because if you ban them surely terrorist will obey and trow sticks instead of firing weapons next time around. look, I'm pro ban, but legislation won't change a thing. won't stop a Hebdo and won't stop a Breivik, and mixing arguments to obtain stricter gun legislation won't go anywhere because of how ridiculous is the assumption that banning would remove gun from the baddies.
... you might want to go back and reread what I've been typing. It's not a matter of stopping any and all terrorists from having access, and if I managed to say it was, I definitely miscommunicated and it wasn't the message I was intending to get across, at all. It's not a matter of stopping a hebdo or a breivik. It's a matter of raising the bar of entry. Of making things that much more difficult. Of maybe, just maybe, making it so the one that was just not quite determined enough doesn't manage to do anything, or at least one or both sorts doesn't manage to do as
much. It's acknowledged that it's still going to be possible for particularly determined individuals to get their hands on firearms, even particularly deadly ones, and it's doubly acknowledged that the state of saturation in the US would make any changes take a pretty damn long time to kick in. But if it makes things even marginally harder, well... probably mission accomplished, especially if hobby shooting and whatnot is unaffected (which isn't exactly difficult).
And yeah, @Erk, of course. The whole saturation thing is a known issue. State of things as is, even if it had been illegal it probably would have still been fairly likely the guy could have gotten a hold of it with enough effort. It'd just have been
less likely, and continually less likely as saturation was brought down. Is whole point.
The UK conviction rate is 1/4 of the US.
http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/html/cjusew96/cpp.cfm
Which would put them about in line with the US, since their homicide rate is generally considered about 1/4th the US, too. Those numbers aren't per 1000 cases, they're per 1000 population. As, uh. As the page itself notes, a bit down. Conviction rates are also a whole 'nother discussion to be had.
Most of the research I've seen suggest that the real numbers are much closer.
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199900/cmselect/cmhaff/95/95ap25.htm
... how much closer? 'Cause that links to something from '00, and it's... not exactly what I'd call research. It says things are maybe wrong, goes no further, and seems to reference very little aside, heh.
This actually seems to be one of the better things I've noticed trying to correct for the reporting differences (and is significantly more recent besides), and the conclusion they end up with is that it
is fairly possible the UK's actual homicide rate is ~double what they report. Which, y'know. Still puts them somewhere in the ballpark of half the US's. It
is several different kinds of pain to navigate different statistics gathering standards, for what it's worth.
I'll admit that knife stat was miss remembered.Even if you evaluate only violent crimes committed by attackers armed with a firearm, only 4.6% of victims were actually shot (5).
Criminals armed with knives and clubs were far more likely to use the weapons to inflict injury to their victims. Club assaults resulted in injury 36% of the time (most injuries were minor, however). Knife armed attackers cut or stabbed their victims in 12.7% of violent crimes (6).
People with knives are more likely to use them than those with guns.
And massively less likely to kill. Like, last I checked we're aware that folks are indeed more likely to attack if they're not using a firearm, especially when it's, y'know, much, much quieter. We're also very much aware the victims are a whole hell of a lot more likely to come out of the encounter alive, injured or not (though note, by the statistics you linked, even the worst case scenario for injury likelihood -- blunt objects, basically -- you're still more likely to come out uninjured than not). Though the numbers in the quote seem to be a bit off from the numbers in the data y'linked to. You can check wuvc01t08 in the zip -- the injuries broken down by weapon for all the crimes they're counting come out to 15/27.7/36, firearms, knives, clubs. For something of a reference, wuvc01t11 notes that the homicide percentages are 86/9/5, similarly. The rates are per 100k, 4, <0.5, <0.5. Basically, ah. We'd really probably rather people be injured by knives than killed by guns. Which y'may have been aware of and not claiming otherwise, but hey, doesn't hurt much to note it just in case.
... also, y'wouldn't happen to be aware of more recent data, would yeh? Those numbers are from '01. They're probably on the site somewhere, s'just kinda' annoying to find the bloody things.
Not sure what your second paragraph is trying to say? I don't see what magazine sizes, which are currently regulated at the state level afaik, have to do with federal agencies trying to apply inappropriate policies to all states, which is a problem across the board for federal agencies.
Ah, nothing at all, in particular. The second paragraph was directed at erkki, and a separate point. Probably could have stood to separate it better or somethin'.