so now that you see and agree that their study did reduce deaths (with no qualifiers) your objection was that because we are not an island, it would not work here. However, because you did not read to the end you missed what they meant by that. this is the part you missed, literally the very end:
1/3/2013 10:19:26 PM
^ so you think a program in a country with fewer homicides than the city of Detroit would substantially reduce murders here? A country that had a homicide rate already declining before the ban? A country where the total reduction since the ban is statistically nothing when considering the previously observed decline? A country without a huge border that effectively open and used by drug cartels to bring in narcotics and weapons? That's really your best argument that a gun ban would work well here? How about the increased violent crime in Australia since the ban? Are you going to accept that as a result of the ban as well? With such a low murder rate before the ban, there's barely even been a 10% drop!Tell me this, what is your goal here? To effectively reduce the number of lives lost or to reduce the number of lives lost to firearms? If its the former then Australia shows that it's not really an effective solution in a country that is NOTHING like ours. If its the latter then you're not even worth talking to.
1/3/2013 10:20:21 PM
1/3/2013 10:22:26 PM
1/3/2013 10:33:07 PM
^^ Sorry to bust your bubble but I'm not a member of the NRA and I don't like them. I'm looking at the numbers from Australia's government. I also posted more that you ignored. Do you accept that the increase in violent crime is a result of the gun ban? Do you think a program in an island country can be just as effective in a country that effectively has an open border used by drug cartels to bring in narcotics and weapons?As far as what you say is false, there has been ~15% reduction in murders in Australis since before the gun ban. In total, approximately FORTY-FIVE fewer murders. There was a downward trend that started before the gun ban. The current rate is within roughly 5% of that downward trend. What have I said that's false? Even if the gun ban was responsible for HALF of the decline, you're talking about less than 10% in a country that's nothing like ours. We're barely talking a double digit reduction in the total number of murders. You consider that significant?Also, is your goal the reduction of murders or the reduction of gun murders?[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 10:37 PM. Reason : .]
1/3/2013 10:35:00 PM
^^ those are shortcomings with a time trend study, which is why they did this more accurate and useful method and found the part that you did not paste:
1/3/2013 10:40:34 PM
^^
1/3/2013 10:42:51 PM
1/3/2013 10:47:17 PM
^^ good job at having a discussion. Thanks for finally admitting you're a troll.
1/3/2013 10:48:43 PM
1/3/2013 10:50:35 PM
no, its not unclear. they find that there is no significant method substitution, no change to non-firearm deaths, and a reduction in firearms deaths. total deaths are reduced. your claim against looking at firearm deaths is that other methods will replace them, this is not unclear that methods were not substituted.(ITT Hiro thinks that there is no smuggling or organized crime in Australia and ignores the last paragraph entirely http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organised_crime_in_Australia)[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 11:20 PM. Reason : crayons man, crayons]
1/3/2013 11:16:20 PM
does the study show any trends for violent crime, home invasions, assaults, etc?
1/3/2013 11:25:04 PM
this study does not look at those. Is your argument now that we should ignore gun crimes because of non-gun crimes? And you seriously don't think that's silly?[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 11:31 PM. Reason : But thank you for taking the giant step to finally concede my point ]
1/3/2013 11:30:23 PM
no, i'm just curious about other effects. i have not been able to locate any reliable data on those crimes.[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 11:35 PM. Reason : please stop putting words in my mouth]i'd like to see post-confiscation data on assaults with and without firearms, home invasions with and without firearms, etc.[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 11:37 PM. Reason : adsf]
1/3/2013 11:34:19 PM
http://swacj.org/swjcj/archives/6.3/4%20-%20Guns%20and%20Violent%20Crime.pdfAbstractThis study examines the relationship between gun availability and crime in a cross-na- tional sample of cities. Data from the International Crime Victimization Survey are used to examine three competing hypotheses. The results of the limited information maximum least squares regression analyses suggest that gun availability influences rates of as- sault, gun assault, robbery, and gun robbery. These findings suggest that increasing city levels of gun availability in this cross-national sample of cities increases the likelihood that violent crimes are committed and that guns are involved in these crimes. Impor-tantly, these findings do not suggest that increasing gun availability reduces crime.(and before someone posts a study, of which there are many, that gun control does not reduce crime very well let me make this clear. I agree with that, that is why I am suggesting a new path, reducing guns in circulation along with controls. Those studies do not cover my proposal, my proposal has shown to be effective at reducing gun numbers and deaths. Now here is a comparison netween guns and crime more broadly)
1/3/2013 11:37:57 PM
i'm more interested in australia at this point[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 11:40 PM. Reason : b/c i think that's the closest example we have to your proposal]
1/3/2013 11:38:59 PM
You got the email forward too? Cute. That's been around long enough it made Snopes:http://www.snopes.com/crime/statistics/ausguns.aspTo answer your question, assault rose slightly through the 90's and leveled off, others dropped. The assault increases were driven mainly by people under 15, the Australian Institue of Criminology attributed it largely "due to better public understanding of child protection issues and increased reporting due to public awareness of what constitutes physical and sexual assault - especially within the family - but this requires further investigation to examine how many recorded violent crimes against children relate to current and/or past events and of the relationship to the offender."http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/current%20series/tandi/341-360/tandi359/view%20paper.html
1/3/2013 11:51:42 PM
1/3/2013 11:52:28 PM
1/4/2013 12:00:05 AM
I apologize, i mistook you for the person who posted that he had finished a critical reading of a 50 page document in 5 minutes. You have been very reasonable.I enjoy guns, I support the 2nd amendment as an individual right, and I think that every human has an inalienable right to defend themselves. I also think that we have a violence problem in this country, and in addition to some real introspection about that problem, we need to look at treating the symptom. Gun controls are on,y effective at some things, and controls like the AWB are a waste of time, money, and political leverage. So far the only thing I've found that has a chance in my opinion is reducing the number of guns in circulation and better tracking the ones that are, along with some minor gun control changes I listed way back. I think a voluntary buy-back program has enough evidence considering its limited intrusion. If this was a mandatory action i would maybe want to see some more analysis too, but I think the support is sufficient for a large scale voluntary action.
1/4/2013 12:12:33 AM
i'd guess the amount you'd have to pay to get enough voluntary forfeitures to have a statistically significant impact on violent crime or homicide rates would be very large. if you tried to finance this with taxes on firearm sales, the tax on a firearm would be so large that it'd be an unreasonable restriction on the 2A, imo.[Edited on January 4, 2013 at 12:45 AM. Reason : dfa]
1/4/2013 12:42:55 AM
1/4/2013 1:40:59 AM
outlaws had guns
1/4/2013 2:17:13 AM
http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/crime/item/14071-the-san-antonio-theater-shooting-the-media-ignored
1/4/2013 7:46:05 AM
1/4/2013 7:59:09 AM
if we assume it's all paid by taxing firearm sales, to simply break even (number bought back = number of guns sold), you'd have to collect enough from each gun sale to buy back one gun. seems to me you'd just have to double the price of every gun. does that logic make sense?otherwise, you'd just be buying back a bunch of junk guns, which don't seem to be what folks are concerned about.[Edited on January 4, 2013 at 9:06 AM. Reason : aws]
1/4/2013 8:56:57 AM
And we're back to my buy-back program, while voluntary, includes a mechanism for funding itself by auctioning off the more valuable pieces purchased to offset the costs of buying the junk.I am beginning to think that the violence is a symptom of a greater problem. Normally people do not kill without motive. Has anyone seen any studies that try to prove a correlation between violence/homicide/assault and other illegal activity?
1/4/2013 9:20:35 AM
I, once again, would like to say... gg duke.
1/4/2013 10:07:53 AM
1/4/2013 10:53:37 AM
i think the destruction of collectible firearms sucks, but let the free market do its thing.a WWII bring-back worth about $30k was turned in at a recent buy-back. it's in a museum now.
1/4/2013 11:05:01 AM
^ agreed
1/4/2013 11:24:14 AM
In the same way that private dealers were able to process cars that were sold back, I see no reason licensed gun dealers, or private clubs working through one, shouldn't be able to process buybacks also. I don't think it should be limited to them, but this would allow people to save collectibles.
1/4/2013 11:42:10 AM
http://frontpagemag.com/2012/dgreenfield/japans-low-murder-rate-is-due-to-its-immigration-policies-not-its-gun-control/
1/4/2013 9:23:27 PM
bye bye guns....10 bills on the 1st day... i would like to thank all the ignorant people blaming objects instead of the crazies wielding them.back to the 90s and mass murders by bombings...thanks for not fixing anything crazy people are still crazy.remember ted?
1/4/2013 9:30:30 PM
Frontpagemag.com? Yeeaaaaahhhhh, okaaaaystudies or at least real media only
1/4/2013 9:50:48 PM
says the man who referenced wikipedia.
1/4/2013 10:15:18 PM
I've never written my elected officials before, but I just did. I don't think we need gun control, we need better mental health shit happening.
1/5/2013 9:30:51 AM
i guess now would be a good time to ask...again...for a link to the report that shows the UK and Japan have lower instances of mental health issues per capita than the US does
1/5/2013 11:35:40 AM
[Edited on January 5, 2013 at 12:20 PM. Reason : A lot of problems with those surveys though, less developed countries will be under reported]
1/5/2013 12:18:51 PM
Including substance abuse makes that chart worthless.
1/5/2013 12:56:03 PM
awesome. a chart from a 2004 report based on "research" from 2001-2003 that doesn't even cover 10% of the countries in the world and includes substance abuse.
1/5/2013 12:57:30 PM
I wasn't being serious and didn't feel like scrolling up to find what the point was, but if you can be more specific about what you want to see I can look for published studies or literature reviews.Do you want to show that there is not more mental health problems in the US than places with lower gun crime rates? Don't forget that if you are not accepting self-reporting surveys you also need to consider and control for different rates of access to mental healthcare.Actually I'm not going to search, this is a good time for you guys to learn how to look for actual information and not a tidbit of a study that you find on a blog post. Google Scholar is a good start if you don't feel like doing a real journal search.[Edited on January 5, 2013 at 1:29 PM. Reason : Also, you have to be more specific about what you mean by mental health problem as I pointed out ear]
1/5/2013 1:28:41 PM
On the problems with using "mental health" as your metric
1/5/2013 1:33:36 PM
which is part of my point. the other part of it being that nobody in 25 pages has done anything to show that, in the united states, it is mental health that is the problem and not the mass proliferation of firearms. yet a lot of anti-control posters here have brought it up at some pointmy asking is simply to try and get any one of them to offer up some concrete proof as to what they say is the real problem in the US[Edited on January 5, 2013 at 2:26 PM. Reason : .]
1/5/2013 2:23:17 PM
^ it's more that there isn't much of anything that can be done about the mass proliferation of firearms.
1/5/2013 2:37:07 PM
And so do white males, so white males shouldn't be allowed to buy guns. Or we can admit this is a terrible way to filter it.We need gun control for more common gun crimes not mass shootings, mass shootings are statistically insignificant
1/5/2013 3:35:09 PM
1/5/2013 5:07:57 PM
1/5/2013 9:53:26 PM
Well, you guys wanted to ban production of black rifles as a move against mass shootings. We said, "No, if you're worried about mass shootings, that's not the smart approach."So are we now not concerned about mass shootings anymore, which would make the black rifles OK again? What's it gonna be?If it's all the same to you, I'd like to tighten up a few things with respect to mental health. I'd good with some additional background check stuff, too...but you are correct; mass shootings are dramatic, but nearly negligible (maybe that's the wrong word; I'm not making light of them) in number.
1/5/2013 10:33:48 PM