I recently wrote about gun control, noting how there’s less murder in demographically similar U.S. states than there is in matching Canadian provinces.
This is one of the reasons why I’m optimistic about protecting the Second Amendment. The empirical evidence is so strong that law-abiding people are safer in well-armed societies.
But let’s see how the rest of the world is faring on this issue.
Let’s start with a story from Switzerland, a nation that has a very strong tradition of gun rights.
Switzerland is becoming safer. Police recently flagged up that crime rates fell by 7% in 2015, reaching a seven-year low.
In 2014, homicide was actually at its lowest level in 30 years. …A survey by swissinfo.ch shows gun permit applications were up almost everywhere in Switzerland in 2015.
Hmmm…, more guns and less crime. The person who slapped the headline on the story seems to think it’s a mystery why that relationship exists.
But anybody capable of passing my IQ test for criminals and liberals understands that the title should be changed to “Lower crime because Swiss have more guns” or something like that.
The article also includes a section on Switzerland’s gun culture.
Switzerland has one of the highest gun ownership rates in the world because of its militia army. The defence ministry estimates that some two million guns are in private hands in a population of 8.3 million. An estimated 750,000 of those guns have been recorded in a local register. Under the militia system soldiers keep their army-issue weapons at home. Voters in recent years have rejected tighter gun controls. In 2011, voters rejected a proposal to restrict access to guns by banning the purchase of automatic weapons and introducing a licensing system for the use of firearms.
Ah, those sensible Swiss voters. Not only are they against tax hikes and regulatory intervention, but they also reject licensing and support the right to purchase automatic weapons.
Now let’s travel Down Under and see what happens when a government takes the wrong approach to guns.
Hillary Clinton says “Australia is a good example”… The man Clinton wants to succeed, Barack Obama, noted, “Australia … imposed very severe, tough gun laws. And they haven’t had a mass shooting since.” …Maybe it’s time to tell the president and his likely successor that the policies they so admire have been largely flouted… Clinton and Obama tout a 1996 “gun buyback” that was actually a compensated confiscation of self-loading rifles, self-loading shotguns, and pump-action shotguns in response to the Port Arthur mass shooting. The seizure took around 650,000 firearms out of civilian hands and tightened the rules on legal acquisition and ownership of weapons going forward. …What the law couldn’t do—what prohibitions can never accomplish—was eliminate demand for what was forbidden. …The Sporting Shooters’ Association of Australia estimates compliance with the “buyback” at 19 percent. Other researchers agree. In a white paper on the results of gun control efforts around the world, Franz Csaszar, a professor of criminology at the University of Vienna, Austria, gives examples of large-scale non-compliance with the ban. He points out, “In Australia it is estimated that only about 20% of all banned self-loading rifles have been given up to the authorities.”
There is one group benefiting from the attempted gun ban. Criminal gangs are big winners.
“Australians may be more at risk from gun crime than ever before with the country’s underground market for firearms ballooning in the past decade,” the report added. “[T]he national ban on semi-automatic weapons following the Port Arthur massacre had spawned criminal demand for handguns.” …Once you enable organized crime, there are no boundaries. Australia’s criminal gangs supply not just pistols, but weapons up to and including rocket launchers—some of which may have ended up in terrorist hands. …like American bootleggers who supplemented smuggled booze with bathtub gin, Australia’s organized criminal outfits have learned the joy of DIY production. …Australia will have to live with the rise in organized crime for years to come.
Such a disappointment that Australia, which is a role model on some issues, is so anti-civil rights when it comes to guns.
Now let’s travel to France, where there are at least one person doesn’t think it’s a good idea to let terrorists be the only ones with guns.
The leader of the rock band playing the Bataclan in Paris the night ISIS terrorists killed 90 in the concert hall three months ago ripped French gun control laws and urged “everybody” to get a gun. “I can’t let the bad guys win,” said Jesse Hughes of Eagles of Death Metal. …Speaking in a sometimes tearful interview to iTele, Hughes added, “Did your French gun control stop a single fu—– person from dying at the Bataclan? And if anyone can answer yes, I’d like to hear it, because I don’t think so.”
Amen. It’s downright bizarre that European politicians think it’s a good idea for citizens to be disarmed while crazies get to stock up on weapons.
Now let’s turn to America, where New Jersey (again) is a national embarrassment.
A New Jersey actor faces 10 years in prison for firing a prop pellet gun while filming an independent film. Carlo Goias, who uses the stage name Carlo Bellario, was charged with firing the fake gun without a state gun permit as part of the Garden State’s insanely strict gun laws. In New Jersey, all guns require a state permit, even non-lethal airsoft guns like the one Goias was using. …just seeing Goias pretending to fire from a car window prompted neighborhood residents to call the police. “I pretended to shoot out the window; they were going to dub in the sound later,” Goias told the Associated Press. “We get back, and within a couple of minutes we’re surrounded by cop cars.” …being sent away for 10 years over a fake gun is a reminder of just how absurd New Jersey’s gun laws still are.
Speaking of gun control, here’s radio shock jock Howard Stern making mostly sensible comments on the right to keep and bear arms.
It’s a bit disappointing that he supports a national gun registry, but I assume that’s because he doesn’t realize that the left supports registration primarily as a predicate for gun confiscation.
But he atones for that error by mocking leftists who have personal (and well-armed) security guards. Gee, I wonder if we might have an example of such a person.
And it’s also good that Howard mentions that most cops support gun rights, something that we see in the polling data.
P.S. Click here and here for some good gun control humor.
P.P.S. And click here for some entertaining videos mocking gun control.
P.P.P.S. Even some leftists have seen the light on gun rights, as you can see here, here, and here.
[…] P.S. For more info on global gun control data on information, click here and here. […]
[…] There’s widespread gun ownership, and the number of guns owners keeps expanding. […]
[…] tends to be grim. Many nations strictly limit the freedom of people to keep and bear arms. As you might expect, the “sensible Swiss” are an exception, and nations such as Monaco, Austria, and the Nordics […]
[…] tends to be grim. Many nations strictly limit the freedom of people to keep and bear arms. As you might expect, the “sensible Swiss” are an exception, and nations such as Monaco, Austria, and the Nordics […]
[…] tends to be grim. Many nations strictly limit the freedom of people to keep and bear arms. As you might expect, the “sensible Swiss” are an exception, and nations such as Monaco, Austria, and the […]
“Telegraph: U.S. Top Country for Gun Ownership, Not Even in Top 10 for Firearm Deaths”
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/10/22/telegraph-u-s-top-country-gun-ownership-not-even-top-10-firearm-deaths/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+breitbart+%28Breitbart+News%29
Gun bans are Unconstitutional.
[…] Howard Stern defending gun rights. […]
[…] Howard Stern defending gun rights. […]
[…] From Ironic to Asinine: Global Gun Control Developments […]
Hello.
A criminal without access to firearms will use knifes, tyre-irons, bicyclechains, sharpened screwdrivers or other implements and bludgeons.
That is the real point: who is the violent criminal, the home-invader, the drugdealer and the gangleader? Could there be an inconveniant truth lurking behind this, demographically, culturally and religiously speaking?
Could it be that the ethnically homogenous Switzerland has a low crimerate precisely because of its culture? One could collect data comparing propensity for violent crime, type of crime, typical victim of specific crime and so on, if one wanted to know who the typical criminal is for any given country and culture.
But perhaps such data and knowledge must be unknown, lest it goes counter to modern politicking.
It is almost as if there is a cultural element to criminal behaviour, and it is almost as if laws are an extension and a product of cultural mores.
Comradely greetings from Sweden
Rikard, teacher
Please do not use the word “liberals” to name people that are not such thing.
The only legitimate arming is the one done collectively by “the people” :
The arming that takes young people from their families, hands them a rifle and says: “See that bunker? That’s where the enemy is. Go get’em boy! Serve us all — or you go straight to jail”.
Of course, many of those people never returned. They are not here to complain about what our collectivism (and our enemies’ ) did to them. More importantly, they no longer vote.
[…] is a guest post by Dan Mitchell “a high priest of light tax small state […]
I think Obama should lead by example. Abolish the secret service, send his Marine guards home, and in their place protect the White House and himself with signs on all the doors reading, “No assassinations allowed”. Make sure they’re printed in English and Spanish, just to be safe. No need to print them in Arabic, of course, as Islam is a religion of peace so Arabs aren’t a threat.
Mike: Yes, those crazy right-wingers keep bringing up irrelevant things like “evidence” and “facts”. So what if countries will strict gun control have more crime than countries where citizens are allowed to defend themselves! What does that have to do with how liberals FEEL about it, which of course is what matters.
persons who find firearms ownership unacceptable can always move to areas of the country where gun laws are quite strict… perhaps the south or west side of Chicago…
as to firearms safety… no reason why it can’t be an elective course for hs juniors and seniors… an introduction to shooting sports… bet it would be quite popular… and young men and women would learn about responsible gun ownership and firearms safety… better to learn about guns in school….. than on the street… no? oh…………….. right………….. that’s sex……………
Not too sure what the point is of making references to Switzerland, Australia and others.
One would have thought the key question is “are American citizens happy/content (?) with the situation in their own country’.
2015, saw 13,286 killed by firearms – 26,819 injured – suicides not included.
If you are happy/content with that – then there is little point in drawing comparisons.
Self-defense is more than a right. It is a responsibility.
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