Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

Anything shooting related including law and procedure questions.

Moderator: dromia

Forum rules
Should your post be in Grumpy Old Men? This area is for general shooting related posts only please.
Message
Author
User avatar
Sim G
Posts: 10752
Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2010 9:09 pm
Contact:

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#111 Post by Sim G »

Fedaykin wrote: There is another issue as well which came to me as I was pondering it yesterday evening, this is a country where the Death Penalty is not legal, what do you think the cultural and judicial considerations would be if we extended the right to the general public to perform extrajudicial capital punishment when that sentence is not even legal under our court system.

To avoid any long discussions I am:

a) Against the death penalty
b) Because I find it repugnant
c) It should never be returned to and if you want a reason Google David Bentley

The use of force, up to and including lethal, should the circumstances dictate, is already legislated for and in fact enshrined, in Common Law. There would be no "extending the right to perform extrajudicial capital punishment". The only thing denied is actually the tools to be able to exercise the right of defending oneself, one's property or another, particularly in a public place.

Criminals are predators. If you're young, strong and in company, generally you are safe. If you have or show weakness, you are vulnerable. As with animals, "if you look like food you will be eaten". It's no good relying on passers-by to assist, they sure just as vulnerable and scared. The police, unfortunately, are unlikely to make it to your rescue in time. The numbers font add up there. But I will tell you what the police are really, really good at, especially in the UK, and that is evidence gathering. Few murders go unsolved, but justice will be served.

Well, that's if you believe justice is 17 years on average, served in a prison that will allow you 12 hours a day out of your cell, access to healthcare at a moments notice, education free of charge, up to PhD. Gymnasiums that would cost a fortune to join the equivalent on the outside and then, towards the end of that 17 years, an open prison that will allow you out on licence every day, for five days a week, so you can get your own job or education, then let you out on the sixth day to visit family.... Yep, justice the British way. Any wonder violent, predatory criminals don't fear "justice".

So you mention Derek Bently.... Yes, I too was anti death penalty but after 24 years in the criminal justice system. But for every Derek Bently or Ruth Ellis you cite, I know 100 others that make an outstanding case for the reintroduction of the death penalty. The fact is, there are some people, who's course of conduct or life style choice, who just simply need shooting in the chest or dancing at the bottom of a rope....

So what really sets you against the concept? The fear that ordinary people will then become murderous psychopaths or that gunfights in shopping centre carparks over spaces? There is absolutely nothing evidentially, anecdotal or other wise that shows this as a potential. Quite frankly, in localities where such measures have been introduced, huge drops in crime is reported and society actually becomes more pleasant, some saying more polite. There are still far more good people around than bad. Opportunity to utilise a defensive tool does not change that. What it does change is criminal behaviour. Crime, as the evidence dictates, is that of a nature where the perpetrator reduces drastically his chances of coming into contact with a member of the public. Theft from unattended park cars and burglary of commercial businesses feature highly.

The routine arming of the police is not that far away, relatively. Discussions on Sky news the day after the Paris attack brought the subject again to the fore. We still hear the 2006 Federation survey being pulled out to state that "rank and file" coppers don't even want it. Well I sat round the table with eight rank and file of both genders, and a wide variety of ages and service, send to a person, we have a different opinion to that survey.

We have one of the home countries of the UK who are fully armed off and on duty. Throw into the mix of other officials such as prison or UKBF or NCA and even retired personnel and other civilians armed, in public, whilst going about their lawful lives. Where's the massacres over the last chicken in Sainsburys there? Somewhat ironic considering the amount of misery that guns and violence have brought Northern Ireland over the last four decades, that the people of the Province and the authorities there have a much more pragmatic attitude towards firearms.

Perhaps you're fortunate enough to live in a nice place and never have to venture to the wrong side of the tracks in your daily live. But some us don't and some of us have to go to the worst places and deal with the worst people that society has to offer. Some of us have had to fight for our lives, literally. And when injured and covered in someone else's blood, having had dig as deep as anyone has ever had to, in order to summon the strength and fortitude to continue, certainly does focus your mind on the whole issue. Try CPR on a young man where you can feel the broken bones in his chest where he was effectively kicked to death for nothing more than his up to date mobile phone. Try telling the husband that purely by chance it was his wife that was dragged into the van after being approached and chased through the car park after the last train.

Where you, the pessimist, see wrongful conviction and lawless ness, I see strength. I see the countless victims of violence and violent or intrusive crime. Where you wish to abdicate your responsibility to your own safety, I wish to strength in a collectiveness that refuses to bow to the criminals. The government will tell you reported crime is down. Everything else will tell you that is because society no longer tells the police because the state have failed to protect their public from harm, despite there being those of us who would offer ourselves to save you and yours....
In 1978 I was told by my grand dad that the secret to rifle accuracy is, a quality bullet, fired down a quality barrel..... How has that changed?

Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
ordnance
Posts: 1280
Joined: Sun Nov 18, 2012 9:00 pm
Location: N. Ireland. UK.
Contact:

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#112 Post by ordnance »

Somewhat ironic considering the amount of misery that guns and violence have brought Northern Ireland over the last four decades, that the people of the Province and the authorities there have a much more pragmatic attitude towards firearms.
Probably because we realize that guns were not the problem, but people able and willing to use them.
Mezzer

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#113 Post by Mezzer »

ordnance wrote:
Somewhat ironic considering the amount of misery that guns and violence have brought Northern Ireland over the last four decades, that the people of the Province and the authorities there have a much more pragmatic attitude towards firearms.
Probably because we realize that guns were not the problem, but people able and willing to use them.

+1

Mezzer
User avatar
Chuck
Posts: 23987
Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2010 11:23 am
Location: Planet Earth - Mainly
Contact:

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#114 Post by Chuck »

Good post Sim.

Old saying: "An armed society is a polite society". Nowadays bystanders are more likely to film your demise for youtube than get involved in helping you!

Numerous surveys amongst convicted felons in the USA have shown that;

If they thought their intended victim was armed or likely to fight back they chose another.

Owners of trucks or cars covered in pro gun stickers were not a target in car park muggings/carjackings - ones with LOVE and HUG A FELON were!

Bars on a window or a dog did not deter burglars much - the possibility of being shot did.
Political Correctness is the language of lies, written by the corrupt , spoken by the inept!
tackb

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#115 Post by tackb »

I find myself in full agreement with sim g !

I can find nothing in fedaykin's statements to agree with in point of fact I find most of them most disagreeable.
25Pdr

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#116 Post by 25Pdr »

Sim's post says it all.... :good:

Law Enforcement
The only job everyone knows more about than the people who actually do it.
techguy

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#117 Post by techguy »

Sim G wrote: The use of force, up to and including lethal, should the circumstances dictate, is already legislated for and in fact enshrined, in Common Law. There would be no "extending the right to perform extrajudicial capital punishment". The only thing denied is actually the tools to be able to exercise the right of defending oneself, one's property or another, particularly in a public place.

Criminals are predators. If you're young, strong and in company, generally you are safe. If you have or show weakness, you are vulnerable. As with animals, "if you look like food you will be eaten". It's no good relying on passers-by to assist, they sure just as vulnerable and scared. The police, unfortunately, are unlikely to make it to your rescue in time. The numbers font add up there. But I will tell you what the police are really, really good at, especially in the UK, and that is evidence gathering. Few murders go unsolved, but justice will be served.

Well, that's if you believe justice is 17 years on average, served in a prison that will allow you 12 hours a day out of your cell, access to healthcare at a moments notice, education free of charge, up to PhD. Gymnasiums that would cost a fortune to join the equivalent on the outside and then, towards the end of that 17 years, an open prison that will allow you out on licence every day, for five days a week, so you can get your own job or education, then let you out on the sixth day to visit family.... Yep, justice the British way. Any wonder violent, predatory criminals don't fear "justice".

So you mention Derek Bently.... Yes, I too was anti death penalty but after 24 years in the criminal justice system. But for every Derek Bently or Ruth Ellis you cite, I know 100 others that make an outstanding case for the reintroduction of the death penalty. The fact is, there are some people, who's course of conduct or life style choice, who just simply need shooting in the chest or dancing at the bottom of a rope....

So what really sets you against the concept? The fear that ordinary people will then become murderous psychopaths or that gunfights in shopping centre carparks over spaces? There is absolutely nothing evidentially, anecdotal or other wise that shows this as a potential. Quite frankly, in localities where such measures have been introduced, huge drops in crime is reported and society actually becomes more pleasant, some saying more polite. There are still far more good people around than bad. Opportunity to utilise a defensive tool does not change that. What it does change is criminal behaviour. Crime, as the evidence dictates, is that of a nature where the perpetrator reduces drastically his chances of coming into contact with a member of the public. Theft from unattended park cars and burglary of commercial businesses feature highly.

The routine arming of the police is not that far away, relatively. Discussions on Sky news the day after the Paris attack brought the subject again to the fore. We still hear the 2006 Federation survey being pulled out to state that "rank and file" coppers don't even want it. Well I sat round the table with eight rank and file of both genders, and a wide variety of ages and service, send to a person, we have a different opinion to that survey.

We have one of the home countries of the UK who are fully armed off and on duty. Throw into the mix of other officials such as prison or UKBF or NCA and even retired personnel and other civilians armed, in public, whilst going about their lawful lives. Where's the massacres over the last chicken in Sainsburys there? Somewhat ironic considering the amount of misery that guns and violence have brought Northern Ireland over the last four decades, that the people of the Province and the authorities there have a much more pragmatic attitude towards firearms.

Perhaps you're fortunate enough to live in a nice place and never have to venture to the wrong side of the tracks in your daily live. But some us don't and some of us have to go to the worst places and deal with the worst people that society has to offer. Some of us have had to fight for our lives, literally. And when injured and covered in someone else's blood, having had dig as deep as anyone has ever had to, in order to summon the strength and fortitude to continue, certainly does focus your mind on the whole issue. Try CPR on a young man where you can feel the broken bones in his chest where he was effectively kicked to death for nothing more than his up to date mobile phone. Try telling the husband that purely by chance it was his wife that was dragged into the van after being approached and chased through the car park after the last train.

Where you, the pessimist, see wrongful conviction and lawless ness, I see strength. I see the countless victims of violence and violent or intrusive crime. Where you wish to abdicate your responsibility to your own safety, I wish to strength in a collectiveness that refuses to bow to the criminals. The government will tell you reported crime is down. Everything else will tell you that is because society no longer tells the police because the state have failed to protect their public from harm, despite there being those of us who would offer ourselves to save you and yours....
Perfect in every single way. Couldn't agree with you more mate! goodjob
froggy

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#118 Post by froggy »

Due to the increased level of violence in France & in his town, Jean-Claude Gaudin the Mayor of Marseille, the 2nd largest town in France that has also the highest concentration of muslims, declared today that he is now considering issuing lethal weapons to the Police Municipale, that until now was not armed or only in exceptional cases. A sign of times to come ?
User avatar
Chuck
Posts: 23987
Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2010 11:23 am
Location: Planet Earth - Mainly
Contact:

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#119 Post by Chuck »

Yes froggy a sad sign of the times for sure - but what about the People, the French citizens?? looks like they are on their own.
Political Correctness is the language of lies, written by the corrupt , spoken by the inept!
froggy

Re: Paris shootings prompt stricter uk gun laws on ammo

#120 Post by froggy »

what about the People, the French citizens?? looks like they are on their own.

In Marseille ? Not much of those will soon be left Chuck...
It used to be truly a fantastic city : beautiful architecture, great climate, fantastic sea-side etc ...
Some estimates now put the muslim population at up to 30% and in a lot of arrondissements (districts) more than half of under 18 have North African origins so it can only go one way.
Marseille has alsologically become one of the most violent European city where all symbols of the France State are regulary attacked (the Police, but also the Fire-Brigade, teachers & even medical personnel) and of course the risk of violence for ordinary inhabitants is very high ...

But who cares ? Soon (2016) Marseille will proudly have one of the largest mosque of Europe O:-)
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests