December 07, 2002, 07:55:33 AM »
Nashwan,

First of all, I hope you're not confusing all of Lazs arguments with mine. The mail should get to the proper person, no?

 

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Nashwan: If you can't come up with a sensible way of banning sharp objects, it's because no-one can.
[/b]

So, "sharp object" homicides are acceptable losses then?

Because sharp instruments, unlike say guns, cannot be registered/licensed/restricted/banned/confiscated?

So, no matter how many die from "sharp instruments" society just has to accept it because SOME people find knives absolutely necessary.

When was the first iron knife created roughly? How did folks get along before that?


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Humans have been using sharp objects for the past million years or so.


Ah. So a patina of age confers the societal "immunity necklace" upon a murder weapon then?


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As I said before, everybody here owns and uses sharp objects on a daily basis. Most do not own or use guns regulary.


Wait..... it's not age? It's just general ownership and use that confer the "immunity necklace"? Over here, according to gun ownership stats, the overwhelming majority of us own guns. So, guns would get the "immunity necklace" here?

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Guns are also far more lethal than knives. In America, where guns are (almost) freely available, guns are used for several times as many murders as knives are, despite the fact there are many times as many knives in use.


And in E/W/S, where "sharp instruments" are freely available, sharp instruments are used for several times... 3X, in fact... as many murders as guns.

And in Canada, which has nearly as many guns per capita (if not more than) the US and an uncountable number of "sharp instruments" the homicide rates for guns or sharp instruments are lower than BOTH the US and E/W/S.

So, maybe it's not the inanimate objects, eh?

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Many countries have banned or severly restricted guns, non have banned knives. That's because it isn't practical, and your joke suggestion remains just that, a joke.


Look a little closer. The two major countries E/W/S and Australia that have banned guns have seen no statistically significant drop in their gun homicide rate. They have, however, seen a rise in their "sharp instrument" homicide rates.

Now there's a joke for you. An extremely cruel joke, particularly on the taxpayers who funded that wasted effort.

At the same time, without bans/confiscation, firearms homicide rates have dropped very significantly in the US, along with our "sharp instrument" homicide rate.

Once again it would seem that  blaming inanimate objects themselves are NOT the way to affect homicide rates.


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Lose control of your anger with you fists and you are likely to hurt someone. Lose control of your anger with a gun and you are likely to kill them.


In the bad old days before Sam Colt, what happened when the big, mean bully started whaling away on the little milquetoast? "Beaten to death" is a phrase that entered our language because it was a useful, meaningful description.

So, you want to go back to the old days? Where big folks can beat the doodah out of little folks? Because there sure aren't enough cops anywhere to stop it.

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Are you seriously saying you wouldn't be more concerned if you got in to an argument and the man pulled a gun on you, rather than simply put up his fists?


Sure. And if you stop and think about E/W/S, just as many guns are being pulled as were pulled before the ban. Same story in Australia; the rates haven't really changed.

So, again, my point is..... the bans don't work. Further, look at Pongo's thread. Look at all that money spent to register with little or nothing successfully accomplished. Couple that to the fact that realistically Canada doesn't even HAVE a firearm problem. Their rate per 100,000 is lower than yours, which seems to get held up as the "holy grail".

So, isn't there a more effective way to use that money to combat crime? You and I both know there is. What Canada is doing, what E/W/S and Australia did is an incredible waste of resources. Yet you would propose we waste our money like you fine folks did?

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If you want to defend yourself and your family, why do you need a gun, as according to your theory a knife or rock is just as effective a weapon?


No, that's not my theory. That's you misreading what I said.

What I said and what I still say is that it is not the inanimate objects. Man has been killing man since the dawn of time for essentially the same reasons that feature in homicide today, Greed, jealousy, etc.

Canada has far more guns than E/W/S and probably as many per capita as the US. Their firearms rate is the lowest of the three.

E/W/S and Australia took the ban/confiscate route; their homicide rates are essentially unchanged, before and after.

It's not the inanimate object; it's man himself.
« Last Edit: December 07, 2002, 07:58:33 AM by Toad »
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen!

Offline -dead-

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« Reply #3 on: December 07, 2002, 08:47:30 AM »
Is this the BBS equivalent of those people who walk around the streets talking into their mobile phone headsets? Or is it more like the BBS version of those other people who walk around the streets talking like they have mobile phone headsets... but don't. I am perplexed.
“The FBI has no hard evidence connecting Usama Bin Laden to 9/11.” --  Rex Tomb, Chief of Investigative Publicity for the FBI, June 5, 2006.

Offline Toad

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« Reply #4 on: December 07, 2002, 09:12:03 AM »
Obviously.

You don't even have a signature block.
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen!

Offline lazs2

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« Reply #5 on: December 07, 2002, 09:25:57 AM »
Another obvious point is that there are 2 million concealed carry permit holders and none of them have commited an unlawful homicide.. the states that have the highest incidence of concealed carry permit holders have the lowest crime rates and,,, I bet they have the lowest "sharp instrument" homicide rates.    More guns less crime... Canada has more guns ans less crime than either of us.  With their new laws tho... when the criminals realize that the government is trying to disarm the citizens.. that will go up I betcha.
lazs

Offline Kieran

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« Reply #6 on: December 07, 2002, 09:48:09 AM »
Toad, I am growing concerned with your obvious need to look more sophisticated and suave and matronly- I mean, telling other countries how they're screwing up and how they should run their countries? What are you... British? ;)














>

Offline beet1e

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« Reply #7 on: December 07, 2002, 11:20:42 AM »
I did a search on all threads - beet1e or beetle or beatle.
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Rather obvious attempt to twist the stats, I'd say, old boy.
LOL!  I have an excellent Mentor in the stats twisting department. :)

As Nashwan has been at pains to point out, we cannot live without sharp instruments, and neither can you.

The tally of homicides apportioned into the different methods that were employed, and a comparison between those proportions has no bearing on the overall homicide rate of another country. It's much simpler. Homicides are in direct proportion to the ease with which they can be committed, which includes the availability and effectiveness of the instrument to be used, whether that be a sharp knife or a gun. More guns = more shootings = more crime. If there were no guns, no-one would be shot. You have lots of gun crime because of the guns free for all which exists in the US. Pray tell me by what stretch of insanity was a gun permit granted to a man who later shot another man for taking a cold beer! Another one I heard was the case of a man who shot his neighbour for splashing his newly cleaned car while using a garden hose. I'm sure it happens hundreds of times a year. :rolleyes:

But I digress. We are talking about sharp objects, and as Nashwan pointed out, about a third of homicides here involve sharp objects. The figure Nashwan gave was 254. That compares with more than 2000 a year in the US, or a US/UK sharp object homicide ratio of 8-1. Factor in the per/100,000 population calculation, and the US sharp instrument homicide rate is clearly double that of the UK.

Offline Kieran

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« Reply #8 on: December 07, 2002, 11:36:29 AM »
So out of a country of 265 million people you want to zero in on a man that shot someone over a beer. Oh.

You choose not to get it, I suppose, that people will kill regardless. Gun, meat cleaver, knife... it doesn't matter. That man was dead as soon as he grabbed that fellow's last cold one not because the crazy guy had a gun, but because he was... crazy.

Now if I apply your logic, you guys should outlaw squirrels, because Lord knows what one squirrel can do if allowed to roam free. I mean, how many of your citizens really need squirrels, anyway? It might even force some brutish octagenarian to brandish an outlawed and deadly BBgun to end such a reign of terror... and how would you feel to know you were personally responsible for the lawless behaviour (notice the cool British "u" in "behavior"?) of grandpa? Perish the thought.

Offline lazs2

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« Reply #9 on: December 07, 2002, 11:58:51 AM »
What exactly do you mean by a 'permitted" gun owner?   I consider that to bea concealed carry
carry a permit... so do state and local governments... neither of these guys had concealed carry permits.  I would also say that a rate of double is not to bad considering that your people are behaving very badly for being stuck on a little tiny island with no chance (or very litte)of escape once they commit a homicide..

More guns equals less crime... here and in Canada which is much more representitive than some dinky little island with a bunch of nanny ruled wussies.   There is a book with that title (more guns  less crime) I suggested that you read it it... Have you?

knives could indeed be regulated and are quite frequently... look at airlines... people seem to be able to eat quite well without em on airlines... look at prisons no (legal) knives there to eat with but no starving prisoners... really.... what do you use a knife for?   why couldn't you just have eateries hold your knives... heck... red meat isn't any good for you anyway and what with mad cow and all.... you would probly double the homicide savings by simply not allowing private ownership of knives in the uk....

I bet you can't carry a bowie knife strapped to your hip in london...  Bet you allready have a lot of "sharp instrument" laws..  it just seems that yu are not "permitting" the right people..  What do you really need a knife for?  why would you need anything but a very thin bladed knife with about a 3" serrated blade?   You don't need all the "assult knives" you have in your kitchen right now unless you are some kinda perv who equates the length of his knife with that of his noodle..  
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Offline NUKE

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« Reply #10 on: December 07, 2002, 12:24:11 PM »
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More guns = more shootings = more crime.


Actually Beet1e you are very wrong..at least regarding the US.

I will find the link to be sure, but in the last 5 years or so, Americans gun ownership increased by at least 50 million guns, yet during the same period, ALL violent crime went down with the exception of rape ( up .68%).  Murders, Shootings, Attempted Murder, etc. all dropped significantly

So it could be said that more guns equates to less murder/crime in the US

Crime including murder is further down in EVERY state that has a concealed carry law.

In fact , some countries have less restrictive gun laws than the US and some have far more restrictive laws. All told, there has never been a proven correlation between guns laws and murder rate that I have seen.

What was the murder and violent crime rate in the UK throughout it's pre-ban history? ( I'm asking, I don't know the figures)
« Last Edit: December 07, 2002, 12:28:15 PM by NUKE »

Offline Toad

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« Reply #11 on: December 07, 2002, 12:26:21 PM »
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Originally posted by beet1e
As Nashwan has been at pains to point out, we cannot live without sharp instruments, and neither can you.
[/b]

So, these are "acceptable losses" to you? Some deaths are acceptable, given the convenience sharp instruments offer to some of society?


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The tally of homicides apportioned into the different methods that were employed, and a comparison between those proportions has no bearing on the overall homicide rate of another country.


Indeed. So why do you continue to focus on totals rather than rates?

 
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Homicides are in direct proportion to the ease with which they can be committed, which includes the availability and effectiveness of the instrument to be used, whether that be a sharp knife or a gun. More guns = more shootings = more crime.


I see. Then please explain the Canadian Conundrum. They have more guns than you folks and ...... less crime and homicide. In fact, their gun ownership stats are much more akin to those in the US than they are to E/W/S.

Beyond that, your own Home Office and the Australian Governmental statisticians clearly state that after the bans, firearms homicide rates remain "very stable". So, the bans have had no effect.

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the US sharp instrument homicide rate is clearly double that of the UK.


Haven't seen anyone argue contrary to that. The question is, since the E/W/S sharp instrument homicide rate is 3X that of it's firearms homicide rate, why are you more concerned with US problems than your own?

That plank in my eye has it's other end in your eye it seems.

Where's your plan for reducing sharp instrument homicide in the UK? To paraphrase: More sharp instruments = more sharp instrument homicides = more crime. If there were no sharp instruments, no-one would be cut. Does that sound silly to you? It does to me, too.
« Last Edit: December 07, 2002, 12:37:05 PM by Toad »
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen!

Offline Nashwan

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« Reply #12 on: December 07, 2002, 12:53:51 PM »
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Another obvious point is that there are 2 million concealed carry permit holders and none of them have commited an unlawful homicide


Wrong. Try Jamie Cokes, for one. He had CCW permit, and went out looking for a man who had shot him previously. He didn't find him, but did shoot and kill another man.

William Manies, serving 26 years for going back and murdering the boss who had fired him. He was also under investigation for threatening to shoot another driver in a road rage incident a few weeks before he comitted the murder.

Clay Wallace, who shot and killed his friend after an argument over a new sewage system escalated into a fist fight.

There are many more. Don't believe everything you read on gun lobby sites.

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So, "sharp object" homicides are acceptable losses then?

Of course they aren't acceptable.

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Because sharp instruments, unlike say guns, cannot be registered/licensed/restricted/banned/confiscated?

So, no matter how many die from "sharp instruments" society just has to accept it because SOME people find knives absolutely necessary

Some? Everybody does. Tell you what, I won't use a gun for the next year if you agree not to use a knife for the next year. Deal?

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Ah. So a patina of age confers the societal "immunity necklace" upon a murder weapon then?


No, it just shows how necessary knives are. Man invented the knife long before he became modern man.

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Wait..... it's not age? It's just general ownership and use that confer the "immunity necklace"? Over here, according to gun ownership stats, the overwhelming majority of us own guns. So, guns would get the "immunity necklace" here?

No, it's necessity. Knives are necessary, guns are not, for the vast majority of people.

I'd estimate about 8,000 murders a year would be prevented in the US if guns are banned. I know you won't accept that, but tell me how many murders you think is an acceptable price for your right to own a gun? If it was 8,000, would you think that fair enough? 4,000? What if it went up to 12,000, or 20,000?

What if it was only 1, but that one was your wife or child? Below the belt, I know, but it' still a valid question.

If you don't believe guns result in any extra murders, ask yourself why America has less robberies but more people killed during robberies, less violent assaults but more people killed during violent assaults, less burglaries but more people killed during burglaries etc.

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Look a little closer. The two major countries E/W/S and Australia that have banned guns have seen no statistically significant drop in their gun homicide rate.


Britain didn't have a statistically significant gun homicide rate anyway. It's the same argument as banning skiing in Jamica doesn't save lives, so banning skiing in Switzerland won't save lives.

Same with banning swimming in the Sahara, or banning driving on the moon.

Who says Australia's hasn't?

Seems homicides by guns in Australia went up from 27% in 89 to 35% in 95, and down to 21% the year after (when gun control increased) to 19% now. Sounds like a drop to me.
http://www.aic.gov.au/research/homicide/stats/type.html

In raw numbers, killings with guns went from 87 in 1989 to 111 in 95 to 64 in 98/99. Incidentally, 64 is a lower number than for any year in the preceeding decade.

http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/rpp/28/ch2.pdf

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They have, however, seen a rise in their "sharp instrument" homicide rates.

No, both England anWales and Australia have seen a drop in the sharp instrument category since the mid 90s, which produced highs in both countries.

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At the same time, without bans/confiscation, firearms homicide rates have dropped very significantly in the US, along with our "sharp instrument" homicide rate

Along with the entire crime rate. The US has increased the number of police, brought in tougher sentencing, and increased the likelihood of criminals getting caught. That has reduced the number of people committing crimes, for obvious reasons.

Britain has gone the opposite route, reducing effective police numbers, letting more criminals walk free on technicalities, hamstringing the police with "racial awarness" etc.

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In the bad old days before Sam Colt, what happened when the big, mean bully started whaling away on the little milquetoast? "Beaten to death" is a phrase that entered our language because it was a useful, meaningful description.

So, you want to go back to the old days? Where big folks can beat the doodah out of little folks? Because there sure aren't enough cops anywhere to stop it.

They can anyway. What happens if both have guns? Chances are, the criminal will have less scruple about using it, will go in to the encounter better prepared (after he knows he's going to attack you. you don't set out to attack him).

US policemen aren't protected by their guns, having a murder rate many times that of British policemen.

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Sure. And if you stop and think about E/W/S, just as many guns are being pulled as were pulled before the ban.

Not in any real sense. English law defines a firearms crime as any one where the offender claims to have a firearm. Famously, one "armed robber" used a banana in his jacket pocket. Not much chance of him panicking and firing the banana, was there?

By far the most common type of "firearm" used in a robbery in the UK is a replica pistol, either blank firing or airsoft.

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Further, look at Pongo's thread. Look at all that money spent to register with little or nothing successfully accomplished.

What Pongo's thread shows is that the people responsible for that policy and it's implementation are very stupid indeed. It has nothing to say about the merits or otherwise of the policy.

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Couple that to the fact that realistically Canada doesn't even HAVE a firearm problem. Their rate per 100,000 is lower than yours, which seems to get held up as the "holy grail".

Firearm homicide rate is lower?

Number of firearms homicides in England and Wales in 2000 was 62, out of a population of just over 50,000,000.

In Canada the number was 171, out of a population of just over 30,000,000. That's about 4 - 5 times the UK rate.

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What I said and what I still say is that it is not the inanimate objects. Man has been killing man since the dawn of time for essentially the same reasons that feature in homicide today, Greed, jealousy, etc.

Agreed. A saint with a gun is safe, a thug without a gun is not safe. But a thug with a gun is more dangerous than a thug without a gun. Surely you can agree with that?

Guns are a very efficient way of killing people, far more so than bare hands, knives, clubs etc.

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Canada has far more guns than E/W/S and probably as many per capita as the US. Their firearms rate is the lowest of the three.

No, it's far higher than the UK's.

Offline Kieran

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« Reply #13 on: December 07, 2002, 01:19:39 PM »
Thank God we are all allowed to live in the country of our choice, where the level of governmental nannying fits our particular perspectives best. Also thank God we live in a country where the means fight such nannying isn't willingly given away.

Offline Thrawn

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« Reply #14 on: December 07, 2002, 01:51:56 PM »
Nashwan, I looked at the Australia homocide statistics a few weeks ago.  And although I did notice a drop in homocides by firearm, I also noticed a proportional increase in homocides by "Other" methods, methods that do no include sharp objects, hands or feet.