Do you mean the 11 in 15 years?Glocksman wrote: Link for this 'fact'?
If so it was said Ken Macdonald the director of public prosecutions.
Here
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Do you mean the 11 in 15 years?Glocksman wrote: Link for this 'fact'?
It's how newspaper editorials tend to work, you're given the party...er...paper line and allowed to go an have a rant with it.Glocksman wrote:Link for this 'fact'?Keevan_Colton wrote:Isnt it great that people can use an editorial (someones rantings designed to fit in with an agenda) in place of evidence?TheDarkling wrote:The opinion of the Torygraph contrasts somewhat with the fact that only 11 people have been prosecuted for "defending their homes" in 15 years.
thanksTheDarkling wrote:Do you mean the 11 in 15 years?Glocksman wrote: Link for this 'fact'?
If so it was said Ken Macdonald the director of public prosecutions.
Here
Burlaries are down, but what about those nice double digit increases in violent crime, same with other violent offences involving bodily injury? 7% increase in sex crimes, 9% increase in criminal damage, and that's just in the last year.TheDarkling wrote:Indeed, I better not show the evidence from the British crime survey showing Burglaries falling by over 40% since 1995, that wouldn't fit in with the crime out of control theme at all (nor would it be useful in proving that guns are necessary for home defence).
Remember aerius, violent crime here includes swearing and spitting.aerius wrote:double digit increases in violent crime, same with other violent offences involving bodily injury?
Hardly indicative of the need for personal firearms, no?aerius wrote:
Burlaries are down, but what about those nice double digit increases in violent crime, same with other violent offences involving bodily injury? 7% increase in sex crimes, 9% increase in criminal damage, and that's just in the last year.
Are you saying that it counts into the categories of "Other offences against the person - with injury" and "more serious violence against the person" rather than "other offences against the person - without injury"?Keevan_Colton wrote:Remember aerius, violent crime here includes swearing and spitting.
No, I don't see it that way.Keevan_Colton wrote:My point remains, it's a rule for the summary execution of criminals.Petrosjko wrote:Tough shit. Don't go breaking into people's houses.
The British Crime Survey indicates a 36% fall in violent crime from 1995.aerius wrote: Burlaries are down, but what about those nice double digit increases in violent crime, same with other violent offences involving bodily injury? 7% increase in sex crimes, 9% increase in criminal damage, and that's just in the last year.
It's not like it's not a hotly debated issue here in the States. But I've had 2 cars stolen, had my house broken into (while I was asleep in it), and my best friend assaulted while she was overseas (she carries a Glock here at home) .... I'm 6'5, 230 lbs., I have never felt afraid for my personal safety when confronted by an unarmed individual, but I know that if that individual is armed, with even a knife, my size will not be one damned bit of help. I do a lot of back-country hiking and there's always a risk I'm going to stumble onto some jerk's meth lab or run into god knows what kind of reclusive whacko.Glocksman wrote:Interesting.
What we're seeing here is a great example of the cultural divide between Americans and Europeans.
Most Americans, even those who consider themselves to be politically liberal, don't question (assuming the circumstances are clear cut) the right of homeowners to use deadly force against intruders.
I confess to being a little surprised to see Aerius arguing this position, considering that he's Canadian.
The few times I've discussed issues like this with my Canadian relations, they're mildly shocked that I can legally carry a gun and they take positions similar to Keevan's on the subject of deadly force and burglars.
Then again, that Snyder quote in his sig is a giveaway.
Sure it's debated, but the trend in lawmaking here has been going in the opposite direction from the state of affairs in the UK. How many states have either loosened their requirements for a CCW or allowed it for the first time over the course of the last 2 decades?It's not like it's not a hotly debated issue here in the States
Bingo.So I carry ... and if you break into my house, I hope you're the kind of person smart enough to run like hell when you hear a 12-gauge chamber a round.
I'm definitely in the minority when it comes to my beliefs in crime prevention, most people I know believe in the UK way of doing things. In my youth I hung around with criminal types and commited a few misdemeanors myself so I know how easy it is to get around laws & restrictions and how little they matter to criminals. I learned that what perps fear most is an intended victim that hits back & whacks them, or otherwise getting caught in the act of commiting a crime.Glocksman wrote:I confess to being a little surprised to see Aerius arguing this position, considering that he's Canadian.
The few times I've discussed issues like this with my Canadian relations, they're mildly shocked that I can legally carry a gun and they take positions similar to Keevan's on the subject of deadly force and burglars.
Then again, that Snyder quote in his sig is a giveaway.
So one could go around beating kids over the head with a ballbat and it wouldn't count. One could also go on a murder spree at one's workplace and not have it count. Or I could just kill my whole family in their sleep and not have it count either.What the BCS doesn't cover
The BCS surveys people in private households, and therefore doesn't cover certain types of crime, including:
crimes against businesses
crimes where there is no direct victim (such as drug dealing)
crimes against victims younger than 16 (it is considered inappropriate to survey child victims of crime in a general household survey)
crimes that have involved deaths, like homicide (as the victims cannot be interviewed)
You can find this info buried deep in a couple UK police websites. Look at the crime stats for London and you will see the jump that's mentioned."American homicide rates are based on initial data, but British homicide rates are based on the final disposition." Suppose that three men kill a woman during an argument outside a bar. They are arrested for murder, but because of problems with identification (the main witness is dead), charges are eventually dropped. In American crime statistics, the event counts as a three-person homicide, but in British statistics it counts as nothing at all. "With such differences in reporting criteria, comparisons of U.S. homicide rates with British homicide rates is a sham," the report concludes.
Another "common practice," according to one retired Scotland Yard senior officer, is "falsifying clear-up rates by gaining false confessions from criminals already in prison." (Britain has far fewer protections against abusive police interrogations than does the United States.) As a result, thousands of crimes in Great Britain have been "solved" by bribing or coercing prisoners to confess to crimes they never committed.
Explaining away the disparity between crime reported by victims and the official figures became so difficult that, in April 1998, the British Home Office was forced to change its method of reporting crime, and a somewhat more accurate picture began to emerge. In January 2000, official street- crime rates in London were more than double the official rate from the year before.
On page 10 of that Home Office report aerius linked, it gives the US homicide rate as 5.56.Keevan_Colton wrote:Well, those extra three people per homocide might help account for why over the same period the US had FOUR times the homocide rate per head of the population compared to the UK according to the CDC.
I'm using England (1.61) as it is what americans tend to understand as the UK, and the figure on the CDC site was 6.1 in the section on homocides and gun homocides (Which were 4.1). Which gives ~4.Glocksman wrote:On page 10 of that Home Office report aerius linked, it gives the US homicide rate as 5.56.Keevan_Colton wrote:Well, those extra three people per homocide might help account for why over the same period the US had FOUR times the homocide rate per head of the population compared to the UK according to the CDC.
If you total up the rates (1.61, 2.65, and 2.18) for the 3 separate regions of the UK and divide by 3, you get a rate of 2.146 for the UK as a whole.
Last I heard, 2.146x4 didn't equal 5.56.
No, I and most of the other Americans I know understand England as England, and the UK as England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. It looks like you are selectively comparing part of the UK with all of the US in order to skew your figures. And the fact that Scotland has a different legal system makes no difference. Different states over here also have different laws, and Louisiana has a completely different legal system altogether (theirs is based on the Napoleonic Code rather than English Common Law like the rest of the country).Keevan_Colton wrote:I'm using England (1.61) as it is what americans tend to understand as the UK, and the figure on the CDC site was 6.1 in the section on homocides and gun homocides (Which were 4.1). Which gives ~4.Glocksman wrote:On page 10 of that Home Office report aerius linked, it gives the US homicide rate as 5.56.Keevan_Colton wrote:Well, those extra three people per homocide might help account for why over the same period the US had FOUR times the homocide rate per head of the population compared to the UK according to the CDC.
If you total up the rates (1.61, 2.65, and 2.18) for the 3 separate regions of the UK and divide by 3, you get a rate of 2.146 for the UK as a whole.
Last I heard, 2.146x4 didn't equal 5.56.
Adding together scotland into the equasion confuses it, it has a completely seperate legal system and seperate laws.
Funny you've been debating with english cases, english law and english police officers...Perinquus wrote:No, I and most of the other Americans I know understand England as England, and the UK as England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.Keevan_Colton wrote:I'm using England (1.61) as it is what americans tend to understand as the UK, and the figure on the CDC site was 6.1 in the section on homocides and gun homocides (Which were 4.1). Which gives ~4.Glocksman wrote: On page 10 of that Home Office report aerius linked, it gives the US homicide rate as 5.56.
If you total up the rates (1.61, 2.65, and 2.18) for the 3 separate regions of the UK and divide by 3, you get a rate of 2.146 for the UK as a whole.
Last I heard, 2.146x4 didn't equal 5.56.
Adding together scotland into the equasion confuses it, it has a completely seperate legal system and seperate laws.
Care to pick a few states at random and see if their per capita homocide rates are much better compared to england?It looks like you are selectively comparing part of the UK with all of the US in order to skew your figures.
Except there is an overall federal legal system, that isnt the case in the UK, the systems are completely seperate from one another.And the fact that Scotland has a different legal system makes no difference. Different states over here also have different laws, and Louisiana has a completely different legal system altogether (theirs is based on the Napoleonic Code rather than English Common Law like the rest of the country).
You would need to weight them by population and England has the bulk of the population by a considerable margin.Glocksman wrote: On page 10 of that Home Office report aerius linked, it gives the US homicide rate as 5.56.
If you total up the rates (1.61, 2.65, and 2.18) for the 3 separate regions of the UK and divide by 3, you get a rate of 2.146 for the UK as a whole.
Last I heard, 2.146x4 didn't equal 5.56.
Firearm death rate in parentheses:Care to pick a few states at random and see if their per capita homocide rates are much better compared to england?
No you wouldn't as the numbers are per 100k in each region, and the UK as a whole *is* England/Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.You would need to weight them by population and England has the bulk of the population by a considerable margin.
Gee, I wonder if that could be because those are the ones I happened to be able to find information on. If I had found similar stories reported from Belfast or Edinburgh, I'd have used them happily.Keevan_Colton wrote:Funny you've been debating with english cases, english law and english police officers...Perinquus wrote:No, I and most of the other Americans I know understand England as England, and the UK as England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.Keevan_Colton wrote: I'm using England (1.61) as it is what americans tend to understand as the UK, and the figure on the CDC site was 6.1 in the section on homocides and gun homocides (Which were 4.1). Which gives ~4.
Adding together scotland into the equasion confuses it, it has a completely seperate legal system and seperate laws.
Gladly. Montana. Wyoming. North Dakota. Vermont. Maine. Alaska. I would not be at all surprised to find their homicide rates comparing very favorably to England's. That sort of thing can happen when you compare selectively.Keevan_Colton wrote:Care to pick a few states at random and see if their per capita homocide rates are much better compared to england?It looks like you are selectively comparing part of the UK with all of the US in order to skew your figures.
So what. Most crimes are prosecuted under state laws. Unless a crime crosses state boundaries, occurs on feeral lands (like military bases) or features a crime like abduction, for which there is a federal statute, offenders are prosecuted entirely under state laws, and sentenced to serve time in state prisons. The federal court system never enters into it.Keevan_Colton wrote:Except there is an overall federal legal system, that isnt the case in the UK, the systems are completely seperate from one another.And the fact that Scotland has a different legal system makes no difference. Different states over here also have different laws, and Louisiana has a completely different legal system altogether (theirs is based on the Napoleonic Code rather than English Common Law like the rest of the country).
Last I checked, 5 states actually have an equal or lower homicide rate than England: In the same period (1999-2001) from which the 1.61 figure for England comes, Maine and Iowa average 1.6, New Hampshire averages 1.56, South Dakota averages 1.43, and North Dakota averages 1.1. Don't know that the gun laws are like in those states, though.Care to pick a few states at random and see if their per capita homocide rates are much better compared to england?