Just Like Communism, Gun Control Only Works if EVERYBODY Does It?

Mr. Free Market emailed me this one, and it bears a striking resemblance to the argument Canada is making about the U.S.

Chunnel security shambles

A SUN undercover reporter smuggled a pistol into Britain using the Channel Tunnel — just like Harvey Nichols killer Michael Pech.

Our man bought a Walther P-38 gun at a Czech market, then drove to Calais and on to the Chunnel’s shuttle train without being searched or quizzed.

Evil Pech, 30, used the same route to smuggle in a gun and murder shop girl Clare Bernal before killing himself.

GUN crime is soaring in Britain — with an armed offence committed EVERY HOUR.

The number of firearms incidents has doubled in England and Wales since 1997.

Cases of attempted murder with firearms have also doubled to over 1,200 annually — more than three every day.

In the year up to June, 11,160 gun crimes were recorded, up five per cent on 2004.

A study has revealed that one in ten teenage schoolboys in London had carried a real handgun, replica, or ballbearing gun in the last year. The list of victims falling prey to firearms is also growing.

They include schoolgirl Danielle Beccan, 14, who was murdered in a drive-by shooting as she returned from Goose Fair in Nottingham in October 2004. Two men were jailed this month.

And in another crime which shocked the nation, Toni-Ann Byfield, seven, was shot alongside her drug-dealer father Bertram Byfield, 41, at a flat in North West London two years ago.

An associated story:

Gun scandal

THE SUN today reveals the scandal of how simple it is for smugglers to bring deadly handguns into Britain.

At the weekend two of our journalists bought a deadly Walther pistol in a Czech market.

Then it was next stop London, with no checks made as they journeyed across Europe and through the Channel Tunnel.

It is believed thousands of firearms enter the country this way — fuelling the terrifying rise in gun crime on our streets.

Eastern Europe is awash with guns. They pour in from the former Soviet states and the Middle East.

Six weeks ago the Chunnel route was used by Slovakian Michael Pech before he shot ex-girlfriend Clare Bernal in a London store.

Shockingly, NOTHING has been done since then to tighten controls.

The possession of handguns was banned in Britain in 1997 following the Dunblane massacre.

Yet illegal ownership is believed to be higher than it has ever been, and the yearly toll of deaths and injuries from guns has DOUBLED.

If no effort is made to stop firearms at our borders that figure will continue to rise … and shame us.

And all of this, after the government banned all modern handguns, and 57,000 people turned in their 162,000 legally owned, legally registered firearms.

“No effort” is being made? I find that highly doubtful. I mean, after all, I reported on the fully-automatic Uzi submachineguns being smuggled into England that were detected by customs officials. Thirty Uzis, twenty-nine silencers and 475 rounds of ammo. And a lot of frozen pizza.

It does make me wonder how many they’ve missed, though. And whether you can order a large pepperoni with a suppressed Uzi on the side.

Supply and demand. The first law of economics cannot be eliminated. And, although England is an island, they still cannot keep guns out. Yet Canada thinks the U.S. can stop the flow of firearms across that pourous border? We can’t stop the flood of drugs and illegal aliens across the (much shorter) Southern border.

“Homicide rates tend to be related to firearm ownership levels. Everything else being equal, a reduction in the percentage of households owning firearms should occasion a drop in the homicide rate”.

Evidence to the Cullen Inquiry 1996: Thomas Gabor, Professor of Criminology – University of Ottawa

According to this Home Office report the homicide rate for England & Wales over the last two decades is as follows:

1984 – 10.8/million population
1985 – 10.7
1986 – 11.2
1987 – 11.9
1988 – 10.9
1989 – 10.3
1990 – 10.9
1991 – 12.3
1992 – 11.4
1993 – 11.1
1994 – 12.4
1995 – 13.0
1996 – 11.4
1997 – 11.9 (all handguns banned)
1997/98 – 11.8 (They changed reporting methods here – wonder why?)
1998/99 – 12.6
1999/2000 – 13.1
2000/01 – 14.9
2001/02 – 15.5
2002/03 – 18.4
2003/04 – 15.8

Yes, the gun confiscation was tremendously successful, wasn’t it?

England, Gun Controllers, and the “Aggressive Edge”

Just a quick one, as this has been making the rounds of the gun blogs. It seems that the producers have chosen Daniel Craig as the next Bond; James Bond. IMDB’s bio says:

Daniel Craig was born in 1968 in Chester, England. He grew up in Liverpool, England and moved to London, England when he was 16. Here, he trained at the National Youth Theatre and graduated from the prestigious Guildhall School of Music and Drama (early 1990s). He made his film debut with The Power of One (1992) in 1992 as Sergeant Botha.

Quote from The Power of One attributed to the character of Sgt. Botha:

I was branded an idiot by everyone I knew!

How… poetic.

It seems that Mr. Craig is not likely to actually receive a “License to Kill” since he hates firearms:

New Bond: I hate guns
By This is London
25 October 2005

Daniel Craig will have a problem playing the new James Bond – because he hates guns.

The actor will wield 007’s famous Walther PPK in the movie Casino Royale.

But he revealed in OK! magazine: “I hate handguns. Handguns are used to shoot people and as long as they are around, people will shoot each other.

“That’s a simple fact. I’ve seen a bullet wound and it was a mess. It was on a shoot and it scared me. Bullets have a nasty habit of finding their target and that’s what’s scary about them.”

He should see what a shotgun can do.

However, this reminded me of an earlier piece I wrote, Americans, Gun Controllers, and the “Aggressive Edge” which discussed the making of – and the casting for – the movie Aliens:

The first (special feature) section on pre-production talked about the fact that the film was shot in England, mostly at Pinewood Studios, but this little bit piqued my interest:

Mary Selway, UK casting for Aliens:

“It was INCREDIBLY hard to do, because, um, James kept saying, ‘State of the art firepower. They’ve got to be incredibly, sort of on the cutting edge of American military…’

“So, what often happens here when American actors come to live in England, they become a bit Anglicized, and they don’t… they lose that really, sort of aggressive edge if you like, that this sort casting required.”

She said it, I didn’t.

Immediately after Ms. Selway’s piece:

Gale Anne Hurd – producer.

“I think we probably went through 3,000 people before we could even consider bringing anyone over from the United States.”

Hmmm… They went through 3,000 “Anglicized” people and couldn’t get enough aggressive ones?

I have to believe that there are more than 3,000 British actors they could have gone through, but I guess casting an American in the role of James Bond just wouldn’t have been cricket.

But at least then they could have found one that wasn’t a GFW.

Behind the Curve

Kim, Kim, Kim...

I know you’ve been busy, but I take time to read YOUR site every day…. 😉

I covered the story of UK teacher Linda Walker back in April. Turns out that she’s been released already, but she’s not a happy camper:

I felt I was being crucified by the full force of the law, says teacher jailed for waving air pistol at yobs

By David Harrison
(Filed: 08/05/2005)

A special needs teacher jailed for defending her home against a gang of thugs said last night that she felt as if she had been “crucified” by the system.

That’s because she’d been crucified by the system.

Linda Walker, a middle-class mother-of-three described her time in prison as “humiliating”. She was strip-searched, put on suicide watch, forced to go on hunger strike and suffered panic attacks during which she thought she would die.

Mrs Walker, 48, was jailed for brandishing an unloaded air pistol in front of a gang of thugs she believed had terrorised her family for two years while the police did nothing. Her sentence provoked outrage and her case became a symbol of Britain’s law-and-order crisis.

Mrs Walker was released by the Court of Appeal last Wednesday after the judges said she should not have been jailed in the first place.

But she was. And that jailing was covered pretty heavily.

The result of which is another reminder to the populace not to “take the law into their own hands.” Another “chilling effect” that keeps the sheep in their place.

Last night, back at her home in a Manchester suburb after spending 38 nights in jail alongside drug addicts, she spoke for the first time of her ordeal and how she felt let down by the criminal justice system.

Her and thousands of others.

Speaking to the Mail on Sunday, she said: “I’ve spent my life supporting the weakest and most vulnerable members of the community. But when I needed support from the establishment, not only was it not there, but the full force of the of the law came down on me like a ton of bricks. I felt like I was being crucified.”

The nail that sticks up gets hammered down, goes the old Japanese proverb.

Her worst moment came two weeks into her sentence when she was told that her application to be released on bail had been refused. She felt there had been a conspiracy, that she was “an embarrassment to the Government” and that she was a “political prisoner”, kept in jail “because I raised embarrassing and sensitive issues just before a general election”.

I think that’s getting to be the equivalent of a felony there. Don’t embarrass those in power.

Come to think of it, it’s getting to be a felony here.

“The issues were anti-social behaviour, gun crime, householders’ rights and why there are so many women in prison.

“I felt so trapped, but I wasn’t going to be swept under the mat. I told the prison governor I had kept quiet about my case but I had plenty I wanted to say.”

Mrs Walker went on hunger strike for three days. She had a heart attack and thought she was going to die.

“It was two or three in the morning,” she said. “I felt totally alone. The place was frightening and intimidating and feelings of helplessness overcame me. I’d had a panic attack during the day which caused my heart to pound at a frightening rate. I had never had one before.

“As I lay awake, it began to beat hard and fast again and I became desperately worried.

“My grandmother died of a heart attack after losing weight quickly. I had lost weight as a result of my hunger strike and I know that the heart is a muscle and if you lose weight too quickly, it can be seriously weakened.

“Alone in my cell, I became very frightened that I might die and never see my family again. I also felt petrified because I had no control over my own destiny and I felt people were conspiring against me.”

Mrs Walker was found guilty of affray and possessing a firearm with intent to cause fear of violence. She was sentenced to six months imprisonment by a Manchester court on March 29.

Meanwhile, the “yobs” who tormented her and her family are still out, free, and running around.

She felt, she said, “more like a naughty child than a criminal”. After all, her crime was simply to confront a gang who for two years had made her family’s life a misery through spiteful acts of vandalism.

Her shed had been broken into and bicycles stolen; garden ornaments had been dumped into her pond; there had been threatening telephone calls and petty acts of sabotage.

Goaded beyond endurance, she had fired an unloaded, gas-powered airgun into the pavement near the toes of the gang leader. Supporting her in court were her partner John Cavanagh, 57, her daughter Donna, 20, and her father Jim Mairs, 78, an ex-Royal Marine. Mrs Walker said: “I didn’t take anything to court. I was not prepared for prison – not even a toothbrush.

“I was confident the pre-sentencing reports the judge had requested would keep me out of jail because it stated in one that prison would be ‘highly inappropriate’.”

When she was moved to Styal prison, near Manchester airport, the inmates treated her like a heroine. “Well done Linda!” they shouted. “You should have bazooka’d them.”

Note that even the imprisoned think that fighting back is a good idea.

She was deluged with more than 2,000 cards and letters of support, including one from Tony Martin, the farmer jailed for killing a teenage burglar, and many from her pupils.

Mrs Walker said she would never forget her ordeal. “Some people lose everything when they go to prison. My experiences will live with me for ever. But I’m fortunate because I still have my home and my family.”

I don’t think they’d have let her out except for fear that she’d die in prison and become a martyr. Can’t have that. And if they could have figured out a way to confiscate her property, I’m not too sure they wouldn’t have done that.

I don’t hold out much any hope for the UK any more. They’re going to have to bottom out first. There’s no chance to arrest their descent any more.

Remember “Police Aware”?

That post from earlier last Saturday? It was an editorial on the inefficacy of Britain’s police. Well, thanks to Cryptic Subterranian, I’ve found another sterling example:

TRADER’S TORMENT

A SHOPKEEPER has been given a DNA kit by police – so he can take samples every time his teenage tormentors spit in his face.

The man likened the girls to Vicky Pollard, of TV’s Little Britain.

Six months of harassment began after he refused to sell the girls cigarettes or give them cigarette papers.

He was beaten by a man linked to the group and his cheekbone and jaw were broken.

The 53-year-old, of Crouch End, North London, said: “We do not feel safe. The guy who hit me in the face has since threatened me.

“You hear about Vicky Pollard, but these girls are worse.”

A police spokesman said: “This behaviour will not be tolerated.”

“This behavior will not be tolerated.”

By whom? “Police Aware” – it’s been taken care of!

How do you hand a man a DNA sample kit and explain to him, “The next time they spit in your face, old chap, just carefully collect some of the spittle into this sample bottle and ring us up! We’ll be by in a week or two to collect the evidence! In the mean time, do try to avoid getting your neck broken or your throat slashed when they come back.”

I. Am. DUMBFOUNDED. And I thought the proposed knife ban took the cake. And if you think this is a hoax, the barely more reliable Guardian corroborates, but here’s a slightly more detailed version from a local online source. A quote from the victim:

“We are hanging on for the time being. Our customers have been very supportive.

“I know other shops in Crouch End are suffering because of these people.

“I’ve been to the police station a number of times to find out what’s happening, but all I’m told is investigations are on-going.”

What will be the outcome of the “on-going investigation?

If enough evidence is gathered against the group, police and Haringey Council could work together to bring an Anti-Social Behaviour Order into effect which could ban the yobs from the area altogether.

“Police Aware!” And ah, yes, the dreaded ASBO!

And if they disobey the ASBO? I’m sure a strongly worded warning will follow!

Bear in mind, too, that it isn’t only the proles being treated this way. These same kits are being given to London’s “traffic control officers” (meter maids). According to This is London, however,

Three (parking attendants) are assaulted in the capital each day, some being attacked with baseball bats and knives.

so they’ll have to be very careful to make sure they don’t get any of their own blood in the samples. It would be awkward if they got ASBO’d for assaulting themselves. But there’s more justification for that knife ban! I suppose a Louisville Slugger ban will follow posthaste.

What the HELL happened to the Brits?

More Moronics from Nerf™land – I Mean England.
(Or: “At What Price, Safety?”)

Have you seen the latest? Two Three Four readers emailed me, and one commenter posted on this story:

Doctors seek kitchen knife ban

EDWARD BLACK

Key points
• Doctors claim long kitchen knives serve no purpose except as weapons
• 55 out of 108 homicide victims in Scotland were stabbed last year
• Police superintendents say a ban would be difficult to enforce

Key quote
“Many assaults are impulsive, often triggered by alcohol or misuse of other drugs, and the long pointed kitchen knife is an easily available, potentially lethal weapon, particularly in the domestic setting” – Dr Emma Hern, writing in British Medical Journal

LONG, pointed kitchen knives should be banned as part of a concerted effort to reduce the terrible injuries and deaths caused by stabbing attacks, doctors warned today.

Accident and emergency medics claim the knives serve no useful purpose in the kitchen but are proving deadly on the streets of Britain, with the doctors claiming the knives are used in as many as half of all stabbings.

Wait a minute. “(P)roving deadly on the streets of Britain”?? It’s already illegal to carry almost any kind of knife “on the streets” of Britain unless you can prove “need” of it. (No presumption of innocence there.) Just ask Charlie Booker, arrested and sentenced for carrying a butter knife in public. Last I checked, a butter knife wasn’t pointy or sharp.

Moreover, they’re setting up metal detectors in public places, and searching anyone who tries to avoid them. It’s “for the children,” you know. If it saves just one life!

But now they need to ban kitchen knives?

The doctors claimed they had consulted leading chefs who said the knives were not needed for cooking – a claim disputed by chefs contacted by The Scotsman.

Latest figures from the Scottish Executive show that in 2003, 55 of 108 homicide victims were stabbed by a sharp instrument – often a kitchen knife.

Fifty-five homicides justifies banning kitchen knives. Jeebus. And of those 55 the weapon was often, not always a kitchen knife. Anyone see a realty disconnect here?

Writing in the British Medical Journal, specialist registrar Dr Emma Hern and emergency medicine consultant Dr Mike Beckett said a short pointed knife may cause a substantial superficial wound if used in an assault, but is unlikely to penetrate to inner organs. However, a pointed long blade pierces the body like “cutting into a ripe melon”.

Define “short.” One inch? Two? I’ve got this Ka-bar meat cleaver that I could really go medieval on your ass with. I don’t think it qualifies as “pointy.”

Internal organs can be heavily damaged, causing serious injury or death. The doctors said long knives with blunt ends – such as bread knives – would do far less damage.

Unless they’re used to slash one’s throat. Or femoral artery. Don’t underestimate the lethality of a serrated bread knife!

Dr Hern said: “Many assaults are impulsive, often triggered by alcohol or misuse of other drugs, and the long pointed kitchen knife is an easily available, potentially lethal weapon, particularly in the domestic setting. Government action to ban the sale of such knives would drastically reduce their availability over the course of a few years.”

Wait, wait. I thought the problem with these knives is that they’re “on the street”. Doesn’t that suggest some premeditation? I mean, after all, you’ve got to be willing to break the law in the first place to simply carry such a knife out of your home, right? So if you’re willing to do that, why wouldn’t you be willing to substitute some other weapon? And banning the sale would “drastically reduce their availability over the course of a few years“??? IT’S A PIECE OF STEEL, YOU MORON!! THEY TAKE DECADES TO WEAR OUT! That Ka-bar meat cleaver I mentioned? WWII-era, if not older. I’ve got a couple of Old Hickory carbon-steel knives about the same age. And I don’t think my 10” bladed, razor-sharp, needle-pointed Henckels chef’s knife will be retiring any time soon, either.

Scotland’s most respected pathologist, Professor Anthony Busuttil, said: “All the statistics show that for the last 15 years, victims of stabbings, whether fatal or seriously injured, are caused by kitchen knives such as steak knives rather than knives bought specially for the purpose.”

Which, of course, could change overnight if such knives were all banned and confiscated, right? There’ll be a big amnesty for people to turn in all their sharp, pointy knives and be reimbursed by the government who will issue them sporks in return? And then house-to-house searches and imprisonment for those who fail to comply?

Restaurateurs and chefs reacted angrily to suggestions of banning kitchen knives. Malcolm Duck, chairman of the Edinburgh Restaurateurs Association, said: “Kitchen knives are designed for a purpose. It would be like asking a surgeon to perform an operation with a bread knife instead of a scalpel. Anything in the house like a cricket bat could be used as weapon in the hands of an idiot.”

Chief Superintendent Tom Buchan, president of the Association of Scottish Police Superintendents, said although a ban on sharp, pointed kitchen knives would be welcome, it could be difficult to enforce.

Gee, ya THINK?? You’ve got to have licensing and registration FIRST! Didn’t you learn anything from the handgun ban?

Oh, right. Of course you didn’t. Silly me.

The BBC has a story on this too. More of the same, except for this quote:

The use of knives is particularly worrying amongst adolescents, say the researchers, reporting that 24% of 16-year-olds have been shown to carry weapons, primarily knives.

The study found links between easy access to domestic knives and violent assault are long established.

French laws in the 17th century decreed that the tips of table and street knives be ground smooth.

A century later, forks and blunt-ended table knives were introduced in the UK in an effort to reduce injuries during arguments in public eating houses.

Ten minutes on a grinder: sharp pointy knife again. Or, of course, everyone could just switch to chisels.

Now, lest you think this is merely an aberration (even after the banning of full-auto weapons, semi-auto rifles, all handguns, pepper & other defensive sprays, tasers, pretty much anything suitable for self-defense, et cetera,) let me remind you that in 2003 they were discussing forcing pubs to use plastic glasses and plastic beer bottles to, what? REDUCE VIOLENCE, of course, because Pub fights cost £4m a year and bottles and drinking glasses were used to inflict 15,000 injuries a year! I don’t know what the outcome of that effort was. If anyone does, please let me know.

But I’ll tell you what: Let’s just raze the British Isles, tote off all of the wood and brick and glass and metal and rebuild with terrycloth, foam rubber, Saran-wrap and soft plastics and then you’ll all be safe! Right?

As soon as everyone is in a straightjacket, that is. You seem to need the spinal support.

Let’s Just Keep Bashing England, Test Case for America’s Future.
Dept. of Socialized Medicine, This Time.

I’m on a roll. Might as well. (The Telegraph is such a wealth of material.)

I present to you this op-ed on just how wonderful England’s National Health Care system is:

My mother was dying, but no one would take charge of her care

By Alasdair Palmer
(Filed: 15/05/2005)

The latest report into the failings of patient care in the NHS has a depressingly familiar ring. An organisation called the National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death found that nearly half of patients needing intensive care were not properly cared for. In a substantial number of cases in which the patient died, the care was so bad that it could have contributed to hastening the patient’s death. The report found that the overall quality of medical records was “poor”. Ten per cent of patients did not even receive a complete examination, nor was their medical history available to the doctors who were charged with making decisions about their care.

Dr Bill Kirkup, the Deputy Chief Medical Officer, was quick to insist that “there is no evidence to suggest that the failings identified by the report are typical or found throughout the NHS”. But of course there is: many people who have experience of NHS care will have their own stories illustrating “less than good practice”. Mine relate to my mother, who died of cancer 18 months ago. Initially, she went to her GP with back pain. He gave her some pain killers, and reassured her that nothing was wrong: he did not order any tests of any kind, even though her medical notes stated that two years earlier she had had breast cancer.

The pain killers he prescribed had no effect. She went back to see him, in increasingly severe discomfort, several times. Each time, her GP said the same thing: “Don’t worry, it will clear up.” My mother’s cancer was diagnosed only when she took herself to see a neurologist who had, years before, helped her get over back pain. That neurologist did some tests – and told my mother she would have to be admitted to hospital immediately.

The GP’s reluctance to look at my mother’s records delayed by six months the diagnosis of the recurrence of her cancer, which turned out to have metastasized into her bones and liver. It was unquestionably a dire example of “less than good practice”. But once she was admitted to the Royal Free hospital, in north London, the standard of her care did not improve much. Some of the nurses were inhumanly rough with her, causing her tears of agony when lifting her off the bed to wash her. We complained and tried to get the nurses changed. The complaints had no effect. Then the hospital’s supply of pain-killing drugs – essential for my mother – first threatened to run out, then not to be renewed.

There was no continuity of care. Several different teams of doctors were assigned to her. They didn’t lose her notes, but they did seem to have difficulty in reading them, for they each asked her the same questions – the answers to which were in her records – each time they saw her. Most of the very limited time the doctors had available for her consultations were thus taken up with these routine questions.

__

I remember my father sitting at her bedside as a group of doctors finally came to deliver an assessment. The senior consultant – who was standing in for someone else, who was on holiday – introduced herself and started to repeat the familiar questions whose answers were in the notes. My father interrupted and said: “We do need someone to take charge of this case. Can I take it that you are responsible for my wife’s care?” There was a long pause. Then came the answer. “Um… No,” the senior consultant said. “I’m not responsible. It is a committee thing.”

And there, it seems to me, is the crux of the problem with so much hospital care: no one is responsible for anything. There are endless teams and committees – the palliative care team, the medical emergency team, the patient-at-risk team, and so on – but no one takes responsibility. The whole point of the committees seems to be to ensure that no individual can be held responsible for whatever decisions are taken. “Less than good practice” is the inevitable result.

“No one is responsible for anything.” Let me quote Mark Steyn from the piece I pointed to in the last post:

Almost every act of the social democratic state says: don’t worry, you’re not responsible, leave it to us, we know best. The social democratic state is, in that sense, profoundly anti-social and ultimately anti-democratic.

That goes for everyone from petty criminal to Member of Parliament.

Please, please, PLEASE let us not take that path here.

You’ll Notice that Corporal Punishment isn’t One of the Considered Options.

Reader Aaron sent me a link to an MSNBC story on Britain’s “Yob Culture” and the (pathetic) efforts to rein it in.

Sweet bleeding jeebus.

Targeting badly behaved Britons

By Jennifer Carlile
Reporter
MSNBC
Updated: 2:29 p.m. ET May 18, 2005

BLUEWATER SHOPPING CENTER, England – Although accustomed for decades to violence from “yobs” and football hooligans, Britain is stepping up its fight against what’s been dubbed an epidemic of antisocial behavior.

There it is again, “antisocial behavior.” That’s British for “violent crime.” This is one of those things I both admire and despise the Left for. Controlling the language allows one to control the debate. I’m not certain if it’s a case of “magial thinking” in that, by altering the words they believe they can alter reality, or if it’s only a cold-blooded understanding that changing the definition will allow them to invalidate the arguments of the opposition without actually having to refute them, or if it’s some combination of both. I suspect the latter. Look how well they do it. It’s almost unconscious now. The Right does it, too, but the Left has mastered the art form.

The perpetrators of the thuggery have been identified as “hoodies,” young people who wear hoods and caps to avoid detection and give off a threatening image.

Prime Minister Tony Blair has made banishment of this street crime a priority for his third term of office, while one of his closest aides has disclosed a scary encounter with the teenage gangs that roam Britain’s urban areas.

Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, who once launched a fierce left hook to retaliate for a thrown egg during an election campaign, described his alarm at being accosted by a large group of hooded youths.

“I went to a motorway café about a year ago and some kid said something to me,” he said. “I said ‘what did you say?’ and he came back with 10 people with hoods, you know, these fellas with hoods on.

“He came at me in a very intimidating manner,” the 66-year-old said.

Yes, I imagine they did. Prescott being an elderly man faced with ten youths should have found it intimidating. I’m 43 and I’d find 10-to-one odds intimidating, especially if I were unarmed. But wait!

Prescott, who was rescued from any possible attack by his security detail, is one of the big supporters of Blair’s decision to focus on street crime.

Rescued “from any possible attack” by his security detail! How nice! Too bad Thomas Noble didn’t have a security detail. Neither did Mi Gao Huang Chen. No, Mr. Chen had to depend on the police, who failed him for fifteen minutes, even though he was attacked, oh, sorry, experienced “antisocial behavior” from possibly twenty “yobbos” in a “high-profile” police zone. Well, at least two of Mr. Chen’s attackers antisocial behaviorists have been charged with murder. The hoodlums youths suspected in Mr. Noble’s death have been “slapped with Asbos”. WTF are Asbos, you ask? Well MSNBC is here to tell you! Just hold on through the rest of this:

Although gun crime here pales when compared with the United States, binge-drinking, street brawls, vandalism, muggings, and general menace are seen to be terrorizing the public.

The United Kingdom is the most-monitored nation in the world, with more than 4 million closed-circuit television cameras operating around the country. But culprits frequently evade Big Brother’s watchful eye by concealing their identities with the ubiquitous head wear.

“I think the fact you go around with these hats and these covers… I mean, it is a uniform, in a sense,” Prescott said last week.

As a result, a large shopping center in southeast England offered a new tact by implementing a “code of conduct” that includes a ban on the wearing of “hoodies.”

The 330-store Bluewater center in Kent drew up the code of conduct to outline its “zero tolerance approach to antisocial behavior” following consultations with guests and staff.

In addition to banning head coverings (other than those used for religious purposes) and swearing, “groups of more than five without the intention to shop will be asked to leave the center,” the mall’s leaflet says.

Blair last week praised the initiative. “This type of disrespect and yobbish behavior will not be tolerated any more,” he said.

No, it won’t be tolerated. And if they continue to do it, the Brits will emulate the UN and issue another sternly worded warning!

“I think it’s marvelous,” Bluewater shopper Jill Hopper said of the initiative this week.

“It’s such a pleasant atmosphere here; you don’t want a whole group of hoodies coming around — it’s great they’re taking these kids on,” the 46-year-old said.

“They do intimidate some people and that’s their aim,” said 27-year-old shopper Adam Cropper.

His girlfriend Laura Thomas, 23, added, “They’re all quite young and trying to act older … they wear (hoods) to make people think they’re stealing even if they don’t have the balls to do it, it’s all part of their act.”

Until, of course, they do work up the balls to do it. Or until they try to intimidate someone, and failing, become violent. I mean, wait until one of them gets a knife and a nice young Briton like Laura Thomas asks “What are you going to do, stab us?”

Cropper, a doorman, and Thomas, a bar manager, both added that they would like to see a complete ban on caps and hoods in city centers.

That should go remarkably well with the semi-automatic weapon ban, the handgun ban, the knife ban, the “offensive weapon” ban, the… Well, you get the picture. How about we just ban clothes? Won’t that work? But no, they have better ideas!

Bluewater’s code of conduct follows in the footsteps of other government and private initiatives to quash hooliganism that include:

* Handing out antisocial behavior orders (ASBOS), some of which bar offending youths from entering city centers or visiting former partners in crime.
* Passing out yellow and red cards in a warning system similar to that used on the soccer field.
* Giving away chocolate to prevent alcohol-fueled violence.
* Banning the designer label Burberry (an apparent favorite with teen gangs) from some bars and clubs.

ASBOS: Antisocial behavior orders. This would be similar to our restraining orders. Go peruse Zendo Deb’s site, TFS Magnum for some stories on just how effective restraining orders are here. Remember, some of the goblins mislead youths suspected of being involved in Thomas Noble’s death received the dreaded ASBOS!! I’m sure they’re suitably chastened.

The other options? Yellow and red warning cards? Want to bet on how many of them end up stuck in public toilets, used with a little scatalogical imagination? Chocolate give-aways to “prevent alcohol-fueled violence”? I thought I’d never heard anything stupider than “midnight basketball” in association with youth violence prevention. Banning Burberry? So they switch to Tommy Hilfiger?

How do human beings disconnect from reality this way? I can’t finish the MSNBC piece, I’m too disgusted. All of this reminds me sickeningly of Theodore Dalrymple’s The Frivolity of Evil though. Read that if you have the stomach for it.

Another Example of How the Law Doesn’t Disarm Assailants.

From the BBC. Apparently the “yob culture” of violent youth gangs is really taking off (or it’s just the “flavor of the month” for the British mainstream media.)

Shopkeeper killed by teenage gang

A shopkeeper was murdered in a “horrific and frenzied” attack in a shopping precinct by more than 20 armed teenagers, police say.

Mi Gao Huang Chen, 41, was battered to death in front of his girlfriend with a spade, tree branch and metal pipes in Scholes, Wigan, on Saturday night.

Police have arrested 17 teenagers on suspicion of assault and violent disorder, including a girl of 14.

Mr Huang Chen, known locally as Michael, ran the Superb Hut takeaway.

Residents say a gang of teenagers have plagued their community with anti-social behaviour.

I love that expression: “Anti-social behavior.” It sounds like they’re just being rude. More of that British stiff-upper-lip understatement, when what it really means is homicidal.

Mr Huang Chen, who was from China, lived at Towcester Close in the Ancoats area of Manchester.

Police say the attack on him lasted up to 15 minutes. He suffered massive head injuries and died in Hope Hospital, Salford, on Thursday.

Det Ch Insp Steve Crimmins, leading the investigation, said: “It is quite frightening really, it was a frenzied attack. It was horrific and sickening.

“There have been ongoing problems in the area. There was a heightened police presence prior to the incident.

Police don’t say, or at least aren’t quoted in this piece, as to why if “there was a heightened police presence prior to the incident” their response time was apparently in excess of the fifteen minutes the assault took.

“There’s been general nuisance that you associate with large groups of youths, in essence rowdiness and criminal damage.

“For some reason it has escalated out of all proportion and a man has lost his life.”

Might I suggest that one reason it “has escalated out of all proportion” is because the “large groups of youths” don’t fear either the police or their victims? I wonder if any of the assailants recorded video of the assault on their cell-phones?

More than TWENTY attackers, all minors. An assault that lasted fifteen minutes. And no one could intervene without risk of getting killed or severely injured themselves.

A question: What would have happened if a large adult man had waded into that melee with, say, an axe-handle and prevented Mr. Chen’s death by inflicting some serious injuries on Mr. Chen’s assailants? Would the charge be attempted murder or merely assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm?

When will people wake up to the fact that the world can be a dangerous place, and the government is not responsible for your protection?

UPDATE, 4/30: Apparently this piece caught the attention of a UK message board. (Welcome, y’all!) But this comment absolutely floored me:

This is yet another example of how people think of tackling things the wrong way. If Mr Chen or some other random passer-by had been carrying a gun, you would have 17 dead teenagers rather than one dead shopkeeper. Yes, they were in the wrong but that’s no reason to kill them.

At least one of the posters felt the same:

X, that is perhaps one of the most naive posts to ever come from your keyboard. No offense mate, but you’ve seen too many movies.

“X” seems to miss the point that, had a defender been armed with a firearm chances are good that NO ONE would have been killed. The twenty-plus attackers would have been quelled.

I’m not much for Hollywood’s interpretation of defensive gun use, but “No, Ace. Just you.” comes immediately to mind. And better one or two of them dead (and the rest running) than the shop keeper, IMHO.

I noticed also that, as of this posting, no one has addressed my question concerning a defender armed with an axe-handle. I wonder why that is? Is contemplation of that question uncomfortable?

Just How Good Are Those British Crime Statistics?.

(h/t to Lurch at Gun Culture)

From the Sunday Telegraph:

When the crime is to speak out
By Daniel Foggo
(Filed: 24/04/2005)

Picture this: you are a retired senior policeman who has information that gun crimes are going unreported because some of your former colleagues are not registering them. You report what you know to a Sunday newspaper, and the next day two detectives knock on your door.

At first you might be impressed by their prompt reaction. But then you discover that your visitors are from the “professional standards” unit (the subdivision of every force that polices its own officers) and have no interest in the truth of your claim. What they want to know is which serving policemen have spoken to you.

They are not concerned that shootings are spiralling out of control while being deliberately unrecorded in order not to spoil the crime figures: no, they want to discipline the officers for speaking out of turn.

This is what happened to former Detective Superintendent Peter Coles last Monday. The day before he had been quoted in this newspaper saying that gun crime in Nottinghamshire, where he was once head of the CID, was under-reported. Criminals turning up in hospital with gunshot wounds were often reluctant to involve the police, which led officers to treat the incidents as “no crimes”, Mr Coles said.

One of the few things that will make police forces stir these days, as Mr Coles discovered, is the slightest hint that their officers are talking to outsiders about embarrassing matters. Going “off-message” is now as much frowned upon by the police as it is by their New Labour paymasters.

Take the crime statistics. Under Labour, they are used to convey an expedient message of the rosiest hue. It would not help senior officers’ careers if they were to speak out about the glaring gaps in the Government’s compiling methods. So the prevailing face of most forces is one of sanguine denial.

Nottinghamshire police’s particular problem is that when their primary dissenter broke ranks last month it turned out to be their own Chief Constable, Steve Green. He admitted to me that his force was reeling under the murder rate and was going to have to “farm out” inquiries to other forces.

His reaction when we published the story was stupefying and gives great insight into the fear that going “off-message” engenders even in chief constables. His press office, who had helped arrange the interview with me and agreed the areas that Mr Green would discuss, announced that the Chief Constable had been “blackmailed” into giving the interview. This was utterly untrue and inherently preposterous. Yet in making the claim, the police tried to deflect attention away from the significance of what Mr Green had actually admitted – that his force could not cope with the slaughter on its streets – by suggesting that the more important issue was that he had been compelled against his will into saying what he did.

I have since been informed that Nottinghamshire police’s professional standards team has been trying to access my phone records and those of a colleague to find out which officers may have spoken out. This kind of behaviour is not unusual. Police forces now consider whistleblowing as a form of corruption that should be rooted out. The officers concerned may be revealing matters that are in the public interest, but this is not a consideration.

Three days after the knock on Mr Coles’s door, Nottinghamshire police revealed their latest crime figures, which showed a more than 10 per cent drop over the year. Naysayers, such as Mr Coles, who claim that the statistics are inaccurate, are not appreciated at such a time. As he is retired, the force cannot touch him but they can, and will, pursue anyone who might have given him information.

Getting to the truth behind the statistics and spin of crime figures is becoming increasingly difficult. Rare chinks of clarity, such as Mr Green’s interview, are quickly covered over. A fortnight after talking to The Telegraph Mr Green admitted that his interview “was not my finest hour”.

I beg to differ. It was probably his most conspicuous act of public service.

But crime is going down in England and Wales! Really!

National Cultures and GUN Cultures

John at The England Project wrote a post back in January on Who Broke (Our) Gun Culture and How Might We Get it Back? Kim du Toit commented on it at the time, and John had a follow-up post in which he relates that fellow English blogger Lurch at the aptly named Gun Culture strongly disagreed with John’s premise that only an increased interest in the shooting sports could revive England’s gun culture. Lurch stated:

I believe that sporting shooting is doomed in the UK and no amount of good behaviour will change this. The recognition that self defence is the most basic human right that there is and that a firearm is the best tool for this is the only thing which can possibly save private firearm ownership. Not just in the UK but across the globe.

John has a much more recent post up that somewhat illustrates Lurch’s position.

I wrote on the topic a while back in my post Fear: The Philosophy and Politics Thereof, but I’ve got more to say, now. John’s premise, in his own words is:

I do not yet believe in the liberalisation of gun laws to the extent that all and sundry should be able to have them for self defence.

…this is not because I do not believe in the principle of self defence or that guns (often hand guns) are not the best tool for the job. On the contrary, I believe in the use of lethal force where necessary to protect ones own life, family, friends, strangers and, if necessary, property. My inability to “go the whole way” on this issue is based on what I believe is the un-preparedness of our society for a more liberalised approach to firearm ownership.

What I do not believe in is that all have the right to firearm ownership unless it can be proven that they are not suitable and I am not just talking about criminals or those with recent or serious criminal records. Actually, that’s not quite true (and this is the point where I would get a little evasive and shady if we were to be chatting about this down the pub) I think that people do have the innate right to have guns for self defence but I do not believe that, in general, the population is prepared for it.

He goes on to say:

…the thing that is central to my current position of practical prejudice is that gun culture is not about guns; it is about peoples attitude to guns, and more importantly, their respect of firearms in general and their ability to treat and use guns in a responsible manner. The gun culture that permitted wide ranging license free gun ownership in this country without significant and disastrous consequence was one of understanding. People understood firearms. They grew up in households that had always had them. They were taught from an early age how to treat them and use them. They were fully aware of what they could do and were fully prepared to take on the responsibilities of what firearms ownership entailed.

This culture was a learnt one. It required a continuity of ownership and the sharing of knowledge over each generation. There were no public training videos, no TV ads, no school indoctrination on the responsibilities of firearms ownership and yet the culture was there. It was there because children learnt it from their parents and/or from other adults. The culture was maintained and passed on and persisted and it allowed for common gun ownership without disastrous affects. In general, everyone (except criminals) benefited from it.

Then the state broke it. By degrees.

Gun culture was strangled to the point where continuity was lost and it is because of that loss that my full support for the liberalisation of gun ownership in the general populace is not forthcoming. I blame the state.

I’ve studied and written a lot about England’s experience with guns and gun control because, for one thing, England is “Mother Country” to America, and for another, it acts as a very useful petri dish to examine the actual results of truly draconian gun control in an otherwise nominally democratic society quite similar (but not identical) to our own.

First, let me say that I’m in complete agreement with John that “the state” is responsible for the destruction of the good gun culture in England; the one of responsible gun ownership, land stewardship, sportsmanship, self-defense and self-reliance, but this might not have been possible had the English and the Americans shared more in our general culture than we do. I’ve quoted before both Sir William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England and St. George Tucker’s American Blackstone on the topic of arms and the law. Sir William wrote:

THE fifth and last auxiliary right of the subject, that I shall at present mention, is that of having arms for their defence, suitable to their condition and degree, and such as are allowed by law. Which is also declared by the same statute and is indeed a public allowance, under due restrictions, of the natural right of resistance and self-preservation, when the sanctions of society and laws are found insufficient to restrain the violence of oppression.

This was written about 1765. (Emphasis is mine) St. George Tucker, a mere 40 years later wrote:

This may be considered as the true palladium of liberty. . . . The right of self defence is the first law of nature: in most governments it has been the study of rulers to confine this right within the narrowest limits possible. Wherever standing armies are kept up, and the right of the people to keep and bear arms is, under any colour or pretext whatsoever, prohibited, liberty, if not already annihilated, is on the brink of destruction. In England, the people have been disarmed, generally, under the specious pretext of preserving the game: a never failing lure to bring over the landed aristocracy to support any measure, under that mask, though calculated for very different purposes. True it is, their bill of rights seems at first view to counteract this policy: but the right of bearing arms is confined to protestants, and the words suitable to their condition and degree, have been interpreted to authorise the prohibition of keeping a gun or other engine for the destruction of game, to any farmer, or inferior tradesman, or other person not qualified to kill game. So that not one man in five hundred can keep a gun in his house without being subject to a penalty.

(Again, the emphasis is mine.) There was some short-term reversal of the English tendency to want the general population disarmed. In 1900 the Prime Minister Robert Gascoyne-Cecil said he would “laud the day when there is a rifle in every cottage in England.”

That didn’t catch on, obviously. As I reviewed in England Slides Further Towards Bondage, the good English gun culture was essentially destroyed over the course of the 20th Century:

(In) 1903 England passed its first gun control law. A minor one, simply requiring an easily acquired permit to purchase a handgun, and restricting the age of purchasers, but it was the first toe over the slippery slope. In 1919, in fear of anarchists and communists, England passed its first sweeping gun law – as a crime control measure – even though crime involving firearms was rare as hen’s teeth. You could only have a handgun or a rifle if you showed “good reason” to have one. (Sound familiar?) So much for “a rifle in every cottage” being a laudable goal. The descent had begun in earnest.

In 1936 short-barreled shotguns and fully-automatic weapons were outlawed – not regulated as they are here, outlawed. The reasoning? Civilians had no “legitimate reason” for owning them. Another slide down the slope. The reasoning had changed from the government needing to show reason for the restrictions to the people needing to show reason to exercise the right, to government telling them that there was no acceptable reason.

In 1936 the British added a “safe storage” requirement for all handguns and rifles. (Sound familiar?)

In 1946 self-defense was no longer a “good reason” to have a firearm. The slope got steeper.

In 1953, carrying a weapon for self-defense was made illegal. Any kind of weapon.

In 1967 the law was amended to require a license to own a shotgun, and jury trials no longer required a unanimous decision.

In 1982 reloaders and blackpowder enthusiasts were made subject to police inspection without a warrant to ensure “safe storage” of the reloading materials. In other words, agents of the government, without a warrant, could come into ones home at any time, without warning.

In 1988 all semi-auto and pump-action rifles were banned. By this time there weren’t many rifle owners anyway, but that didn’t matter. The personal property of law-abiding subjects was, once again, made illegal. And they were all registered – that is, the ones belonging to the law-abiding.

In 1996 all handguns were banned. And they were all registered… Well, you get the point.

Also in 1996, carrying any kind of knife was made illegal – unless you could prove you had a good reason for having it. The presumption of innocence was gone.

Since then there have been increased penalties for imitation guns, toy guns, and air guns. I fully expect there to be a law passed prohibiting extension of the index finger with one’s thumb held at a 90º angle to it in the classic gun-like shape, or the pointing of a Chicken McNugget in a threatening manner.

As I said before:

Am I suggesting that this has been some nefarious plan all along to strip the British of their rights and bind them into slavery? No I am not. I’m suggesting that this is a cycle of human behavior – long recognized – that we should be paying attention to and trying to break. We know what government does: it acquires power at the expense of the governed, for good reason or bad. And it does it slowly, almost imperceptibly, because we never believe that each “next step” is leading where we’ve been told it always leads. “Not this time,” we think. “We know better.”

Yeah?

Ask the English.

How long before we follow them?

But there’s considerably more to this than just gun control. As the cliché goes, it isn’t about guns, it’s about control. Let’s look at some of what’s going on in England today, since they are acting as a liberal/pacifist petri dish. First we have this story from The Guardian:

In one video clip, labelled Bitch Slap, a youth approaches a woman at a bus stop and punches her in the face. In another, Knockout Punch, a group of boys wearing uniforms are shown leading another boy across an unidentified school playground before flooring him with a single blow to the head.

In a third, Bank Job, a teenager is seen assaulting a hole-in-the-wall customer while another youth grabs the money he has just withdrawn from the cash machine.

Welcome to the disturbing world of the “happy slappers” – a youth craze in which groups of teenagers armed with camera phones slap or mug unsuspecting children or passersby while capturing the attacks on 3g technology.

According to police and anti-bullying organisations, the fad, which began as a craze on the UK garage music scene before catching on in school playgrounds across the capital last autumn, is now a nationwide phenomenon.

And as the craze has spread from London to the home counties to the north of England, so the attacks have become more menacing, with increasing numbers of violent assaults and adult victims.

In London, British Transport police have investigated 200 happy slapping incidents in the past six months, with eight people charged with attacks at south London stations and bus stops in January alone.

Here’s another:

COPS are hunting a man in connection with a vicious “happy slap” attack on a night bus.

Andrew Greenwood, 28, was set upon by thugs in an unprovoked assault on the top of a N176 double decker driving through Camberwell. Cops believe the man featured in this e-fit stood by and filmed the February 19 violence on his camera phone so the sniggering yobs could play it back later.

The sickening footage is then likely to have been circulated among other mobiles or on the internet, in a violent craze dubbed “happy slapping”.

Mr Greenwood, who works for Victim Support, was beaten and kicked so badly he needed hospital treatment for a fractured eye socket.

The e-fit suspect is black, in his late teens, with a stocky build and a broad nose.

He had what was described as a “street slang” accent, was wearing a bold red cap with a distinctive box shaped peak, and was holding a silver flip phone.

The other five gang members were black and dressed in sportswear.

Police want to hear from anyone who saw the attack or who wants to report other “happy slap” incidents.

This isn’t a big departure from the kind of behavior I posted about back on the 9th of this month. And why are they doing this? Because they’re not afraid. They’re not afraid of the police, and they’re damned sure not afraid of their victims. And why aren’t they afraid of their victims? Because they know that their victims are disarmed, and powerless to oppose them even if they’re willing. (Though fewer and fewer appear to be willing.) They know the rules won’t be enforced on them, but they will be enforced on the otherwise responsible adults who they drive over the edge. Examples: Bill Clifford, Martin James, Maureen Jennings, Linda Walker, and most recently, Richard Bottley. “Yobs” can get away with pretty much anything with very little fear of punishment. For example, from this story:

A POLICE officer has been appointed to work in St Albans secondary schools in a bid to combat youth crime.

The Youth Crime Reduction Officer has been visiting schools to gather intelligence, and develop ways of beating crime, truancy and drugs.

PC Paul Allen is working in schools across the district with pupils who risk ending up on the wrong side of the law.

He is also involved in developing acceptable behaviour contracts and anti–social behaviour orders for youths.

All well and good, right? Um, no:

He also intervened when a pupil caused £500 worth of damage to a piano at his school.

The pupil was excluded from school for three days, leaving a mark on his school record, after speaking to the police officer about the consequences of his actions.

PC Allen said: “A common perception among pupils is that damage or bullying is not a criminal offence.

“Often by just explaining the consequences and the fact that their actions are criminal is enough to curb their behaviour.” The police officer claims many youngsters do not realise when they are breaking the law and believes that early intervention is essential.

By my handy-dandy currency converter, £500 is approximately $950. And the kid’s punishment was three days suspension?? What does he have to do to get five days vacation? Deck a teacher? Oh, yeah. He learned a lesson there!

If you want more evidence, read this story about how a teacher secretly filmed unruly, violent, and uncontrollable students in several different schools in England. And then think about that 5 year-old kid in St. Petersburg that the cops handcuffed. (At least they didn’t need their new AR-15s). As the teacher put it,

Teachers end up walking on eggshells, and when you do that, you cannot discipline a child.

The same is true for parents and for other citizens, so kids run wild without fear of discipline. I’m afraid we’re slowly following England there, too.

As I mentioned before, I recently picked up Abigale Kohn’s book, Shooters: Myths and Realities of America’s Gun Cultures. The preface of Kohn’s book starts off:

From the 1970’s on, the American print media has carried out an all-out war against gun owners. They are labled “gun nuts,” “gun fanatics,” “the lunatic fringe,” “sickos,” and “terrorists.” Gun owners are laughable, contemptible, “a handful of middle-aged fat guys with popguns.” Editorial after editorial calls for stronger gun control, ranging from licensing and registration of all guns to outright bans on handguns. The New York Times publishes “The Scourge of Guns” and “Addicted to Guns,” straightforwardly indicting guns and gun owners for America’s high rate of civil violence. Not to be outdone, the Washington Post publishes editorials entitled “Good Parents, Bad Kids: And Far Too Many Handguns” and “Illegal Guns and the District,” arguing that “turning off the supply of handguns from around the nation” is the only effective way to reduce gun violence in the nation’s capital and across the United States.

On the other side of the country, a columnist in a major West Coast newspaper pens a piece about the Second Amendment Sisters, a pro-gun women’s organization formed largely in response to the Million Mom March, which favored gun control. Entitled “Pistol-Packin’ Polyester,” the columnist describes the Second Amendment Sisters as “bored, under-educated, bitter, terrified, badly-dressed, pasty, hate-spewin’ suburban white women from lost Midwestern towns with names like Frankenmuth all carrying firearms and somehow thinking they’re aiding the species.” Only slightly less inflammatory, another West Coast contributor argues that America’s gun culture is responsible for the “tyranny of danger” and “omnipresent threat of death” in contemporary American society.

She goes on at length. But one of the things Abigale Kohn discovered when she studied America’s “gun culture” – the good one – was this:

One of the reasons that some shooters are so opposed to allowing more stringent government regulation of gun ownership is that they believe that being able to own guns is synonymous with being recognized as a full-status person in the eyes of the state.

Which is correct. However, she continues:

In fact, historians have long recognized that the vast majority of individuals living in colonial America did not have legal sanction to own guns: the ability to “keep and bear arms” was a right afforded only to white, propertied, adult men.

Which is somewhat true, though I advise that she interview Clayton Cramer on the facts of just how many people other than property-owning white males actually did have guns in the colonial period. Anyway, continuing:

In relation to the broader question of what constitutes a good arbiter of personhood and political status in any given society (historically and contemporarily), shooters argue that legal access to guns is a particularly powerful statement of how the state recognizes the power and status of the individual.

These symbolic associations resonate even today. Shooters implicitly believe that the symbolic associations between guns and personhood so deeply entrenched in the American cultural and political cosmology are still meaningful and important.

Yes, we do. But that belief has been stripped from the English, by and large. She says elsewhere in the book:

Over the years, Americans have used their discussion of rights to articulate their vision of citizenship – of what being an American actually means in terms of legal rights and political status. But the question of the right of individuals to own guns is particularly contentious. Critics of the concept of gun rights have often asserted that such a concept illustrates the ultimate in selfishness: the triumph of the individual gun owner’s desire for guns over the basic community safety and security.

And I’d argue that is the position that England has taken that has lead it to become the gun-control poster-child of the industrialized nations.

And in fact, many shooters do see their guns rights as a basic right conferred on them as American citizens. Some even believe such gun rights may add to problems of public safety.

But most shooters see gun rights as a means to confer safety to individuals and social groups; gun rights enable individuals to protect themselves and their family, their community, and even their nation. The issue is not so much that gun control supporters believe in public safety and shooters do not. The difference is in how public safety should be achieved. Shooters believe gun rights allow them to promote collective as well as individual safety. In their minds, a lack of individual gun rights means that only government agents and criminals would remain armed, and citizens would be vulnerable to both.

And I certainly concur with the sentiment. A large majority of the posts I put up here echo that. But it goes beyond mere ownership of guns. It goes well beyond John’s characterization that “(gun culture) is about peoples attitude to guns, and more importantly, their respect of firearms in general and their ability to treat and use guns in a responsible manner. “ What is involved is personal philosophy, and what that philosophy means to the overall culture.

Kohn notes several traits common to America’s gun culture: responsibility, toughness, individualism, independence, clear moral codes, patriotism, and dedication to tradition. None of these are desireable in a collectivist, relativist society. It seems obvious that if such a society is to be achieved, it is the gun culture that must first be destroyed. If one studies English history, the beginning of the destruction of their gun culture dates back to the rise of Communism in Europe, and the fear of the ruling class that the ruled would rise up in arms in a revolution. And if one asks John, or Lurch or anybody over at Samizdata, they’ll tell you that the relativist/collectivist Left has pretty much taken over the English government, and apparently with the willing cooperation of most of the population. It seems that anyone in England exhibiting any of these traits is liable to be hammered down by society, or by the government. And it seems apparent that we here are trying to follow that path, except that our gun culture is experiencing a resurgence.

Our gun culture is, in my opinion, essential to the overall “American culture” that has made this nation the powerhouse that it is. Responsibility, toughness, individualism, independence, clear moral codes, patriotism, and dedication to tradition are all bulwarks of that culture, and are all embodied by the people who make up “the gun culture” of responsble gun owners. The question in my mind is, “can we maintain it?” Or will we too eventually be overwhelmed by the voices of the Left who tell us that what we believe is selfish, short-sighted, bigoted, cruel, racist, unfeeling, etc., etc., etc.?

I concur with Lurch that, short of a miracle, England’s shooting sports are doomed and that further, there is almost no chance that England will restore its historic right to self defense. The last gasp of that was the recent attempt by the UK Telegraph to get a law passed acknowledging a right to defend oneself in ones own home. That effort failed. I was not surprised. England has slid too far down the slippery slope. I think that if we are to avoid the same fate, we must say “this far, no further,” and work to recover what we have lost.