Here's a 2006 article from a Sydney newspaper:
https://www.smh.com.au/news/opinion/stu ... 88302.html
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Greta wrote: ↑March 25th, 2018, 9:48 pm Basically, you refuse to face the problem of school massacres squarely, reducing the issue to numbers. The US's morale and unity is being eroded further with every massacre.Greta, reducing the issue to numbers is precisely how you "face the problem squarely." Without the numbers you have no means of assessing the effectiveness of any proposed policy.
Meanwhile, you want to claim that Australia would not have more gun massacres if it adopted the US approach . . .That is not what I am claiming. That is what the studies are showing.
Meanwhile, the US is sick - you can claim ad hominem until you are blue in the face and it's still not anything like an ad hominem. The US is obviously a fading empire, just as other dominant nations have fallen from lofty peaks through hubris and internal divisions throughout history.*Sigh*
GE Morton wrote: ↑March 26th, 2018, 11:32 amI'm sure that approach works well when, say, your house is on fire. Do the numbers and work out the rate of burn for each item, then maybe catalogue the carpet just before it burns ...Greta wrote: ↑March 25th, 2018, 9:48 pmBasically, you refuse to face the problem of school massacres squarely, reducing the issue to numbers. The US's morale and unity is being eroded further with every massacre.Greta, reducing the issue to numbers is precisely how you "face the problem squarely." Without the numbers you have no means of assessing the effectiveness of any proposed policy.
GE Morton wrote:Studies don't "show" anything. They provide information. You ignored some of the most critical information - societal discord and rapid population growth, as noted above. Why did you ignore it? Convenience?Meanwhile, you want to claim that Australia would not have more gun massacres if it adopted the US approach . . .That is not what I am claiming. That is what the studies are showing.
GE Morton wrote:Hard truths tend not to be well accepted. All great dynasties fall, and it's internal sickness and hubris that causes those falls. America will not be the only great power in history to avoid decline. Just accept it, GE, and then you can do something about it.Meanwhile, the US is sick - you can claim ad hominem until you are blue in the face and it's still not anything like an ad hominem. The US is obviously a fading empire, just as other dominant nations have fallen from lofty peaks through hubris and internal divisions throughout history.*Sigh*
Greta wrote: ↑March 26th, 2018, 3:59 pmYes, it does. Because someone did the numbers there is a fire station about 8 blocks away. And because I did the numbers I have fire insurance.
I'm sure that approach works well when, say, your house is on fire. Do the numbers and work out the rate of burn for each item, then maybe catalogue the carpet just before it burns ...
Hard truths tend not to be well accepted. All great dynasties fall, and it's internal sickness and hubris that causes those falls . . .*Sigh*
GE Morton wrote: ↑March 27th, 2018, 1:05 pmIt's clear that you have abandoned rational argument in favor of visceral but baseless certainty and ad hominems. A classic example of, "My mind's made up; don't confuse me with the facts."You have essentially been claiming that lethality of rapid-fire weapons is not greater than any other, and you support your arguments with biased interpretation of statistics. So I could have said exactly what you said to me a number of posts ago - aside from your continued incorrect use of the term "ad hominem". I'm glad to pull the plug - seemingly never the twain shall meet.
Time to end this dialogue.
Rederic wrote: ↑May 21st, 2018, 7:26 am Are mass shootings becoming the new normal? Is there going to become a point when the shooting lobby say that enough is enough, something must be done?Yes. I live in Australia but I used to be upset by the reports. Not any more. I instead just feel loathing for people trying to deflect by blaming these murders on abortions and video games when the obvious answer is the responsible regulation of lethal weapons.
GE Morton wrote: ↑May 21st, 2018, 8:47 pmThe problem is that some folks equate "effective" with preventing 100% of possible events, then smugly claim victory when they make up a scenario where the proposal wouldn't work. As if other possible laws or regulations on any other issue are held up to that sort of scrutiny.Rederic wrote: ↑May 21st, 2018, 7:26 am Is there going to become a point when the shooting lobby say that enough is enough, something must be done?Everybody is saying, "Something must be done." The trouble is finding something to do that is both effective and constitutional.
LuckyR wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2018, 2:23 amWho are these people? I know of no one who expects any measure to be 100% effective, or argues that they must be.
The problem is that some folks equate "effective" with preventing 100% of possible events, then smugly claim victory when they make up a scenario where the proposal wouldn't work.
GE Morton wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2018, 10:29 amYes, I was exaggerating with the "100%" number, but I assume you are familiar with the cable news trick of modern "Whataboutism", especially it's use on the specific topic of gun control.LuckyR wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2018, 2:23 amWho are these people? I know of no one who expects any measure to be 100% effective, or argues that they must be.
The problem is that some folks equate "effective" with preventing 100% of possible events, then smugly claim victory when they make up a scenario where the proposal wouldn't work.
A petition drive has been launched in my state (Washington) to raise the minimum age for purchase of semi-auto rifles to 21 (from 18), and require completion of a firearms safety course and background checks before purchase of those weapons. This is another of those hand-waving exercises for allowing voters to think they're "doing something," but which will have no measurable effect on the problem
LuckyR wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2018, 12:06 pmBut it is not correlated with homicide rates. The correlation there is essentially zero.
As to the ineffectiveness of this or that gun control measure, you are right it won't eliminate all such events, but there is a clear correlation between states with more laws and lower gun death rates.
GE Morton wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2018, 2:23 pm"Yeah, but whatabout homicide rates separate from ownership rates?"LuckyR wrote: ↑May 22nd, 2018, 12:06 pmBut it is not correlated with homicide rates. The correlation there is essentially zero.
As to the ineffectiveness of this or that gun control measure, you are right it won't eliminate all such events, but there is a clear correlation between states with more laws and lower gun death rates.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/vol ... dd06393806
The Brady figures you cite are for all gun deaths, which includes suicides. And the actual correlation there is with the rate of gun ownership, not the state laws. If fewer households keep a gun in the house, guns will obviously be less likely to be used for suicides. The suicidal person will choose some different method. The state laws are relevant only to the extent they reduce the ownership rate.
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