More Wonderful News from Australia

For a people descended largely from convicts, you’d think they’d have more testicular fortitude, but apparently not.

Nor do they seem to have much in the way of logical faculties, if this story is anything to go by. (Nod to Keepandbeararms.com again.)

Gun buyback underway

“Buyback.” Right. As though the guns were bought from the government, and now they’re simply “buying them back.”

A NATIONAL gun buyback scheme and firearms amnesty aimed at curbing the illegal guns trade began in NSW today, Police Minister John Watkins said.

Now, correct me if I’m wrong here, but England BANNED ALL handguns and it hasn’t “curb(ed) the illegal guns trade” there, has it? In fact, the “illegal guns trade” in England is a BOOMING BUSINESS, isn’t it?

Isn’t one definition of insanity “Repeating the same behavior while expecting a different outcome?”

The buyback is part of a national plan to outlaw a range of handguns, with the initiative already underway in the majority of states amd territories.

The firearms amnesty applies to unlicensed owners and/or unregistered guns of any type but will not result in payment to the gun owner.

So, let’s see if I understand this: If you own a licensed gun (and are thus a law-abiding gun owner) you’ll get reimbursed for your property. But if you’re an illegal gun owner, and possess unregistered firearms, well, if you turn them in you’ll get the heartwarming feeling that you’ve done your civic duty, but no money?

And this will disarm who exactly?

I though so.

If it’s that blindingly obvious to me, why are they going along?

The buyback and amnesty were part of a scheme put forward by Prime Minister John Howard and accepted by the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) last year.

Finally! The word “scheme” used appropriately!

Mr Watkins said NSW would use three vans – similar to RBT vans – to visit gun clubs and dealers across the state to collect newly prohibited guns under the National Buyback program.

Licensed owners who turn their handguns and accessories over to police will receive a cheque on the spot – based on a national price list,” he said in a statement.

He said the buyback and the amnesty would both run until March 31, 2004.

Mr Watkins said two previous amnesties and a buyback, held since 1995, had resulted in the surrender of 207,215 firearms in NSW.

The programs would bolster the NSW Government’s plan, announced last week, to address the illegal guns trade.

“Obviously, criminals are not going to take any notice of the buyback or amnesty,” Mr Watkins said.

“But these programs should reduce the total number of firearms in the community.

There it is: It isn’t the criminals that are the problem, it’s the number of guns. And the only way to address the number of guns? TAKE THEM FROM THE LAW ABIDING. Thank you Mr. Watkins for stating what gun banners control advocates here will not say (with the exception of the Violence Policy Center and a few outspoken individuals.) The ONLY “gun control” that CAN “work” is gun CONFISCATION – but it DOESN’T work because you CANNOT DISARM THE CRIMINALS. The most you can do is disarm the victims. And that works so well everywhere it’s tried, doesn’t it?

And the other thing this illustrates? Registration is only good for confiscation. You can only be sure you get the guns that are REGISTERED. The ones outside the registry? Who knows?

“And our illegal guns policing package … will hit back at the dangerous criminals who dare to carry firearms on our streets,” he said.

Hey, I’m all for that! Find ’em, jail ’em.

Oh, wait. “Dangerous criminals” like the guy in the story below? Nevermind.

South Australia’s handguns buyback also begins today.

Again: What it will do is disarm the law-abiding. It will do NOTHING to disarm THE CRIMINALS. And it will turn a LOT of formerly law-abiding citizens INTO criminals.

For government, that’s a win-win situation, isn’t it?

Nationalized Health Care Dept.: Equally Bad Care for All

Sorry I missed the article when it was still free, but Kiwi Pundit points to this NYT story blurb on the state of National Dental Care in Wales:

Carmarthen Journal; A Nagging Pain in Britain: How to Find a Dentist
Wales is so lacking in British government-subsidized dental treatment that 600 people recently lined up outside dental office in Carmarthen seeking one of 300 advertised appointments to see National Health Service dentist; some pitched tents overnight and others came from 90 miles away; ever fewer British dentists are willing to endure grueling, assembly-line work required to take part in National Health Service.

Here’s another story (complete, this time) on the problem:

NHS dentist shortage is exposed

The full extent of the shortage of NHS dentists is exposed today.

New statistics show that fewer than half of Londoners are registered with a state dentist – the worst record in the country.

The figure has fallen to as low as 21 per cent in some areas – raising concerns about the state of dental health in the capital. Critics blame health chiefs for failing to prioritise dentistry and say urgent action is needed to widen access to NHS care.

Thousands of patients across Britain are being forced into private-dental care because of the shortage of places on NHS registers.

Earlier this month, 600 people queued outside an NHS dental practice in Wales because it was taking on new patients.

The latest figures show that on average, only 40 per cent of Londoners are registered with a state dentist, compared to 74 per cent in Great Yarmouth, 71 per cent in Ipswich and 82 per cent in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire.

The worst affected areas in the capital are Kensington and Chelsea, where only 21 per cent of residents are on the register; City and Hackney, where 29.4 per cent have a state dentist; and Tower

Hamlets, where only 28 per cent have a place. By contrast, 48 per cent in Haringey are registered, with 46 per cent in Westminster.

Many of those who cannot register with a state dentist and are unable to afford private care are forced to visit NHS drop-in clinics, where staff do not have access to their records and only provide emergency care.

Dr Evan Harris, health spokesman for the Liberal Democrats, said: “This is bad news for Londoners’ teeth. As dentists leave the NHS in droves, the Government is putting money into providing dental access centres for emergencies, instead of people getting care throughout the year. Also, patients have to travel further.”

In 1999, the Prime Minister promised that within two years, everybody who wanted access to an NHS dentist would have it.

However, the number of dentists working for the NHS has declined – many claiming that poor pay forces them to go private. State dentists, who are selfemployed and work as “independent contractors” for the Government, receive about £18 for filling a tooth. The private patient fee is about £50.

A spokeswoman for the British Dental Associat ion said : “Because dentists are contractors, it is up to them where they work and how many NHS patients they treat. We worry that increasingly only emergency care will be available on the NHS.”

John Renshaw, chairman of the BDA’s executive board, said: “The NHS pays dentists a standard fee. This discourages dentists from working in some areas. The Health and Social Care Bill will give primary care trusts the power to set payments, which should improve the situation.”

Here’s ANOTHER story about just how hard it is to get dental care in Wales:

I broke law to help others

A NORTH Wales pensioner last night told how he helped scores of people desperate for dental care – even though it was illegal.

For years Russell Hall has fitted people with dentures. He even advertised his services in the Yellow Pages.

The 70-year-old told the Daily Post: “I know what I have done is illegal, but when there are people coming up to you desperate for help, then I was not going to turn them away.”

Mr Hall, of Hafod Road West, Penrhyn Bay, is a retired dental technician but not a qualified dentist.

Yesterday, he was fined £1,250 by Llandudno magistrates after client Marjorie Porter, of Penrhyn Bay, complained to the General Dental Council.

He was also ordered to repay her £360 and prosecution costs of £1,616.

In court he claimed less than half the population had access to an NHS dentist, leaving people no option but to seek illegal aid.

A dental technician makes false teeth but is not allowed to work in a person’s mouth. That has to be done by a qualified dentist.

I just shelled out about $1,100 to an periodontist to have my wife’s teeth worked on (after she suffered for six months because she hates going to the dentist.) But at least we were able to make the appointment(s) and get her seen.

Please, jeebus – no nationalized health care here.

“I Know, Let’s Make Guns REALLY Illegal!!”

Britain’s Evening Mail provides the following wrenching and earnest op-ed piece, Let’s end gun misery:

The anguished mothers of Birmingham’s New Year party victims will brief a powerful body of MPs on the problems of gun crime in Britain’s inner cities.

Six months to the fateful day their daughters were shot, Beverley Thomas and Marcia Shakespeare are to give evidence to the group.

Pals Charlene Ellis and Letisha Shakespeare were gunned down outside a city hair salon when gangsters opened fire on a crowd of partygoers.

Charlene’s twin Sophie and a fourth girl, Cheryl Shaw, were injured in the same incident.

What they don’t tell you is that the shooter used a submachine gun – illegal to possess in England since the 1930’s. But they’re available on the black market along with other goodies like hand grenades.

Now the mothers will tell politicians of the heart-rending and long-lasting impact gun crime has had on them and the community.

Perry Barr MP Khalid Mah-mood told the Evening Mail: “It has taken a lot for both these women to take such a public stand and we should applaud them for that.

“They are standing out, demanding justice and refusing to be silenced.

And apparently risking getting killed for speaking up, since the criminals don’t seem to fear the police very much.

“They are a credit to the community and we will be interested to hear their views on tackling the menace of guns and the gang culture that spawns such violence.

“Also, I want to hear about how they have coped over these past six months, especially with having to bring up young children as well.”

Their appearance comes a week after West Midlands Assistant Chief Constable Nicholas Tofiluk told the same Commons all-party parliamentary group how Birmingham’s image was being soured by gun crime.

He said: “A long-term issue that needs to be addressed is that in some parts of the city there is an emergent culture that sees guns as part of a lifestyle.

“These are issues the police alone cannot affect.” The MPs launched an inquiry following a nationwide “surge” in violence involving firearms over recent years.

Police on London’s Operation Trident, West Midlands’ Operation Ventara and Manchester Gang Strategy Unit have also given evidence.

Now, bear in mind that this is in a country where there are only about 600,000 legal shotgun owners and about 125,000 legal rifle owners, and ZERO legal handgun owners or submachine owners, or “assault rifle” owners outside the government. (The London police did recently upgun to the H&K G36 assault rifle.) And the legal ownership levels are declining each year.

But NOW there’s a SURGE of firearms involved violence. NOW there’s an “emergent gun culture.”

No, they killed the good “gun culture” and are left with the unfettered bad one.

What’s next, really really banning guns?

Let’s really end “gun misery” in England – teach people to defend themselves, and then let them carry and keep guns in the home. Nothing else seems to work. Banning sure as hell proved useless.

The Sun May Have Set, But Some Brits Still Have A Pair

Also from Samizdata comes this story of Geoff Bean an unrepentant and belligerent Brit who has no patience with government bureaucrats. Here’s part of what he wrote to his government:

Were I a one-legged homosexual Afghan refugee/terrorist living on the welfare state, you and your ilk would not dare write in such a manner for fear of having all the human rights lawyers in creation round your necks, but as you are speaking to an honest, hard-working and overstressed Englishman, you appear to think you can behave like all too many of the vast and ever-increasing army of totally useless, non-productive, arrogant and bloody-minded officialdom, who are now only too successfully doing more damage to this once great and free nation than was ever achieved by Adolf Hitler.

That’s the kind of attitude we need more of here before we become more like there. Go read it.

Buy that man a beer!

The British Still Aren’t Getting It

A recent BBC News “Talking Point” question was How can guns be made less accessible? Well, seeing as they’ve made damned near everything illegal, and what is left legal is under draconian restriction, I was quite interested in what the Brits had to say. Let’s sample a few, shall we?

The problem isn’t the guns, it’s the total inability of the police to police the streets! If people carrying illegal thought the might get stopped and arrested it might deter them. But the chances of them being arrested are about zero. We don’t need more laws we just need to enforce the very strict ones we already have. We need less “sound-bites from Ministers and more Police on the streets. After all, when did you last see a Police Officer on the beat?
Andy, UK

Someone else who believes that the government is responsible for his safety.

This Government’s standard response to such problems is to launch a spin campaign to convince the public that they are taking action – it is far easier than doing something effective.
Chris, UK

A cynic! But he doesn’t give any suggestions for “something effective.”

The new legislation should offer an amnesty for those who surrender their weapons to police within a time frame. We have seen this policy of amnesty in parts of Africa such as Angola and Sierra Leone.
Namabanda Mubukwanu, UK

And those are such safe places to live, aren’t they? I mean, Sierra Leone lifted their curfew just last year!

We should also ban toy guns for children. I can’t think of a sicker, more twisted ‘toy’ and corrupting influence on a child. And the age limit should be raised for movies that feature an excessive use of guns. Never mind 18, we should introduce a 21 certificate for violent films. And maybe the BBC could help by not showing as many war films at Christmas and on Sundays. Drop the violence completely.
Iain Harrison, UK

I’m rendered nearly speechless at the inanity of Mr. Harrison. Way to go, Iain!

Ban gun shop websites! I just put in gun shop in a search engine and came up with at least 700 results. This is too much.
Helen, UK

Well, hell, while we’re at it, let’s ban pornography and news sites, too!

Are these people naturally morons, or is it something in the water?

The latest figures prove that the government’s current legislation on firearms is not working. Will making this legislation tougher solve the problem? In a word – no. The people that are obtaining these weapons are the kind of people that have no respect for the law or their fellow citizens. Why not stop wasting money on actions that are all show and no substance and tackle the real problems like how are these weapons getting here in the first place and why aren’t they getting destroyed the moments they are impounded?
Ian, UK

Apparently this Ian drinks bottled water occasionally. But not enough.

Gun crime is hugely related to how guns are portrayed in the media, especially the music industry. Some gangster rappers glamorise guns in their music. If that can be tackled, then gun crime will fall.
Daniel, UK

I thought it was toy guns and violent films?

If Steve:

How about prison for the rest of their natural lives with hard labour and no chance of parole if a gun is used in any crime? Make the punishment a good deterrent!
Steve, UK

and Warwick

Deterring crime with severe sentences is a very ineffective measure. Unless one lives in a police state, criminals just assume that they won’t get caught. A more effective method would be to extend the weapons amnesty concept by offering a reward for weapons that is set higher than their street value. Of course, this has to be handled carefully to avoid fuelling demand. It would also face opposition from the tabloid reading types, but if it works, so what? Fighting crime shouldn’t be the crude popularity contest that it is.
Warwick, UK

were to meet, would there be a particle / antiparticle annihilation?

Oh, and offering more than “street value” for street weapons? First, where would they get that much money, and second, why would they want to fuel gun smuggling by the containerload? Warwick, I suggest you start drinking Evian. Perrier in a pinch. I understand the French economy needs a boost.

One obvious solution is to make them illegal. If that doesn’t work then, er, make them more illegal. Oops, sorry, I forgot, the government tried that and it didn’t work. How about banning people from wearing clothes, so they can’t hide a gun if they have it?
Dave Tankard, UK

Cynic, cynic, cynic. That last idea? I shudder to picture it. Most Brits don’t look like Page3 girls. And aren’t British winters brutal? Dave Tankard, eh? I bet he’s not drinking water.

I doubt that tougher penalties alone will work. The government should go for a complete ban on the import of all replica guns, and a ban on air guns, except in licensed clubs. If it puts a few gun shops out of business, then I would rather my taxes be used to buy them out than see the current trend in shootings continue.
Nick, UK

Yeah! You need more gun laws! Er, weren’t the recent shooting deaths of two young women committed with a machine gun?

Once again the government, with the backing of various police chiefs are looking at bringing in new laws to “control gun crime”, despite having the most draconian laws in Europe which they appear singularly unable to enforce! I take it the law abiding will suffer as usual?
Gordon, UK

Gordon seems to take offense at your suggestion, Nick.

Funny isn’t it – the government announce all kinds of things they’re going to do about gun crime, and then days later we find out that the rate has doubled since they came to power. You don’t think they’re cynically managing the news (and you) do you? No, perish the thought!
Andy Edmonds, UK

More cynicism. Tsk, tsk.

Five years for every round possessed and 10 years for every round fired, that would be a deterrent. An Uzi clip being fired would put someone in jail for 450 years, that would deter all but the most hardened criminals.
Drb, UK

Well, that’s an idea. One of the few actually presented. I don’t think it would work, but it’s an idea. And I have no idea where they’d put all those criminals. I understand that their jails are already full to bursting.

Guns will become inaccessible to law abiding citizens. Criminals however will still be able to get their hands on weapons.
Doug, UK

“Will become”, Doug? They’re close enough to that now as to make no difference. According to the Home Office there were, in England & Wales, 125,363 firearm certificates on issue at the end of 2000, and 600,733 shotgun certificates. That’s down from 133,600 firearm certificates and 623,100 shotgun certificates in 1997. Assuming a complete overlay between firearms certificate holders and shotgun certificate holders that’s about 600,000 people out of a population of 52 million who possess at least one gun. At most, with no overlap, that’s 725,000. That’s 1.1 to 1.4% of the population. Oh, wait, that’s legal owners. Jebus only knows how many illegal possessors there are. The last amnesty netted a reported 40,000 weaponsbut almost none from the crime-ridden areas. And I doubt a single one of those 40,000 were on a certificate.

Makes you wonder just how many “off certificate” weapons there are, doesn’t it?

Besides, it doesn’t matter how many guns the law-abiding permit holders have. They can’t use their guns for defense of self or society anyway, under current UK law.

The Debate Continues

Jack has posted his riposte. I seem to have offended him. George Bernard Shaw wrote once that “England and America are two countries divided by a common language.” I’ll chalk it up to that, I guess. No offense was intended, but now I guess I’m going to have to strain to make myself perfectly clear.

My last response to him ran six printed pages.

Hoo-boy.

We ARE Going to Have a Debate!

Jack has responded to my opening post in our debate on gun control over at The Commentary. It’s going to take me a while to generate my response, but all I’ve got to say is, This is going to be FUN!

Go on over and give it a read.

Are We Going to Debate, or Aren’t We?

I started this blog because of a fairly heated exchange between a blogger I read regularly – Rob over at Gutrumbles and someone he reads, The Road Not Taken, over guns and the right to bear arms. Jack, being an Irishman living in England, has a very different take on it than Rob, (and for that matter, me) but Rob’s debating skills on this topic are, shall we say, vitriolic.

So I invited Jack to debate the topic, and he suggested I sign up at Blogger and we’d do it on-line. That was the last prompt I needed, so I set up The Smallest Minority. However, Jack had a little different idea, and he set up The Commentary and invited me to be a contributor there instead. OK, I’ve done that, and I’ll keep this blog too. Anyway, I opened the debate by responding to the post that set Rob off. I don’t know if The Commentary is going to go anywhere, and I’m not the administrator of that blog, and I put some time into the post, so I thought I’d repost it here as well. As of yet Jack has not responded. From here on down is my response to Jack’s opening salvo:

The opening thread in question is here (so long as Blogspot’s links are working) or you can just go to The Road Not Taken and scroll down to the heading The Right to Bear Arms.

I won’t quote that section whole because it digresses from the right to arms, discussing whether or not Dubya is a doofus and Rob’s bonnet, but I will take several of the statements and discuss them. Jack can then respond, refute, or clarify his positions and ask me whatever he wants.

Jack opens the debate with this statement:

“In the United States, a big deal is made of the right of US citizens to own and bear arms. It’s laid down in the Second Amendment to their constitution, right under freedom of speech and religion.”

Yes, it is a big deal – at least to some of us. That much is obvious from the amount of media coverage it gets and the number of people blogging about it over here.

“Or is it? The Second Amendment states (and I quote): ‘A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.’ ”

That is correct, weirdly placed commas and all.

“Now, I do not believe that this gives US citizens a blanket right to own and carry weapons. Specific reference is made to a “well regulated Militia” and, to me, that does not imply that anyone who feels like owning an AK-47 should be allowed to do so. However, I do believe that it means that if a group of people form a militia, if they behave responsibly, if they liaise with the proper authorities and, as long as there are no fears that the militia will be used for any other purpose than to defend the freedom of the State, then those people should be allowed to keep and bear Arms.

“On the other hand, if some kid walks into a gun store off the street with a handful of crumpled bills, I don’t think he should be allowed to buy a gun.

“That’s my first point – that the Second Amendment does not give any fool off the street the right to keep and bear arms.”

First point taken. And that is the position that people espousing gun control have been using for the last thirty to fifty years. But first let me correct a misassumption. Neither the Second Amendment nor any of the other members of the Bill of Rights “gives” anybody anything. Read carefully the First Amendment:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”

The Fourth Amendment:

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

Note that the First Amendment doesn’t say: “Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech hereby established…”, nor does the Bill of Rights say “This Constitution hereby grants the following rights…” This point is made explicitly by the Ninth Amendment:

“The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”

The enumeration of certain rights, not the granting of them.

This was universally understood at the time of ratification. In fact, ratification was held up until the Bill of Rights was agreed upon and added to the Constitution as a hedge against future infringement of our pre-existing rights. This was stated plainly:

“The whole of the Bill (of Rights) is a declaration of the right of the people at large or considered as individuals…. It establishes some rights of the individual as unalienable and which consequently, no majority has a right to deprive them of. –Albert Gallatin of the New York Historical Society, October 7, 1789. (My emphasis.)

So the right in question in the Second Amendment is “the right to keep and bear arms” – a right fully recognized prior to the Bill of Rights, and designated as inalienable by the Second Amendment. So why the preamble, and is it irrelevant? As many argue, does the naming of the militia make the right to keep and bear arms a right of “the people at large”? If so, as many have said it was the best kept secret of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, as no known writings by any of the Founders even suggests this possibility, while numerous citations exist to support the individual rights interpretation. What the gun control people avoid is what the Second Amendment was actually there for: as a final protection for “the People” against government.

It’s not about hunting, or target shooting, or even self-defense against common criminals – it’s there to ensure that the People have the means to oppose tyranny. Hunting, target shooting, and self-defense are givens if the people retain the right to arms against government. Samuel Adams said it best:

“And that the said Constitution be never construed to authorize Congress to infringe the just liberty of the press, or the rights of conscience; or to prevent the people of the United States, who are peaceable citizens, from keeping their own arms; or to raise standing armies, unless necessary for the defense of the United States, or of some one or more of them; or to prevent the people from petitioning, in a peaceable and orderly manner, the federal legislature, for a redress of grievances; or to subject the people to unreasonable searches and seizures of their persons, papers or possessions.” (My emphasis)

That pretty much covers it.

Now to Jack’s second point:

“I drive a car. In order to drive that car, I had to pass a theory test, in which you are quizzed about the rules of the road, and a practical test, in which you demonstrate that you can implement the theory you have learnt and that you can drive safely and competently. If I drive dangerously, if I speed, if I drive while drunk, I’m liable to have my licence taken away from me.

“I think it should be the same with guns. Unlike most Europeans, I’ve used a gun. They strike me as incredibly dangerous things. Their sole purpose is to injure or cause death. I’m a kind of jocular guy and I often joke and mess around with stuff, but when I’m around weapons, I stop messing around, because it’s just too dangerous. I pride myself on having passed my weapons handling test first time, and I really, really don’t like being around people who aren’t competent or careful with weapons.

“Therefore, I can’t even comprehend why you would want to give a gun to anyone without ensuring that they are competent to handle and use it and without registering the fact that they keep it. As I understand it, and feel free to correct me if I’m wrong, there are places in the United States where you can walk into a gun shop, show your driving licence to prove your age and walk out with a gun and ammunition. No competence test, no registration, no enquiry as to why you want to own something whose primary purpose is killing people.

“To me, that is just plain dumb.”

These too are arguments – good arguments – used by gun control promoters. Let’s discuss them in reverse order. I as an individual can walk into a gun shop, pick out a gun, show my driver’s license or other acceptable form of photo ID, fill out a form, undergo a background check, and if I pass it lay down my money and walk out the door with a firearm I have no idea how to operate. This is a given. As to whether or not a registration has occurred, there are differing opinions. I did fill out a government form, and I did undergo a background check performed by a government entity. As to whether that information ended up on a list somewhere, we’ll have to pass on that question for the time being. However, if you accept that the Second Amendment protects a RIGHT to arms, then doing what I just described was me exercising a constitutionally protected individual RIGHT. Driving a car (an admittedly lethal instrument) isn’t a right.

I’m not comfortable around people who are incompetent with weapons either, but I’ve yet to see a way to prevent those yahoos from having arms without also risking my own disarmament. However, as with other protected individual rights, we’re allowed to strip people of them if they prove themselves unworthy. If Bob Mouthbreather does something felonious, his right to arms (along with his right to liberty and possibly even his right to life) can be stripped from him – but only AFTER the fact, and only after due process of law. His right to arms cannot be denied to him for something he might do, only something he’s actually done and been convicted of in a court of law. (Now, however, there is an exception for people under restraining orders and for misdemeanor domestic violence. There’s that slippery slope again.) If people had to prove competency and get a (government issued) license, then the government could make getting that license more and more difficult until it didn’t give out any licences at all. And if all guns were registered and all gun owners licensed, then the government could come and collect them all. Or at least collect them from the people honest enough to register.

England’s done that already with fully automatic wepons, with semi-automatic rifles and shotguns, and with all handguns. In the name of public safety. And it hasn’t made England any safer by any measure. Like the old saw goes, only the criminals (and the government) have guns there now. Which brings us to Jack’s third point:

“A lot of people make the argument that people should have guns for self-defence, because criminals have them. In American, the Second Amendment doesn’t mention self-defence. It only mentions a militia, so, in my opinion, you can’t say that the Second Amendment gives citizens the right to carry weapons in order to defend themselves against criminals.

“So, remove the Second Amendment from the argument and it comes down to a straight question – if criminals use guns to commit crime, should law-abiding citizens be allowed to carry guns to defend themselves?

“I don’t think so. I think that if criminals have guns, you need to tackle that problem head-on, not exacerbate it by allowing everyone to carry guns to defend themselves.”

Again, the Bill of Rights doesn’t “give” citizens anything – it protects our rights against government infringement. The question of carrying weapons in order to defend oneself is an interesting one, as the earliest court cases involving the right to arms discussed this very topic. The conclusion of the majority of those cases was that laws prohibiting concealed carry were constitutionally OK, but laws prohibiting OPEN carry were not. Self defense was one of those non-enumerated rights, and the Second Amendment protected the means of self-defense. On this question Jack and I have a major disagreement. Jack continues his point, saying:

“Here in the UK, there’s been some debate and tabloid headlines about the police shooting and killing people who’ve turned out to have been brandishing replica guns. People say that the police should be more careful, et cetera, et cetera. I say fuck ’em. If you’re stupid enough to go waving something that looks exactly like a gun at the police and you don’t put it down when you’re told to, then you deserve to be removed from the gene pool.”

What Jack has done here is separate out the police – people who should be allowed to remove other people from the gene pool – from the general public, who should not. I have a real problem with that. The police cannot be everywhere all the time. If they are, you are living in a de facto police state – something no one wants. If someone attempts to rob, rape, or assault me, I cannot depend on the police to be there to protect me, so I have two options: submit, or resist. England has apparently chosen to advise its subjects to submit. It has passed law after law making resistance legally dangerous. It has, in fact, made the job of the lawbreaker substantially less risky since the passage of the Prevention of Crime Act of 1953 made it illegal to carry any kind of weapon with which to defend yourself, and it’s only gotten worse since. This law did what Jack wanted – it disarmed the average citizen, but left the criminals armed.

So a question, Jack: Why should the police be the sole arbiters of whom is a suitable candidate to remove from the gene pool?

Jack concludes his piece thus:

I(n) conclusion, I’d just like to say that I’m not against gun ownership in principle. I thought it was really, really bad that the backlash after the Dunblane massacre led to a ban on sporting target pistols. British Olympic shooting competitors now have to go abroad to practise because their weapons are illegal in this country. That is just dumb.”

I thought it was really, really bad too, but I was not at all surprised. It was licensing and registration that made it possible. It was laws preventing the use of firearms for self-defense, and ever more stringent licensing and storage and documentation and recreational use requirements that reduced the number of law abiding gun owners in England and Wales to the point that they had no effective voice in Parliament that allowed the ban to be passed. England provides the template for “proper gun control legislation” that the supporters of such want to implement here. The Second Amendment prevent this.

Those old rich white guys knew what they were doing, didn’t they?