Banning guns has indeed cut down homicide rates dramatically. The spike in 2003/04 & 2005/06 homicides is as it says caused by the possibly over 250 victims of Harold Shipman and terrorists. Pointing at that graph and saying "BANNING GUNS DIDN'T DO ANYTHING" is just highly insulting.
No, it isn't highly insulting.
Yes it is insulting. You are either intentionally misleading people or saying things with confidence when you didn't look for the most basic background information. Either way it's insulting.
Quite. You posted a graph that exaggerates the initial rise in crime after the first gun ban - which was not enough before the UK imposed the stricter gun restrictions today which show a massive decrease in homicide, to the lowest it is in the past 30 years, while completely ignoring national disasters.
It holds as much worth as saying 9/11 proves banning guns does nothing.
And now for a thorough breakdown.
[1] I'll grant that, but it's been so long since the ban, it would be hard to claim that the ban caused declines recently.
[2]What we can definitively say, however, is that the ban had no overall effect on homicides anywhere near its implementation date.
[3]I never claimed, when presenting a chart or some other data, that people would read the tea leaves the same way.
[4]I do, however, say that the data is not straight-forward in concluding the prevailing assumptions here.
[5]Fewer guns do not equal less murder. People have compelling reasons to snap, and they will snap regardless of ease or difficulty.
[1][4] No, it is easy to say what caused the decline. In America the number of gang related homicides committed with firearms has increased.
In LA 58% of all murders were gang related.How any people were murdered in LA last year and this year."Data from the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service also indicate that firearm usage has increased dramatically over time where murders are concerned. For the period 2002 to 2010, a total of 3264 murders were committed, of which 2421 or 74% were committed with the use of a firearm. Indeed, as Figure 16 indicates, firearms have become the weapon of choice where murders are committed. Prior to 2000, firearms were used in fewer than one third of all homicides in Trinidad and Tobago, whereas after 2000, firearm usage in homicides consistently increased to the point where at present, firearms represent by far the predominant type of weapon used in homicides. These data imply that at least an appreciable proportion of gang related murders are committed with the use of firearms.
The link between gangs and firearms is a troubling one. Firearm usage has increased over time for a range of additional crimes including wounding with intent and shooting with intent (see Figure 17). For the period 2002 to 2010, a total of 2164 woundings with intent were committed, with an annual average of 240. For this period, wounding with intent increased by an annual average of 13.4%. Shooting with intent exhibits similar upward trends. For the period for which data are available, there were a total of 1204 such shootings, with an annual average of 134. Shootings with intent increased at an average of 5.4% per annum. The only crimes in which firearms were used and in which there were decreases were robbery with aggravation (an annual average decrease of 2.7%) and robbery with violence (an annual average decrease of 0.3%). While there were observed decreases in these crimes, the quantum of such crimes nevertheless is cause for concern. With respect to robbery with aggravation, the annual average number of such crimes occurring is 1637 while the annual average number of robberies with violence is 455."
http://sta.uwi.edu/uwitoday/archive/june_2012/article9.aspIn the UK there are around
171 gangs, and as the same article says "the risk of becoming a crime victim in Britain today is at a 30-year low. There has been a long-term downward trend in crime, [2]including violent offences, since the mid-1990s," after the gun control laws were passed to make sure things like the Dunblane massacre wouldn't happen again. That is a direct reaction that means the difference between murder and attempted murder - [5]the difference between homicide and violent crime. This is even after cuts in the police force REDUCING the size of Britain's police force - and crime is still going down.
[3]There is interpreting data and falsifying data.
You are either deliberately misleading people, politicizing national tragedies or honestly don't care to have the slightest sensitivity towards anyone that's not a shotgun. Your graph is a bloody upward slope which does not correlate with actual data.
But you can't tell me what part is wrong. You only have fake outrage.
How fake you are Mr. Trollheiming. How fake indeed.