T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
787.1 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Fri Jan 28 1994 10:06 | 21 |
|
not being from the area I can't tell what's "really" happening but
it sure seems like the mayor is grandstanding.
The problem with cig smuggling it pretty wide spread though.
What I find interesting is the governments response. Both Ont. and Que
are willing to lower the cig tax in an attempt to decrease the
incentive for smuggling.
This is hilarious when you realize that the Ont. gov is now
licensing cassino gambling which is known to attract criminal
activity.
Politicians sure are flighty aren't they.
Brian V
|
787.2 | Arrest the smugglers, it is a crime after all. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Jan 28 1994 11:11 | 11 |
| There was a bombing, and a shooting up of public buildings. Death
threats all around, gunshots are commonly heard along the river and the
Natives have stated it would be open warfare if the government tried to
stop them. The warriers are the Native version of organised crime, I say
put a few tanks along the river bank, and blow them out of the water. I
don't take kindy to armed groups with attitudes shooting up peaceful
towns, and the government is remiss for not putting a stop to it alot
earlier. The problems are real, the mayor's grandstanding is not
totally fabricated.
Derek.
|
787.3 | Hey Derek, we agree for once. | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Fri Jan 28 1994 12:03 | 12 |
| I agree, wether they are white or indians, they should be arrested.
Last week the natives shot at a military plane and an helicopter, the
governement's response; "we will avoid going in the airspace of the
reserves in the future"
In Qu�bec, at least 66% of all cigarettes are from illicit sources, the
same distribution network is ramping up to provide liquor, perfume and
weapons. It is time to put a stop to this once and for all before
society degrades further.
Jean
|
787.4 | | KAOU59::ROBILLARD | | Fri Jan 28 1994 13:04 | 12 |
|
Illiminate the taxes put on cigarettes and you'll have no more problems. It's
that simple. I hear people talk about how Canadians are always so complacent
and how they talk the talk but never walk the walk. Everbody bitches about
taxes but no one ever really pressures the government enough to force them to
find another way to bail themselves out of their own fiscal mismanagement.
I'm not saying that it's OK for the smugglers to start shooting up the country
but let's not lose sight of who's to blame for this situation and why it's come
to this.
Ben
|
787.5 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Fri Jan 28 1994 13:27 | 7 |
|
Cornwall eh? Who wrote this note for you?
:-)
|
787.6 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Jan 28 1994 17:00 | 14 |
| I disagree about reducing taxes. Now that the smuggling channels have
been opened, people will still get their cigarettes from contraband
sources. There is no way that the government is going to reduce the
taxes to the point that a carton will be sold for $20.00. That being
the case, the smuggling will go on, and, less taxes will be brought in
from legitimate sales. It's a no win scenario.
The country is just around the corner from a full scale tax revolt.
Park a few old navy destroyers around where the smuggling goes on
across the St.Lawrence river and fire warning shots. Better yet, sink
their row boats!
Glenn
|
787.7 | Smile you're on Candid Camera | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Jan 31 1994 10:41 | 6 |
|
And the radio reported this AM that photo stations are being setup to
take pictures of all plates on vehicles to monitor illegal traffic
and enable officers to look up offenders on their database with higher
efficiency. One step closer to the police state. This is at customs
points in Ontario and BC. What is the answer?
|
787.8 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Jan 31 1994 12:31 | 3 |
| > What is the answer?
42
|
787.9 | | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Wed Feb 02 1994 12:25 | 17 |
| Our medical insurance and all of our social programs are based on the
fact that all of us pay our share. When this chain is broken, there
has to be a tradeoff, what should be done, is something close to the
old Fram oil filter commercials "you can either pay me now, or pay me
later" translated; you can remove the taxes from cigarettes (booze...)
BUT pay user fees, if you get lung cancer and you have smoked all your
life, you pay your hospital bill, if you get liver cancer or cirrosis,
you pay your hospital bill.
Insurance is insurance, nothing is free, the guy with the Mercedes pays
more than the guy in the Chevy Cavalier BECAUSE it costs more to remove
the dents in the more expensive car. The same holds true for smokers,
statisticaly 25% of them will get lung cancer so they have to pay now
with taxes or later when they do get the desease.
Jean
|
787.10 | Huhh? | TROOA::BROOKS | | Wed Feb 02 1994 12:42 | 4 |
|
I'm confused; why are they trying to smuggle smokes into the US???
D
|
787.11 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Wed Feb 02 1994 12:43 | 14 |
| So, if you get AIDS from having `unsafe' sex, you should pay then.
If you ski and break your leg, you should pay then.
If you play hockey and suffer a separated shoulder, you should pay
then.
If you jump off of someone's roof and break your neck in a pool, everyone
should pay and you should be awarded $2,000,000 for such a spectacular
feat.
I think I'm going to go have a good cry now.
Glenn
|
787.12 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Wed Feb 02 1994 13:12 | 5 |
| Duty free Canadian cigarettes are smuggled into the US ... apparently
some American smokers prefer Canadian brands ... just as some Canadian
smokers prefer US brands.
Stuart
|
787.13 | look its growing | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Thu Feb 03 1994 13:05 | 25 |
| A store in Quebec has gooten a fair bit of press in Ontario.
Apparently it has openly sold smuggled cigs. on 2 seperate
occassions. Both times the RCMP just stood by.
In Hamilton yesterday police pursued and caught 2 men that were selling
cigs. out of a vehicle.
There are 20 stores on the 6 nations indian reserve (south of
Brantford) that all sell smuggled cigs. quite openly. In addition
they sell gas for 20-30 cents/litre. So far no charges have been laid.
Leader of the reserve has stated that they will not interfere with
the police, if they decide to lay charges or attempt to stop the
sales.
I guess what I'm trying to say in the above is that the police
have not been given any direction in dealing with the smuggling
or the sale of smuggled goods....so naturally it is going to
escalate.
Leave the TAX alone stop the criminals.
Brian V
|
787.14 | Spending my Tax dollars uselessly | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 04 1994 11:21 | 3 |
|
Prohibition...here we go again. Those who do not study and learn from
history are condemned to repeat it.
|
787.15 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 04 1994 11:23 | 5 |
| Boooooooooooo Hoooooooooo Hooooo Hooooooooooooooo!
Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!
Snif.
|
787.16 | | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Feb 04 1994 12:26 | 13 |
| Placing a high tax on a product is not the same as "prohibition."
Alcohol is also heavily taxed, I believe.
The social purpose of taxes on cigarettes is to deter smoking; raising
revenue is incidental.
It is the tobacco companies who profit most from the current situation.
Why not re-implement the export tax on cigarettes that they succeeded in
having lifted? The vast majority of exported cigarettes are simple
smuggled back in, as seems to be commonly admitted; why not deter the
manufacturers/profiteers from facilitating the smuggling by exporting a
low-price product?
|
787.17 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 04 1994 12:38 | 5 |
| Why?
$$$ and Canadian Tobacco Industry jobs.
|
787.18 | | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Feb 04 1994 12:49 | 3 |
| We've known that use of tobacco causes cancer & other diseases for a
generation or more; the objective of public policy ought ot be to phase
it out, not preserver tobacco industry jobs.
|
787.19 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 04 1994 12:59 | 5 |
| There are a lot of "ought to be"'s in this world. Doesn't make'm be.
Jobs are jobs. Right now, people are more concerned about jobs.
Glenn
|
787.20 | | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Feb 04 1994 13:17 | 3 |
| Except, perhaps, those who have cancer.
-Stephen
|
787.21 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 04 1994 13:41 | 3 |
| Keeps people in radiology labs busy.
Glenn
|
787.22 | | TROOA::MCRAM | Marshall Cram DTN 631-7162 | Fri Feb 04 1994 16:33 | 7 |
|
I've heard that they are dropping cigarette taxes in favour of a
Kleenex tax....they feel that they can get it back from Glenn....
Sniff.
|
787.23 | Exactly ...and theuser should pay | KAOFS::R_DAVEY | The meek SHALL inherit the earth! | Fri Feb 04 1994 16:36 | 6 |
| Exactly. So in our new user pay society we either drop medicare
and pay at the hospital door or tax the cause of the illness at
the source.
Robin
|
787.24 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 04 1994 17:04 | 20 |
| re. Note 787.22 by TROOA::MCRAM
|Kleenex tax....
I don't believe this is true as that would be singling out a particular
brand name of facial tissue. If there really was going to be a Kleenex
tax, I would just switch brands to, say, Facelle Royale, thus
circumventing the governments attempt a taxing me more simply because
I'm a very tender and sensitive type of guy.
If this is a mistake on your part and the new tax covers all brands of
facial tissues, then I would have to resort to purchasing mine from the
nearest Mohawk reservation. Or, I could just use the coat tails I am
riding on at the moment.
Please help, I'm going to cry again.
snif.
Glenn
|
787.25 | There MUST be a social program for FREE kleenex! | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Mon Feb 07 1994 11:16 | 29 |
| Glen,
I know it's not nice to have to pay trough the nose (no pun
intended on your condition) for services we now consider to be "free"
and part of our heritage but there is a sad fact we are in the hole,
not just for a short term, we can't even pay each year for what we
"buy". If Canada had a VISA card, we would be forced to declare
bankrupcy and start over again with a fresh slate and NO LUXURIES.
I think there is still time to get over the problem if we act as
soon as possible, this means reduce our spending ways by introducing
user fees on all public funded programs.
And yes, if you hurt yoursefl doing something dangerous like
skydiving or mountain climbing, you should pay a bigger fee to get
treated. Why should a social program be any different than a private
one? Just look at your own car insurance, would you get it repainted
everytime there was a scratch if it was COMPLETELY free without having
to pay more the next year? of course you would. When your premiums are
too expensive, you raise the deductible. Even DEC with it's company
cars (when we had them) went from $100 to $1000 of deductible. If you
break a tail light in a parking lot, just pay it! if you get in a
major accident, pay the $1000 and get it fixed. Social programs are
the same, get a bad cold; stay in bed, take plenty of fluids and
aspirin, get hit by a bus, go to the hospital, pay your fee and get
well.
Jean
|
787.26 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Feb 07 1994 12:38 | 8 |
| I believe a graded user fee would be too difficult to manage. Insurance
for property can't be compared to health care.
I like your idea about free Kleenex though, because I think I'm going
to cry again.
Glenn
|
787.27 | Remember whirlie twirlies? | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Wed Feb 09 1994 11:11 | 10 |
| No, graded user fees are a great idea, you could have a civil servant
per person....hummmm no that wouldn't work, OK, OK lets say one civil
servant per family to watch our lives, if we break a leg dancing the
"achy breaky dance", we would have to pay at the hospital because that
would be abuse of our bodies... but we could also BRIBE our civil
servant to say we broke our leg in the shower before going to work,
whirlie twirlies excepted of course.
Jean
|
787.28 | Snicker snicker...8*) | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Wed Feb 09 1994 11:37 | 1 |
|
|
787.29 | Sniff. Sniff. 8.-| | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Thu Feb 10 1994 09:52 | 1 |
|
|
787.30 | done deal | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Thu Feb 10 1994 14:16 | 16 |
| Well the tax cut is now a done deal.....
What do you think ? does it make a difference to you ?
In my ussual Q bashing manner it looks as though this is yet another
case of the feds caving into pressure from Q.
Bob sure as H@## didn't want this done and no one out west did either.
Any guesses out there as to where they are going to try and make up
this revunue ???? Can you say more income tax ???
Brian V
|
787.31 | Good News! | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Thu Feb 10 1994 14:32 | 9 |
| I don't know about you, but I'm going to take up smoking. The
government has sent a clear message to me, "Smoking is good". In light
of this new revelation, how can I not start smoking? I've never smoked
in my life, why should I not start now? It seems like the sensible
thing to do. I'm happy about it.
Now I'm going to have a cigarette and a good cry.
Glenn
|
787.32 | | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Thu Feb 10 1994 14:42 | 14 |
| Do you know what other "hot" product the smugglers are carrying across
the border now?
FROZEN CHICKENS!!!!
Jean
BTW, don't you all think this reduction in taxes was wanted by all
Qu�becois, in fact it is only a clear demonstration of the lawlesness
present in our society (worse in Qu�bec than other provinces, true) and
the lack of power all police and governements have over their citizens
(natives included or should I say in particuliar)
|
787.33 | Right thing to do | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 11 1994 09:16 | 26 |
|
I agree with the approach taken in this case, since the problem
was so widespread the RCMP couldn't begin to tackle it. What makes
me chuckle is the comment by a government official today that "We'll
put the tax back on, once smuggling is stamped out." Brilliant,
Sherlock, what do you think got you into that situation?
Of course I'm against "feel good" legislation and enforcement of
personal safety and health, any way. This includes cigarettes, booze,
seat belts, helmets, you name it. I feel that freedom of choice
should exceed the power of the government. I don't smoke, and I prefer
to work in a smoke free workplace, don't drink to excess. I wear the
legislated safety equipment most of the time, I just would like the
right to choose not to wear it without fear of financial penalty and
delays by police pulling people (me) over. I don't buy the "greater
good of public health" argument. I respect the alternate approaches
that the Netherlands and Switzerland have taken with respect to the
world's oldest profession and the drug trade. I think that we should
approach some of our own problems without bullets flying and fists
beating.
Now to wait for the incoming rounds, and suggestions that I move south
of the 49th.
8*)
Pat
|
787.34 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 11 1994 09:22 | 7 |
| Actually, if you saw the drug zones in Switzerland, you would be
reduced to uncontrolled weeping. All of Europe's junkies congregate in
these places. It's not a pretty sight.
Have a happy day!
Glenn
|
787.35 | Every day is a happy day.... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 11 1994 09:32 | 12 |
|
You don't have to go far off the beaten track in our own Byward market
to see some amazing stuff, as I'm sure you are aware. Certain public
park areas in Montreal are awash with boozed and drugged out shells
of humans who beg and steal to continue their lifestyle. I think every
Canadian is issued a pair of rose colored glasses at birth and very
few indeed ever take them off.
Of course it bothers me to see waste of human life. Ever the optimist,
I feel sure there is a better approach.
Pat (My tear ducts have long ago dried up...)
|
787.36 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 11 1994 10:07 | 10 |
| After that reply, my eyes are welling up with tears again, and my
bottom lip is trembling.
If you made say "Montreal" a legalized drug zone, you would magnify the
problem x 100. Drug users would come from all across North America to
do drugs, it would be simply terrible.
Choking back the tears,
Glenn
|
787.37 | Business partners wanted with pickup truck... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 11 1994 10:23 | 14 |
|
I'm not sure what you base your arguments on, Glenn, but like any human
problem, the answer lies in a concerted approach across the country,
even across the continent. As much as certain people would like to
segregate and push problems onto someone else's turf "Say Montreal", I
don't think drug users would travel across the country from Vancouver
to do drugs in Montreal.
I do however believe that there is real possiblity that people will
buy cigarettes in Que for sale in Ontario, creating a whole new
business unit 8*) (Unless Rae caves in...).
Looking for a towel..
Pat
|
787.38 | The 8th deadly sin..... Stupidity (in reference to helmets) | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Feb 11 1994 10:55 | 15 |
| POLAR::ROBINSONP
So you are against the government legislating "health and safety"
issues. You would prefer that DDT was still in use ? Use of let's say
"Agent Orange" to defoliate under power lines ? Car seats for children
that detach during an accident and bounce around inside the car ? I
think you over stated your case. Perhaps you meant that you disagree
with sin taxes, and a few other ideas that are plainly for the public
good. Having driven motorcycles for more than a decade, I can assure
you helmet laws are not "feel good" laws, they save lives. Maybe you
don't want the government to save your life, but let it save other
peoples. If you really don't like it, dive your 'cycle without a
helmet, and consider the fine a sin tax.
Derek
|
787.39 | Ptui! | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 11 1994 11:58 | 24 |
|
Derek, the name is Pat, and please use it when replying.
I am not against the government outlawing DDT or Thalidomide. I am
against the government legislating against eating bacon and eggs
for breakfast, (Heart disease is THE biggest killer of Canadians) and
taxing cigarettes (Lung disease) to the point where smugglers are
getting rich. Where do you think the Kennedy's made most of their
family fortune? Smuggling booze during prohibition...
I do not deny that safety devices save lives, and I thank my helmet
that I still have a face that is recognizably human. However, I am
a grownup now, and I feel able to weigh the risks of certain situations
where only my personal health or safety is at stake. The most dangerous
thing about a public health plans is that legislators will look at
personal health statistics and drive wedges in where they think they
will fit. I resent this even if it doesn't affect me personally. To
this extent, I have a strange sympathy to the smokers I see standing
outside in a -35 deg windchill. On the other hand, their behavior affects
the health of others (me) so I am happy to work in a smoke free office.
Hope this rids me of the those extra words I found stuffed in my mouth.
Pat
|
787.40 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Fri Feb 11 1994 12:05 | 22 |
| Great so the RCMP cant deal effectively with smuggling so lets
drop the tax.
And while we're at it the cops don't solve the majority of thefts
so lets stop trying.
And we're having no luck at all in stopping any/all drug related
problems so let elliminate all drug laws. (no minimum age no pessession
no trafficing)
And lets face it what percentage of speeders get caught ? lets get rid
of all speed limits.
This is the most irresponsible line of reasoning I've ever heard !!!
If the police can not deal with a problem effectively you don't
ignore it you put more attention and focus on it.
Brian V
|
787.41 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 11 1994 12:24 | 13 |
| The difference with cigarettes is, it's not illegal to smoke them.
Trying to stop the smuggling of cigarettes is difficult because (unless
they're traceable somehow) it's not illegal to possess cigarettes.
It is not cut and dry like it is for cocaine for example.
This issue is about taxes. People are tired of the various ways the
governments have tried to get their hands in peoples pockets.
Cigarette smuggling is just a small piece of an increasing pie. More
and more people are finding ways to not pay taxes because they've had
enough.
Glenn
|
787.42 | Speaking of Taxes | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 11 1994 12:46 | 6 |
|
The ingenuity of our millionaires with regard to avoiding taxes
amazes me. How do they do it? I shudder to think I'll have to approach
that pile of receipts and T1 on my kitchen table soon.
ECCH!
|
787.43 | | KAFS31::LACAILLE | Half-filled bottles of inspiration | Fri Feb 11 1994 12:48 | 4 |
|
A serious reply from Glenn...now I think I am going to cry.
Eiweep Knightly
|
787.44 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Fri Feb 11 1994 12:55 | 7 |
| It is not illegal to use cocaine/pot or any other drug the charge
is for possession. Similarly it is not illegal to have sex sex for
money it is illegal to solicit money for sex.
Brian V
|
787.45 | But we are not all as wise as you. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Feb 11 1994 14:26 | 39 |
| Pat:
>>I am a grownup now, and I feel able to weigh the risks of certain
>>situations where only my personal health or safety is at stake.
I would say you are not likely to make informed judgements on all
issues that effect your H/S. I would also say that not all people have
the same ability to make those value judgements you *are* able to do. So
who arbitrates ? Speeding laws are a good example. I judge that I can
drive 180KM/HR to work on my on my motorcycle, I have been known to do it,
and a fellow employee called the cops "for my own good". Who is right ?
Who is wrong ? I was wrong because the law says so. If it were up to the
individual, too many people would drive beyond their own/cars ability. The
government tries to set a reasonable standard. You or I may be able to
drive well beyond the posted limit in complete safety, but does that mean
all people can ?
I would agree that the government many times gets involved in areas
they should not, but these are not those cases.
As for words in your mouth. I tried to say that you overstated your
case with the following:
Of course I'm against "feel good" legislation and enforcement of
personal safety and health, any way. This includes cigarettes,
booze, seat belts, helmets, ***you name it***. I feel that freedom of
choice should exceed the power of the government.
So I did name a few that I felt would point out that the government
setting standards is not *always* a bad thing. Once a person gets out of
the BLACK/WHITE mode it is easier to sway their opinion.
As for not calling you Pat, sorry, no insult intended. I just find it
easier to click on NODENAME::USERNAME than search to the bottom to see if
there is a real name associated with the note. I have met one person who
has stated offense, you. Sorry, I will try to remember to address you
as Pat.
Derek.
|
787.46 | Manners makyth ... | R2ME2::HINXMAN | In the range of strange | Fri Feb 11 1994 14:41 | 11 |
| re .45
> As for not calling you Pat, sorry, no insult intended. I just find it
> easier to click on NODENAME::USERNAME than search to the bottom to see if
> there is a real name associated with the note. I have met one person who
> has stated offense, you.
There are conferences in which half the membership would flame you for
doing that. Especially with the "I'm too **** lazy" excuse.
Tony
|
787.47 | If I sent E-MAIL to you, that's what I would have to call you. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Feb 11 1994 14:51 | 8 |
| R2ME2::HINXMAN
^
|
If that is going to get a flame, wait till they read the contents.
Glad I stay out of those "I take offense when none was intended" notes
files. Who needs more professional victims anyway.
Derek.
|
787.48 | | KAOU59::ROBILLARD | | Fri Feb 11 1994 15:00 | 13 |
| > Speeding laws are a good example. I judge that I can
> drive 180KM/HR to work on my on my motorcycle, I have been known to do it,
> and a fellow employee called the cops "for my own good". Who is right ?
> Who is wrong ? I was wrong because the law says so.
One day they'll tell you that your motorcycle is illegal and I'm sure your
response will be something like, "Oh well, the government knows best. They're
definitely looking out for my own interest."
More government, more legislation, more interference!! Makes me want to
puke! HEY, that means the government is a health risk! Let's get rid of it!
Ben
|
787.49 | Consider this.. | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 11 1994 15:19 | 33 |
|
Hi Derek:
Let's take your speeding example vs. seatbelts...
Excess speed in the presence of other traffic affects others,
regardless of your personal "safety envelope."
Excess speed on an empty highway does not affect anyone except
you.
In which environment is it OK to speed? The law says neither. The
judge would ream you. Guess which environment I like to speed in.
In the case of seat belts, it is legislation which is still
controversial in some areas of North America. A seat belt will only
protect you in certain limited situations, and will in fact cause
great damage in other situations. You have to ask yourself what kind
of accident you are likely to have. However, the point is if you
choose not to wear it you affect only yourself, not everyone else on
the road. I find the resources expended to charge people for not
wearing their seat belt particularly galling, especially when compared
to Brian V's comments regarding proper application of police efforts
in solving thefts,(and preventing bank robberies, and paying visits to
violent spouses in violation of their restraining orders.) Patricia
Allen might be alive today if police were not out randomly searching
out seatbelt violators, if you get my drift. It comes down to
how public funds are applied with respect to the magnitude of the
problem.
I can't believe I'm the only one that thinks this way.
Pat
|
787.50 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 11 1994 15:53 | 24 |
| re:
| <<< Note 787.44 by KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB >>>
|
| It is not illegal to use cocaine/pot or any other drug the charge
| is for possession. Similarly it is not illegal to have sex sex for
| money it is illegal to solicit money for sex.
|
|
| Brian V
This has got to be one of the silliest arguments I've ever seen.
How can you use cocaine/pot if you first don't possess it. You're
splitting a hair that doesn't support you argument.
It is not illegal to posses/use cigarettes. tobacco is not an
illegal substance. Cocaine is, whether you're holding it in your hand
or holding it up your nose.
Also, if you think that all sex is legal, you are gravely mistaken
and very ignorant of the laws of this country. It is illegal to "have"
sex with a minor for one.
Glenn
|
787.51 | Double entendre opportunity | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 11 1994 16:09 | 4 |
|
Gee, I've never had sex with a miner. What's it like?
Pat
|
787.52 | All a matter of perspective... | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Feb 11 1994 16:35 | 20 |
| Pat:
I think seatbelts will protect you more often than not wearing one.
Ask the police who show up at accidents, they don't seem to agree with
your assesment that they are of limited value. You believe the right to
do stupid things is paramount (ie. no helmet), I believe that government
can and should set guidelines for society. If the rights of the
individual gain too much power over the rights of society, we will end
up like the US, where to protect the "rights" of an individual, they
are willing to put everyone else at risk. (gun control as an example)
We as Canadians have a new charter of rights, but even that has been
demonstrated to be subserviant to the rights of society
(notwithstanding clause). I honestly feel your perception is that of an
American, probably from watching TV, and it is out of step with the way
*this* country is governed. You of course can desire and work for
change, but that does not alter the fact that in this country the
rights of society and the individual are more balanced than in the
States.
Derek
|
787.53 | Sex with a miner | KAFS31::LACAILLE | Half-filled bottles of inspiration | Fri Feb 11 1994 16:54 | 4 |
|
I can dig it...
Cole Myne
|
787.54 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Sat Feb 12 1994 14:09 | 1 |
| Be careful, you might get shafted.
|
787.55 | Where I stand... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Feb 14 1994 09:55 | 38 |
|
Well Derek, our wonderful government has put a gag on the press, is
putting cameras out to watch it's citizens, has gun control policies
that protect money, empower criminals and endanger the private
citizen, (witness the family in Nepean who's house was stormed by
criminals who beat them and robbed them recently), we have drive-by
shootings (sound familiar?). Now we're going to spend a few million
trying to find the guilty party because someone was fed up with
being a vegetable and decided to end it all.
When my son was born, we got a visit (non-optional!) from a public
health nurse who brought half a pound of government health pamphlets
which we already had picked up at our pediatrician. Poor thing, I made
her feel most unwelcome for intruding in my house, spending my tax
dollars uselessly checking out where my child would sleep and eat. I
also made a fuss about the stinging drops they put in newborn's eyes
to counteract the effects of the possibility of the parent's having
syphilis. I KNOW I don't have V.D.!!!
When my daughter was born last Feb, the nurse didn't show. I guess
they have my number now.
For my part, I will continue to act against those social
engineers in every way I can possibly think of, arranging my affairs
to pay minimum tax, and teaching my children to thumb their noses in
the general direction of those who seek to drive the wedge too far in
imposing their collective "wisdom" on others. Hopefully my children
will inherit my values, and join with others who share them, to build
independent lifestyles in a debt and violence free country, where
government opression through taxation or other subtle means is
stamped out.
In the words of Paul Martin, I have, to a certain extent, "withdrawn
my consent to be governed". I am watching my government *VERY* closely
at all levels. I know they are watching everybody...I have relatives
working in CSIS.
Pat
|
787.56 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Feb 14 1994 10:41 | 8 |
| Oh no.... I think..... I think I'm going to......
CRY!
sniff.
Glenn
|
787.57 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Mon Feb 14 1994 11:50 | 6 |
|
Hey POLAR::RICHARDSON
Get a life!
|
787.58 | this is it? | KAOFS::N_BAXTER | we'll see who rusts first... | Mon Feb 14 1994 12:12 | 3 |
| Cote;
Like the beer commercial says, "It doesn't get any better than this".
|
787.59 | | KAFS31::LACAILLE | Half-filled bottles of inspiration | Mon Feb 14 1994 13:24 | 4 |
|
It's emunderscorecote...the emunderscore is silent...
M_LACAILLE
|
787.60 | Are you sure you are a Canadian ? | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Mon Feb 14 1994 14:24 | 18 |
| Pat:
I really didn't want to say this, but since you:
want to hear all the gory details of sickos crimes
don't think the government has the right to enforce laws
think the answer to a in-house beating is giving out guns
think drive by shootings are common occurences
can't see the benifit to a public health visit
You should really move. I can think of a place where these ideas are
common, and welcome. Remember to pick up you "personal protection" when
you cross the border. I thought this was going to be a discussion, but
when you say "has gun control policies that protect money" I take it
you are not in favour of gun control, and my opinion, of your opinion
falls through the floor.
Derek.
|
787.61 | Rayhole | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Mon Feb 14 1994 14:38 | 12 |
|
? shootings (sound familiar?). Now we're going to spend a few million
? trying to find the guilty party because someone was fed up with
? being a vegetable and decided to end it all.
I read somewhere that:
She locked herself in the garage, closed all the doors and lit
a cigarette. providing a most efficient means for suicide. It only
goes to show you that the government knows best about smoking.
|
787.62 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Mon Feb 14 1994 15:18 | 21 |
| Glenn,
It is quite easy to identify a package of cigarretes that have
not been imported correctly. It is impossible to identify an individual
cig. though.
Just like other laws it is possession that is the charge not use.
Possession of smuggled goods is a crime. I beleive the police are
charging $100.00/carton in your possession.
My point was that there are a lot of laws out there that the police
can not enforce effectively. It does not mean that they are bad laws or
that the laws should be removed. The society just needs to decide what
is acceptable behavior and what isn't.
"everyone else is doing it" is not a good excuse.
Brian V
|
787.63 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Feb 14 1994 17:09 | 3 |
| Hey KAOFS::M_COTE
Get a sense of humour!
|
787.64 | I sorta like the flag, though... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Feb 14 1994 17:26 | 38 |
|
Derek, I expected to hear you say that eventually. However, I'll pass
on the offer to move, since I was born in Ottawa and intend on staying
to collect whatever CPP has to offer when I get there.
Re: gory details: It's helps me form an opinion of the society we
live in, and what precautions I need to take as social disease
progresses.
enforcement of laws: I'm only against enforcement of "feel good"
legislation as defined by my earlier replies. Your sweeping
generalizations undermine your arguments.
in-house beatings: The knowledge that a homeowner has the means
to exercise self defense is certainly a deterrent. Think of that
as you feel the boot on your neck, trying to dial 911, and the
operator answers, "Sorry, all our officers are busy filling out
paperwork caused by Kim Campbell's bill c17, please wait for the
next available officer. Your call is important to us"
Drive-by's: We aren't there in frequency yet, just wait a bit.
Especially as the government turn's the heat up on
smugglers.
Public health visits: I didn't ask for it, don't want it and
I told them to stuff it. 'Nuff said.
Personal protection: I've got more than enough to do the
job. I'll remember to phone 911 first though, since I already
pay for it. What if I accidentally break my Louisville slugger
needlessly?
Your opinion of my opinions: Politely put, I don't really care. I
suppose each of us thinks the other is dangerous. Time will show
the truth, and maybe we can revisit this topic in 5 years or so
and compare notes.
Rgds, Pat
|
787.65 | The only good crook is an unarmed crook | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Tue Feb 15 1994 08:53 | 12 |
| I have a clever reply to each of your points, but you ended seeming to
say we can agree to disagree. That works for me.
The only point you make that I would consider dangerous is the one
about criminals not entering a house if they think it is "protected".
The truth is that a criminal would be stupid to go unarmed into a house
in the States exactly because of the fact that there is a fair chance
the owner will have a gun. The crooks are not going to give up crime,
they are going to "protect" themselves. I prefer our generally unarmed
crooks, it keeps them humble.
Derek.
|
787.66 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Tue Feb 15 1994 09:06 | 12 |
|
Hey POLAR::RICHARDSON
If your dribblings are humour, I'm glad I have the sense not to
have one!
Actually I'm sorry. The first 45 times or so your jokes are so very
funny. It's that repeat factor that's killing your routine.
|
787.67 | OHIP will take care of you.. | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Tue Feb 15 1994 09:50 | 66 |
|
This is the classic chicken and the egg argument. Whoever is first
armed gets the advantage. Sure, we have plenty of unarmed kids around
committing petty theft, but the career criminal has no disincentive
to using arms and will enter even if you are still in there. Most
prefer to wait until you leave or will choose another home that appears
empty. Personally I don't feel threatened by some kid stealing my
VCR, I'm insured. We do however, also have that segment of the
population out there who likes the power trip of imposing violence
on others, while they ransack your home for drug money to support
their habit.
I'm sure you will be most understanding as you ride with your
wife to the hospital, nursing your concussion and stab wounds, telling
her that sampling for semen and pubic hair doesn't really hurt, it's
only necessary to support the court trial. This all will be going
through your mind, as will the images of that high capacity
semi-automatic pistol that was held behind your ear while you watched.
By the way, that pistol or shotgun was easily purchased from the same
truck that holds cigarettes and booze, for about $500. A small drop
in the bucket from last weeks $20,000 intake.
The reason I look suspiciously at gun control is that I have been
around them for 20 years, off and on, and I have yet to see one
jump off the bench and shoot someone. In the back of my mind, I had
always thought that someday I might take up hunting, time allowing.
This sensitized me to the legislation, which I have examined in
some detail. Perhaps you have also examined it. Perhaps not.
Most of the new legislation is an excellent example of "feel good"
law. Laws that serve to protect oneself from oneself. Locks upon
locks upon cabinetry. Don't keep ammunition near or in them at home,
in case your child takes a notion to play with them. Penalties for
violation that exceed all rational thought. For example, you can get
10 years for *possession* of a high capacity magazine. This is
technology that has been around since the turn of the century .If you
choke someone to death, you can be out sooner than that.
The new law also has provisions that the police have the right
to inspect your home to ensure that the rules are being followed. You
can guess how I feel about that. The "order in council" provisions
are so sweeping, that even Hitler and Mussolini would have been proud.
Basically it means that the solicitor general can order any firearm
or multiple thereof, confiscated at any time, without compensation, or
going to parliament for permission. I wonder how our Olympic Gold
medal shooter, Linda Thom, is going to feel when Chretien confiscates
her Olympic free pistol is the name of public safety.
If you are in doubt as to the paper load all this has created for
our boys in blue, call the local OPP office or Ottawa police, and
ask them how many FAC's they process per week, and how long it will
take to get yours. When you get to the bottom line, like I did, you'll
find that hunting has become a rich man's pursuit.
The value added component of such legislation is very small
indeed,compared to the investment in resources, and will have no effect
on the Marc Lepines of this world, or even the Colin Fergusons. We have
not yet found a machine to read people's thoughts, and the mass
murderers will still choose their victims in the best environment to
find them without protection. I can't help thinking that the female
engineers would have been greater in number today if one of them had
had a "little something" in her purse, even a can of mace or pepper
spray.
Our emergency response team did a good job of sweeping up though,
I was impressed.
I can hear the criminals chuckling now....
Pat
|
787.68 | | R2ME2::HINXMAN | In the range of strange | Tue Feb 15 1994 10:49 | 6 |
| The U.S. statistic that murder occurs about three times more frequently
in households with guns as with households without, of course, simply
reflects that it is those with homicidal tendencies who are more likely
to own guns.
Tony
|
787.69 | SNARF! | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Tue Feb 15 1994 10:53 | 22 |
| re. Note 787.65 by KAOFS::D_STREET
|I have a clever reply to each of your points, but you ended seeming to
oooooooooo! Let's see them! I want to gurgle and kooooo at every one as
the cleverness enraptures me and sweeps me off to a magical land of
euphoria never before trodden on by ugly bags of mostly water like us!
re: M_COTE
Thanks for the warning. Your reply really cheered me up!
Have a great day everyone! It's great to be alive!!
Happy Happy!! Joy Joy!!
Glenn
|
787.70 | Violence is not the answer. Is that so complicated ? | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Tue Feb 15 1994 11:00 | 20 |
| Wow a made in Canada gun-nut. Are you one of the people who went under
LSD experiments by the CIA ? You can't see that the States has become an
armed camp, with children afraid to go to school ? You want the crook
to pick another house ? Get a dog, that way the criminal will know what
is in the house. Or did you plan on having one of those cute "This
house protected by Smith & Wesson" signs to advertise to the crooks
where they could steal a gun ? Your "solutions" are short sighted, and
dangerous. What I don't understand is why you don't see what free and
easy access to guns has done to the States, or do you think it is a
fluke we have less violent crime ? Talk about "feel good" solutions.
You would feel good until the crook appears in your living room, and
your gun is in the basement. See how poor made up examples are ? Maybe
I should have referenced your wife's pubic hair to make it more
forcefull.
You mention my wife again and I'll be sure to do something you do not
like.
Derek.
|
787.71 | | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Tue Feb 15 1994 11:06 | 6 |
| POLAR::RICHARDSON
Stick to weeping, it's your strong suit.
Derek.
|
787.72 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Tue Feb 15 1994 11:08 | 1 |
| gurgle.
|
787.73 | DIAL 1-976-HELP-ME, 50 cents/min | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Tue Feb 15 1994 11:27 | 30 |
| RE .68
Tony, I suspect that that the 2 million legal Canadian gun owners would
take issue with you on whether they have "homicidal tendencies".
Perhaps there are other "activities" going on in those households. The
people who use this murder statistics without looking closely at how
they were gathered and interpreted are misleading themselves. For
example, murder with firearms is often interpreted to occur between
"close acquaintences". What they forget to say is that "close
acquaintences" *includes* competing drug dealers who know each other
since they share territory. Another reason to be suspicious.
Sporting uses aside, examining the self defense use, at what point
do you think that your "instinct for self preservation" would include
a "homicidal element". Do you bend over and submit as in "Deliverance"?
Do you beg for mercy? Many victims get offed anyway. 'Course, if you
believe unswayingly in God and government, the police will rescue you,
and if they don't, you'll be floating on a cloud taking those harp
lessons you always wanted to take.
The government should stick to collecting garbage, building roads
and defending helpless nations.
Well, on the last point, maybe not. I've been reading about Dieppe
since the TV special, we're court martialling private for following
orders to defend his post in a war zone, and we're about to get our
butt kicked in Bosnia. Better just call the U.S. to go in and clean
up.
Pat
|
787.74 | DIAL 1-976-HELP-ME please | KAOOA::MACLELLAN | hardware..software..silverware.. | Tue Feb 15 1994 11:38 | 16 |
| RE. -1.
>The government should stick to collecting garbage, building roads
>and defending helpless nations.
>Well, on the last point, maybe not. I've been reading about Dieppe
>since the TV special, we're court martialling private for following
>orders to defend his post in a war zone, and we're about to get our
>butt kicked in Bosnia. Better just call the U.S. to go in and clean
>up
Their's a green card waiting for you at the Cornwall border....
I'll give you the $2.50 for bridge fare too.
|
787.75 | PAX man 8*) | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Tue Feb 15 1994 12:00 | 21 |
| RE -.1
Gee, I'm really bringing them out of the woodwork. At this rate
I'll have enough toll fare to make it to Florida. Keep your
pledges coming, and it'll start looking better than the CPP which
is keeping me here.
Derek, I'm sorry my somewhat graphic examples offended you, and the
pubic hair I referred to was not your wife's. I forgot that getting
too descriptive with my examples might shock you, since we are, after
all, getting used to having a gagged press, and all our entertainment
has been preselected by people that know what's good for us. I will
endeavour to use the third person from now on, and to predigest my
replies to suit the "It can never happen to me, I'm non-violent" crowd.
However, you must also agree to tame your violent streak, and to
refrain from personal threats.
Do we have a deal?
Pat
|
787.76 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Tue Feb 15 1994 12:56 | 40 |
| I have looked at this argument from the side-lines for a long time ...
as both moderator and noter ...
As a noter, I have seen lots of examples down here in Colorado of homicides
that may not have happened were it not for the free availability of handguns.
A hot headed argument, with a gun handy, seems to result in shots fired.
Without handguns available, what might have happened ? Someone maimed or
beaten maybe, but not dead. The biggest objection that I have to handguns
is that it is so much easier to mortally injure another person, either by
accident or by design. I don't know about you, but I think I would prefer
to be beaten than shot at with a gun ... my chances of surviving the assault
are a bit greater!
Yes, there are a large number of guns in the hands of criminals, and laws
only serve to keep legal users legal, but the number of accidental shootings
and shootings from hot-headed arguments by legal gun owners is staggering.
On the matter of laws, the problems every society faces is defining and
implementing enforceable laws without violating individual rights, and at
the other end, defining reasonable punishments for violating those laws.
We have known for a long time that punishment and sentencing for violent
crime is out of whack, especially when compared with non-violent crimes.
Often there is little wrong with the laws ... just the enforcement and
punishmenet and sentencing. Clearly we really need to see if the laws
currently on the books are capable of doing what society needs, and
find out why they are not working as they should before adding other
piece meal laws to the books.
On the other hand, be thankful that Canada does give the Crown right of
appeal. I have seen several people here, acquitted by a jury due to
essentially technicalities, but still very guilty of crimes and yet
allowed to walk free forever on that crime.
Now, as a moderator ... Please be careful on this subject. Generally
gun control discussions in US notesfiles get quickly quashed because
they easily get out of hand.
Stuart
|
787.77 | I feel better now | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Tue Feb 15 1994 13:16 | 11 |
|
Ahhhh. He hath spoken. 8*)
Thanks for the needed perspective, Stuart. Maybe I have some
unreasonable fears, others have different fears, like the fear
of inanimate objects.
I fear the armed lawbreaker and the government that empowers him.
I am aware of my vulnerability to both.
Pat
|
787.78 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Tue Feb 15 1994 13:33 | 14 |
| Pat,
Don't read me wrong ... I have an intense fear of that cold inanimate
object, just like I have a fear of the surgeon's knife, just like I
have a fear of bare electrical wires. Obviously, it is not the
actual object itself that one should be afraid of, but rather a
fear of what the object is capable of, if used (I meant *used* and
not *misused* ... and that is even more frightening) ...
The ownership and use of a hunting rifle is a lot different from the
ownership and use of a handgun. A handgun is essentially for one
single purpose ... you would not go out hunting bear with a handgun!
Stuart
|
787.79 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Tue Feb 15 1994 13:36 | 4 |
| What you all have failed to understand is that Pat owns a Harley
Davidson. And if you saw it, it would bring a tear to your eye.
Glenn
|
787.80 | And he wasn't wrong. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Tue Feb 15 1994 13:45 | 11 |
| Pat
>>others have different fears, like the fear of inanimate objects.
If you are refering to me, I fear the intent of the individual who
wants to own the gun, not the gun. I suspect you are drawing people out
because of your point of view, and faulty logic in defending it. As the
paranoid said, "The whole world is against me".
Derek.
|
787.81 | Self defense is not a good reason to own a gun. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Tue Feb 15 1994 14:33 | 13 |
| Oh yeah, PAT:
Go down to who ever you go to to get a gun permit and say you want to
buy a gun for self defence. As I understand it, that is not a valid
reason for owning a gun. Hunting, collecting, and target shooting are
the only reasons I know of that you can state for ownership. I have a
friend who is a gun nut (owner), and he said it was very clear that you
are not to own a gun to blow the VCR thief away. As I see it, there is
no capital punishment in Canada, so no citizen has the right to take
the life of another, regardless of circumstances. My views are
substantiated by the law, yours are opinions.
Derek.
|
787.82 | look Ma - I got a bullet in my head! | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Wed Feb 16 1994 10:10 | 19 |
| Hey Mr. KAOFS::M_COTE (I hear you like to be addressed that way),
Please stop picking on Glenn (Polar::Richardson). He's a very
sensitive guy! Everyone needs a jester. Here's one more vote for
Glenn to continue his crying crusade. Ren and Stimpy quotes? ...NOT!
And about the issue at hand...
Before we had societys we were nothing better then animals in the jungle,
killing each other for whatever whim drove us. It is important for the
society to find a common ground to give quality of life to most who
belong to it.
Survival of the fittest works in the jungle. It doesn't work in
our world though, because SO MANY are fitting themselves with guns
and automatic weapons. And that puts them at a distinct advantage,
whether they deserve it or not.
Steve
|
787.83 | Again Ptui!! | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Wed Feb 16 1994 10:27 | 94 |
|
Derek, it may surprise you to know that it is possible for an
individual citizen to own and carry a handgun for self protection. It
is extremely rare, and permission is granted on an individual basis
by court order. I believe the number is less than 10 individuals
across Canada. It depends how they can demonstrate that their life
is threatened due to their business (ie carrying alot of money) and
amount of political influence. There are also many individuals who own
and operate fully automatic firearms, although I can't figure out how
they can afford to feed them. Despite the fact that a fully automatic
firearm has never been used in a crime in Canada, they are now a
prohibited item, but grandfathered owners can keep 'em.
It is also possible for a citizen of Ontario to carry a handgun in the
northern regions, to "protect life". It must be displayed in a non-
threatening manner, and is only valid within a stated area, during
a fixed time period and it may be carried in a loaded condition. Many
hunters do this, to protect from bear attacks. I believe the reason
is that a handgun can be aimed more quickly in dense bush if you are
surprised by a mom and her cubs. We all know how pi$$ed off an upset
mother bear can be, don't we Goldilocks? Other provinces and
territories have different requirements and quirks in the law.
Sigh...I am growing weary of extracting words placed in my mouth from
external sources. I think I stated that the burglar could have my
VCR, I'm insured. Read back a few.
I only raised the self defense issue because of recent events in
the media, and my personal experience with undesirables in and around
my home. I am paid by DEC to solve materials problems at the molecular
level and I know how to study and dig into an issue. (Too bad DEC's
problems are at a Macro level now...)I analyse everything, including my
home, and have a mental picture of emergency plans for fire, flood etc.
When I read about someone breaking into a home within a couple of miles
of mine, forcing their way in, beating the occupants to the point where
OHIP has to kick in, I transpose the situation to me ....Unfortunately
I found that my home is not particularly suited to escape due to the
location of the bedrooms at a second floor level. I have become even
more sensitized with the raising of a young family, who at home alone
while I am at work. They are essentially defenseless. Their only chance
is if I am at home to operate the Louisville Slugger on their behalf.
I shudder to think of what happens when they get to the bedroom, to
find my wife and kids cowering beside the bed, and there is no jewelry
to speak of. 'Nuff said. Time for my Prozac pill. Well, on second
thought, there is a motion detector and buzzer etc. and stickers on the
windows. They are in the name of the alarm co., not Smith and Wesson.
I am not really "into" self-defense. At 6'3" 230lbs, I've defused many
threatening situations just by standing up and looking at my
confronter. My physical size has acted in my favor almost every time
the fists were forced to fly. I know that there a people out there, the
elderly, the small of stature, the disabled, who are not in such a
position. I fear for them.
By the way Stuart, there are several hundred Ontario target handgun
shooters who would disagree with you statement on the utility of
that particular configuration of firearm.
Derek, I challenge you to get your friend to take you down to the
RA on Riverside Dr. to try out a little recreational target handgun
shooting, you may find it relaxing. Unfortunately I am not a member,
but I hear it is an excellent facility, and has produced Olympic Gold
class competitors.
As to flawed logic, it is all on your side, with one possible exception
that I was thinking about yesterday, but nobody picked up on it. Paul
Teale is innocent until proven guilty, therefore his rights stand and
the court is correct to gag the press.
I can read what happens off the Internet anyway. Most Canadians can't,
and I fear for them.
It's been a most interesting rathole, fully furnished, full of twisty
little passages, most alike. An adventure, to be sure.
In closing, I think that the major difference between the US and Canada
is our approach to solving confrontations. It a mentality, a mind set
that no gun control will ever solve from Brady through to Bill C17.
When I see a Waco type massacre happen in Canada, I will be forced to
reconsider my position. Derek, you have offered no convincing argument
to sway me, and the Email I have been getting is skewed in my favor. In
fact, you wrote a reply entitled "Violence is not the answer", and then
at the closing line, write an not so subtle personal threat. Your
credibility is near zero. I know you don't care. You don't have to
waste any more disk space or company time telling me. I know of
several nice fern bars where other social engineers who know everything
hang out. I'll even offer to buy you a beer if I happen to cross tracks
with you as you eat your filet mignon, which was *gasp* killed with
a bullet for your enjoyment. Maybe you prefer a nice Cabarnet
Sauvignon, though.8*)
Pat
|
787.84 | You brought a tear to my eye | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Wed Feb 16 1994 10:40 | 11 |
| re: Note 787.82 by REFDV1::MURPHY
| Please stop picking on Glenn (Polar::Richardson). He's a very
| sensitive guy! Everyone needs a jester. Here's one more vote for
| Glenn to continue his crying crusade. Ren and Stimpy quotes? ...NOT!
Now I've got a big lump in my throat.
Sniff.
Glenn
|
787.85 | 230lb people standing up to a gun loose big time !!! | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Wed Feb 16 1994 11:05 | 28 |
| Pat:
I said I would do something you would not like, and you assume I would
resort to violence. Pretty hard to do over this medium. See what I
mean by flawed logic ? I would agree that one of the main differences
between the US and Canada is our approach to confrontation resolution.
In the States a gun is considered a reasonable response to a confused
student on your front lawn, in Canada it is not. In that you think
Johnny Sixpack should have a gun, you are taking an American approach,
so you may prefer the freedom to live in an armed camp to the tyranny
of living in an unarmed camp.
As for nameless people who send you supportive mail:
If they won't express themselves publicly, you have no right to claim
support. Maybe if they had a gun, they would have the nerve to enter a
note, but since they don't, all we get is your opinion of their
opinion. Not exactly something to loose sleep over.
As for the 10 people allowed to carry guns for self protection:
You must have used a microscope to split that hair. I ask YOU to try
it. Rather than admit I was right and you could not get a license to
"protect" yourself you dig up this tangent. Fortunatly the people who
do express their views in public do agree that gun control is a good
thing, so you and your shadow people will just have to live with it.
Derek.
|
787.86 | Sleep tight 8*) | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Wed Feb 16 1994 11:30 | 16 |
|
Derek, you don't seem to understand that Johnny Sixpack already has
a gun, and laughs at your brand of gun control. In fact, he drove down
to Florida for a holiday, got his Florida driver's license, sold
drugs for 6 months, drove back up, got a haircut in New York and
brought his gun in under the fender of his new Camaro. He may have
even stopped on the reserve to pick up a couple of extra clips. he
smiled at the Customs agent as he was waved through. He smiled
as he drove up the bridge. He wore his seatbelt. He smiled at the
officer who passed him on highway 16. Whew! He was driving 100 km/h.
Your absolutely right I am 230lbs of dead meat, just like the
fellow with with the swinging swords in Indiana Jones. And you could
be too. And your gun control couldn't help you.
Pat
|
787.87 | There's nowt so queer as folks | R2ME2::HINXMAN | In the range of strange | Wed Feb 16 1994 11:40 | 14 |
| re .83
> RA on Riverside Dr. to try out a little recreational target handgun
> shooting, you may find it relaxing. Unfortunately I am not a member,
That worries me, at the "what sort of person would find that relaxing?"
level. But then again, I don't understand the attraction of
Heavy metal music
Motor racing
.
.
.
Tony
|
787.88 | | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Wed Feb 16 1994 12:51 | 6 |
| I find it hard to believe that "Joe Average" (which is what I ment by
the reference to Johnny Sixpack) that is to say the vast majority of
Canadians, has smuggled a gun into Canada. And you bring into question
MY credability.
Derek.
|
787.89 | More incoming... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Wed Feb 16 1994 13:53 | 21 |
| Hi Derek:
No, Joe Average can still legally get his gun in Canada, just like in the
US. Sorry I misunderstood "Joe Sixpack". Somehow I associated drinking
with illegal guns...OOPS. Just like I misinterpreted "Do something you
won't like" with "Write something you won't like". My mistake..shame,
shame. And no smileys anywhere to be found. Highly illogical of me.
In my defense:
I was momentarily distracted by the sound of Ontario's social
utopia beginning to crumble (ie, cigarette taxes being lifted).
Unfortunately, at the same time I also heard on the radio that
Kanata is the region's highest growth welfare area. The noose is
beginning to tighten.
*wheeze*
Cover your wallets, people....
Pat
|
787.90 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Wed Feb 16 1994 14:56 | 18 |
| Heard this morning that the finance minister for Ontario said
that Ontario has little choice but to lower cig taxes because
when people go to Q. to buy cig's the buy other things as well
and that stores in the Ottawa valley are suffering.
Lets try and look at this logically. How far would people drive
to get cheaper cig's in Q. . How is this any different that the
mass exodus to the states that was occuring when the Canadian
dollar was low and continues still to a lesser extent.
I don't understand why the government is so fixated on this issue.
Why cant we solve the smuggling problem ?
The debt is still climbing and the governemt WILL get this money
from other sources.
Brain V
|
787.91 | No, please not here ! | CURRNT::ROWELL | For 25 dollars, and pieces of silver | Thu Feb 17 1994 07:03 | 30 |
|
There is an Gary Larson cartoon, where one caveman is holding a rock
above his head, and two others are holding rocks by their sides.
One of the pair is saying to the other "We better do as he says, Thag
... He's got the drop on us."
It seems to me that having the freedom to own a gun means that more
'criminals' will have to commit their crimes with a gun for their own
'protection', and increase the likelyhood of fatalities.
If you are going to use a gun for protection, then you had better keep
the gun in your hand, ready to fire, because how do you know that the
knock at your door is not a thug with his gun ready and waiting ?
When the breakin does occur in your own home, can you really be
sure that you will get to your gun before he (or they) gets to his ?
The fact that you have a gun means that he is more likely to shoot.
You can't proctect your wife and family with a bullet in your head.
Having said all that, I do sympathise with your views, and
the reasons why you want a gun. I have a baseball bat that I keep
handy, so as to be better able to protect ny own wife and daughter,
but living in the U.K., I do not have to worry too much about
smuggled guns. I do not, however, agree with your views.
Regards,
Wayne.
P.S. - Fascinating topic ! Keep it friendly though.
|
787.92 | | R2ME2::HINXMAN | In the range of strange | Thu Feb 17 1994 08:41 | 11 |
| re .91
> If you are going to use a gun for protection, then you had better keep
> the gun in your hand, ready to fire, because how do you know that the
> knock at your door is not a thug with his gun ready and waiting ?
Well, at least he doesn't live in Orlando, where it might be two or
three armed thugs. Presumably they want to be sure they have more
fire power than the resident.
Tony
|
787.93 | argumentive - not unfriendly | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Thu Feb 17 1994 10:06 | 25 |
|
yah - thugs travel in flocks around the states. It's that inbread
sense of teamwork that we all exibit down here ;-)
re: .91 (Currnt::Rowell)
So many of us rely on out baseball bats. They sit proudly in our
closets, giving us that false sense of security we so desperatly need.
>>> I do not, however, agree with your views.
Um - who's views? There have been so many in this topic.
>>> P.S. - Fascinating topic ! Keep it friendly though.
I agree, it has been facinating - but unfriendly??? Naaah! Communication
is enhanced by tension. The reading wouldn't have been so compelling
if the notes opened "Hi Pat - I'm sorry to say - but I dissagree with
you" and "Derek - You are entitled to your own opinion and I respect
you for that, but..."
Steve
|
787.94 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Thu Feb 17 1994 10:26 | 9 |
|
How true!
How wonderfully true!
How wonderfully , bubblingly , frothingly , burstingly true!
What a truly ecstasy inducingly correct observation!
|
787.95 | Down with drug dealers etc. | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Thu Feb 17 1994 10:33 | 48 |
|
RE: -.2
Hi Wayne:
If I were you, I would worry alot about smuggled guns. Both
the UK and Canada have violent crime rate *increases* over the past
10 years that outstrip the US. With the fall of the iron curtain,
there is a stream of cheap available arms flowing all over Europe,
and plenty of political tension to boot, not to mention the
ever present drug trade.
Correct me if I am wrong, but haven't there been some shootings
of your unarmed bobbies recently, with the proposal that they consider
carrying sidearms? My family has a long history of military men
and police officers. My uncle is a former RCMP officer who was shot
in the stomach with a shotgun for standing between a drug dealer and
his money. Fortunately he lived to tell the tale, and believe me they
would raise your hair. I propose that we use our recombinant DNA
technology to produce drugs so cheaply that it runs all illegal drug
dealers out of business. The junkies can register for treatment
through our most excellent health system, and get treated for the
problem, (instead of breaking into your house and mine to support
the artificially high prices the dealers demand). Some won't make it,
tough. We'd have a safer environment all around, and more of those
silly expensive to enforce feel good laws could be dropped from the books
forever. Put that in your social engineering pipes and smoke it.8*)
Seems to me it would be relatively easy to fill a boat with
illegal items and make a run across the channel.
Anyway, the Brits are generally well behaved with their firearms,
and certain segments of the shooting sports are very healthy over
there, especially skeet shooting and sporting clays. Too bad nobody
could find a way to stop the idiot with the AK47 who shot up that small
town (something-borough). I'm sure the majority of criminals over there
are more polite.
Re Brian V.
To stop smuggling as we know it to be today, in Canada, would
require armed occupation of Indian reserves along the Canada US border.
Recalling OKA, the Federal government realizes this is political
suicide. I for one, would not want to see another Waco in Canada. It
would force me to reconsider my views. 8*)
Surely there are some more readers out there who are chess players, and
remember their last game as well as how to think 2 or 3 moves ahead???
Pat
The Feds are using their leetle grey cells....
|
787.96 | heeeeeyyyyy - nice Adverbs! | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Thu Feb 17 1994 10:44 | 7 |
| re: .94
Glenn,
Thanks for all the adverbs and adjectives. I'll add 'em to my list.
Steve
|
787.97 | Cop shooting not an everyday occurance ! | CURRNT::ROWELL | For 25 dollars, and pieces of silver | Thu Feb 17 1994 10:51 | 22 |
| Pat,
The small town that the guy shot up was Hungerford, about 10 miles
up the road from this office (Newbury).
However, we are talking a LONG time ago. How many similar incidents
have occured in the states ( what about just one city in the states ?)
since then.
Yes, we are having a lot of trouble at the moment, but I do not feel
that I need to get myself a gun, nor do I feel the need to be allowed
to get myself a gun. Perhaps, when the level of crime, and shooting
incidents have reached a certain level, my views will change. At this
moment, I feel safer in my house than I do driving my 42 mile round
trip to work.
Regards,
Wayne.
(BTW, my earlier note should have been addressed to Pat and refered to
Pat's views.)
|
787.98 | | R2ME2::HINXMAN | In the range of strange | Thu Feb 17 1994 11:30 | 19 |
| re .97
> Cop shooting not an everyday occurance !
However, ambulance crews in Manchester have been issued bullet-proof
vests.
re .96
> would raise your hair. I propose that we use our recombinant DNA
> technology to produce drugs so cheaply that it runs all illegal drug
> dealers out of business. The junkies can register for treatment
What are you wittering on about? Most of these drugs are like IBM
computers. Cheap to produce but supplied to the customer with a
massive mark-up. Legalization by itself should bring shipping and
handling charges down to something reasonable.
Tony
|
787.99 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Thu Feb 17 1994 11:36 | 18 |
| Pat,
If you need to blockade the reserves to enforce the law then
it should be done. Native rights need to be settled in this country
and that wont be done until the feds hand is forced. (just like Q.)
Turning a blind eye to the problem will only lead to more of
the same. How much is a carton in Q. now ??? $30. I can get a
carton delivered to my house in Ont. for $20 and I'm 1.5 hours
away from the closest bourder. Oh and by the way I can can get
discount booze from the same source on the same delivery run.
Cig's are just the tip of the iceberg...if they fed's don't
squash this they'll find that out the hard way.
Brian V
|
787.100 | But.... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Thu Feb 17 1994 12:16 | 23 |
|
Hi Brian:
I sense in what you are saying that violence(or force, which
could very well lead to violence) is the solution to this problem. I
smell hipocrisy in the air. Remember Chatauguay? I submit that the
Indian population is fully capable of blockades of their own, and
are organised and ready to act. I found the images on TV of white
people throwing bricks and stones at the Indians cars absolutely
sickening.
If you can get cigarettes delivered for $20/carton, then they
should be available at the cornerstore for $18. Destroying the
competition is the name of the game, as we at DEC are finding in the
PC space, and as the consumer electronics industry was targeted by
the Japanese.
Re: Tony, of course you are right about the production cost of
conventional drugs. I was thinking about ultra pure designer drugs etc,
that could (?) be made and distributed, and may be easier to treat for
addiction. I passed organic chemistry class strictly on memory, not
understanding, so I'll not speculate further.
Pat
|
787.101 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Thu Feb 17 1994 12:55 | 5 |
|
Hey Wayne,
Didn't the outlaw carrying concealed bombs over there, or was
that only on busy urban streets?
|
787.102 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Thu Feb 17 1994 13:01 | 7 |
| Good one KAOFS::M_COTE !
Have a great day everyone!
Happy Happy! Joy Joy!
Glenn
|
787.103 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Thu Feb 17 1994 13:16 | 23 |
| Pat,
What am I saying that is contradictory ? I agree that the Indian
population is fully capable of blockades, and indeed violence; as
they have prooved time and again. But their rights and the limitation
of those rights need to be settled. In my opinion the government needs
to take a 2 pronged approach with native peoples. 1 enforce the law
equally for all Canadians and 2 spell out native rights in the
constitution. The problem is politicians are jelly-fish more
concerned with getting re-elected than in doing what's right.
Tough constitional decisions need to be made in this country if we
are ever going to make any real progress.
You can not compete on price no matter how low you cut the taxes.
All you can do this way is reduce the incentives. All the government
is doing is shifting the tax burden from cig users to all tax payers.
This lost revenue will be made up somewhere else, the finance
minister has already said that next weeks budget will be tough.
How much more are you willing to pay in taxes because government
doesn't have what it takes to face the problem.
Brian V
|
787.104 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Thu Feb 17 1994 13:18 | 14 |
| seen on a bumper sticker in COlorado Springs ...
Criminals prefer unarmed victims
My reaction
Victims prefer unarmed criminals
The solution is in achieving the latter, rather than obvious intent of
the first (arm potential victims).
Stuart
|
787.105 | | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Thu Feb 17 1994 13:40 | 5 |
| CURRNT::ROWELL
Shouldn't that have been a cricket bat you keep handy ??
Derek
|
787.106 | Ask a question and take off... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Thu Feb 17 1994 14:04 | 5 |
|
Have we set a new record here with more than 100 replies in X days?
Where the heck is that basenoter anyway?
Pat
|
787.107 | Another idea... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Thu Feb 17 1994 14:26 | 21 |
|
Brian, your say that all the government is doing is shifting the
tax burden onto everyone. I submit that you can't make the screen
against smuggling cigarettes fine enough (read that cheaply enough, in
both economic and political cost) to force the customers to pay that
tax, using the outdated methods that history has proven ineffective.
You want to raise taxes fairly? Tax food. Everybody's gotta eat, even
the rich. Not too many people can go without it for very long.
You would expend too much energy to get it if you had to go far to
get it. It would reduce urban congestion as people wanted a little
square of land to grow their lettuce. Apartment dwellers could get
a little fresh air out on the rented city plots. Fibre consumption
would go up, certain types of cancer would be reduced. Fat people
would get slimmer, bulemics would think twice about the old binge
and purge. What a healthy happy place this would be! Cows could run
around...wait...maybe rustling would increase. Uh Oh...major flaw.
I tried...
Pat
|
787.108 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Thu Feb 17 1994 14:40 | 11 |
|
Hey English_Accent_Guy::S_Brook
? Criminals prefer unarmed victims
? Victims prefer unarmed criminals
With all these people walking around without arms, Chickens can
start ordering Hot Human Arms at any greasy spoons.
|
787.109 | oh where oh where has the basenoter gone... | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Thu Feb 17 1994 14:49 | 9 |
| re: .106
>>> Where the heck is that basenoter anyway?
I am concerned with the disappearance of Alan "basenoter" Atkinson.
I sent him some VAXmail asking him to check out what happened to his
topic. Perhaps, after a detailed review, he'll have some comments
and -heck- maybe even still another opposing view.
|
787.110 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Thu Feb 17 1994 14:56 | 6 |
| I'm just soo darned excited about this discussion that I really do think
that I will truly burst!
Have a fantabulous day everyone!!
Glenn
|
787.111 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Thu Feb 17 1994 15:18 | 8 |
| From a man beside himself, that's pretty good!
I bet there wouldn't be that confusion in French between being
Unarmed (as in no additional weapon) and Unarmed (as in having no arms)!
Stuart (an English as in UK English sounding guy ... Befo' long tho I'll
be talkin' 'mercan ... so be carful in yo' description dere bo-uh'!)
|
787.112 | He's tied up right now... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Thu Feb 17 1994 15:32 | 14 |
|
No, in French it would be spelled "unharmed" and pronounced "un-armed".
This works as
"Victims prefer unharmed victims" and
"Criminals prefer unharmed criminals".
GVA05 is in Geneva, and the Swiss have arms in almost every home. I'll
bet he didn't have his, being the professional Canadian victim, and
is at this very moment fending off his attackers.
Pat
|
787.113 | dialect | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Thu Feb 17 1994 15:36 | 9 |
|
>>> ... Befo' long tho I'll be talkin' 'mercan ... so be carful in yo'
>>> description dere bo-uh'!)
Yo - Dat's how we 'mercan's talk... eh hoser?
've
|
787.114 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Thu Feb 17 1994 15:50 | 5 |
| It's all depen on wayuh y'awl cuhm frum don' it ?
:-)
Stuart (who enjoys talking dialects for fun!)
|
787.115 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Thu Feb 17 1994 15:51 | 6 |
| PS Whatever else I might be, a hoser I am not!
(To the person who said I was nothing but a dumb programmer ...
Look ... I might be dumb, but I'm NOT a programmer!)
|
787.116 | apostrophe | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Thu Feb 17 1994 16:08 | 9 |
| >>> It's all depen on wayuh y'awl cuhm frum don' it ?
We're thinking of changing the national bird from the Bald Eagle
to the apostrophe.
Steve
(why does a nation need a national bird anyway)
|
787.117 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Thu Feb 17 1994 16:13 | 5 |
| | (why does a nation need a national bird anyway)
Because everyone and their cat is having one.
Glenn
|
787.118 | And "beaver" has too many meanings... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Thu Feb 17 1994 16:26 | 5 |
|
Personally, I'd prefer a bird over a rodent with an overgrown tail
and a huge overbite.
Pat
|
787.119 | rhodentially speaking... | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Thu Feb 17 1994 17:26 | 9 |
| yah... leave it to beaver :-)
Stuart - sorry I called you a hoser. That, coupled with 'Eh is the
only Canadian dialect I know. What is a "hoser" anyway. Never really
knew the definition...
Steve
|
787.120 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Thu Feb 17 1994 17:40 | 12 |
|
* GVA05 is in Geneva, and the Swiss have arms in almost every home. I'll
* bet he didn't have his, being the professional Canadian victim, and
* is at this very moment fending off his attackers.
I thought the Swiss army used those, um, Gouda Army Knives. If you
look carefully, the Canadian Victim is there, but sometimes you
break your fingernail trying to prior the sucker out. When will our
army have these tools?
|
787.121 | tweezers and a plastic toothpick and | REFDV1::MURPHY | Fun times when you're havin' flies | Thu Feb 17 1994 17:49 | 2 |
| the corkscrew comes in soooo handy...
|
787.122 | | CURRNT::ROWELL | For 25 dollars, and pieces of silver | Fri Feb 18 1994 05:05 | 10 |
| M_COTE - I don't care what you say, but there is NO way that I am gonna
carry a concealed bomb in case I get accosted by thugs who
have their own concealed bombs ! ;)
D_STREET - Cricket Bats ? With the way the English play ? ;)
Nah, I used to play Baseball here a few years back, so I
have a Baseball Bat.
CURRNT::ROWELL
|
787.123 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Fri Feb 18 1994 12:08 | 19 |
| Pat,
Taxing food would tax everyone equally as everyone eats close
to the same amount. The way our tax system is suppose to work is to
tax people in proportion to their ability to pay (income).
The garden senario mentioned is another example of how those
people that have greater financial freedom would be able to avoid
even more taxes.
Brian V
I guess I'm just old fashioned ... thinking that the police should
try to catch criminals.
Tell you what Pat. Try not paying your income tax and see what
happens.
|
787.124 | Just give me a howitzer | KAFS31::LACAILLE | Half-filled bottles of inspiration | Fri Feb 18 1994 12:39 | 6 |
|
If Canada has a national bird, then why not too the 'mericans.
Feeling a-loon,
Sike O'Path
|
787.125 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Feb 18 1994 13:53 | 13 |
| Well, if the government started taxing food, and people were resorting
to growing things in gardens to eat tax free, the government would
impose a garden tax of some sort. A garden permit if you will. And,
those who would try to grow food indoors hydroponically would have to
have a hydroponics license.
So what will you do then eh?
Well, you could stand and scream for help.
Right! Try that with a pineapple down your windpipe!
Glenn
|
787.126 | Johnny Sixpack rides again... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 18 1994 15:54 | 30 |
|
Well, Brian, I hate to nitpick, but if I were rich, the amount of
food I ate may be the same as a poor man, but the composition thereof
would be quite different. Shrimp and New York cuts would replace
the Kraft dinner on my plate. The truly destitute would continue to
obtain their food through our excellent system of food banks. It costs
me about $500/mo to feed my family of 4. Let's say we are taxed at the
rate of 2% (political suicide is likely at higher levels than that.)
This works out to about $30 per person per year, a total of almost
billion dollars per year assuming inelastic demand and every Canadian
paying his share. Sounds like a cash cow to me.
As you know, our taxes are deducted at source for those of us who
still have the status symbol of the '90s, a job. As such, they are
unavoidable. I think the experts have grossly underestimated the
extent of the underground economy, however, and like smuggling, it
is impossible to implement a system with fine enough resolution to
catch everything and everybody, even with a building full of Alpha
AXP's. As Derek puts it, there is still Johnny Sixpack out there.
And I say that Johnny Sixpack collects his UI, and also works 60
hour weeks drywalling for cash. And the chances of us catching him are
slim. If we do catch him, he doesn't keep bank accounts, and his
physical assets will be protected by the personal bankruptcy laws of
this country. And...he gets his food at the food bank on the way home
from the last rec room he drywalled for cash. These are the "job
smugglers" that make all our other problems pale in comparison.
Talk about the government turning a blind eye...
Pat
|
787.127 | That's ***IF*** they catch you. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Feb 18 1994 15:58 | 9 |
| Pat:
The one guy I know who got caught working while on UIC had to pay
back every cent.
Taxing food is a joke. (or at least I hope you meant it that way)
Derek.
|
787.128 | Go home Derek, it's quitting time. | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Feb 18 1994 16:05 | 15 |
|
Derek, I used to think it was a joke, until that notorious provincial
budget a few years ago. If I wasn't so taxed to death, I'd bet money
on the appearance of new food taxes.
I like a good joke, especially political ones.
Until they get elected that is. 8*(
Pat (Who was offered two different prices on his engine work recently
one with receipt, one without)
I got a receipt. 8*(
Pat
|
787.129 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Mon Feb 21 1994 07:54 | 15 |
| Your right Pat ... they can never catch all of the underground
economy; but I think it their responsibility to
try. If Joe average becomes really worried about
getting caught he wont try.
As to the likelyhood of a food tax...I don't think
that the feds would try it but Bob sure would.
Brian V
Ps. my brother-in-law just got a good deal on a Bronco $ 500....
but had to pay tax on the fair market value $ 3000
This Bites !
|
787.130 | More fuel for the fire... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Feb 21 1994 09:53 | 23 |
|
Brian:
Did you read Brown's beat in the Citizen on the weekend? Or the
article about the cigarette smuggling welfare lady who was caught
with $10000 worth of cigs? Seems she got a $2200 fine and a year to
pay. Lawyer got her off by playing on her "deprived childhood" and
the jury believed her story about "holding the cigs" for a third party
who was not named. It's a shame that our tax money goes in one hand
and out the other like that.
She was described as a "nuisance to the court". Made me nauseous. This
is our justice system?
Pat (If I had the time I would type in the Brown' beat article on the
crooks winning at "Cops and Robbers". Seems the Ottawa police
can't keep up with the business robberies, and businesses are
having to fold because insurance rates are going through the
roof. A police spokesman says he wasn't "aware there was a
problem", but would consider the proposal for stepped up patrols.
One businessman even had his security cameras stolen!!!. 911
response time was about 20-30 minutes, a lifetime under those
conditions, no pun intended. The police just hand out occurence
numbers....)
|
787.131 | | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Mon Feb 21 1994 12:27 | 21 |
| Interesting how we got into gun control from smugglin. BTW I am in
favor of gun control, I don't think there is any rational use for a
firearm unless you are a hunter with apermit to hunt, handguns are NOT
for hunting, nor are automatic weapons (the only good scene of the film
"A Distinguished Gentleman" with Eddie Murphy was that of the duck
hunting with members of the NRA, that was VERY United Stater). Of
course if you do own a Harley Davidson, you do need weapons, all the
ones you can legally or illegally get, and don't worry about you wife
or your children, what they want is that HD, nothing else.
Jean
PS with less tax money coming in, we should expect less services from
the governement yet none of the politicians had the nerve to say so
(you want to pay less taxes, you get less services) It's the same as
going to McDonald's vs Les Halles� you get a meal at both these
restaurants, but you have to take out the trash at McDs.
� Les Halles is a very nice restaurant here in Montr�al, a meal could
cost upwards of $150 with wine and service for two.
|
787.132 | Bunch of Well wishers | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Mon Feb 21 1994 12:50 | 11 |
|
I don't understand this talk, "Government losing money..." stuff,
like the smokers of this country are to pay the way for the non-smokers
sorry @sses. The tax was just a easy target for the moralist government
in the first place. Sin tax indeed. If smoking is costing the Canadian
government for medical needs, then the Sin tax money should have been
transferred directly to the hospitals, not to line the pockets of our
do-gooder governments.
|
787.133 | It's all related | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Feb 21 1994 13:04 | 26 |
|
Of course, Miriam Bedard had no rational use for her firearm in
acheiving her gold medal at Lillehammer.
Eddie Murphy movies are to be taken with a grain of salt, although
I did enjoy the scene where he was hanging from the door of a
semi-trailer loaded with cigarettes. I wonder if they were bound for
Canada?
BTW, the final tallies are not yet in, but the interim bill for
implementation of Cambell's feel-good C17 is in the range of
100 million dollars for the first year. This does not reflect the
cost to gun owners for locks etc. and the cost to modify all those
evil firearms to comply. It costs $80 to process every FAC application,
and the fee is $50 to the applicant. But hey, Canadians will pay
any price to feel safe and insured. Kind of like putting a new roof
on the house instead of setting up sandbags when the river is flooding.
And, like the Ottawa businesses who are forced out by criminals, I
may be forced to sell an excellent motorcycle because the insurance
rates are too much to bear. We have had two vehicles stolen right
out of the parking lot here at KAO in the last 2 weeks in broad
daylight. Our contract security is stepping up patrols. Are we having
fun yet? I won't even consider parking my bike in Montreal....
Pat
|
787.134 | If we all had guns, we would win more medals !!! | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Mon Feb 21 1994 17:19 | 8 |
| Pat:
I can't see why I missed it for so long. Buy a competition rifle and
maybe you could pick off that car thief in the parking lot. Guns *ARE*
the answer. I have seen the light, and it is the muzzel flash from a
sport rifle.
Derek.
|
787.135 | Welcome to the dark side, Derek | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Tue Feb 22 1994 08:51 | 11 |
|
Actually, Derek, what you write in your title string is absolutely
correct. Increase the sample of population participating in any
activity, and you statistically improve your chances of having a
gold medal in that sport, since you might just get that special someone
with the right genetic makeup and mental fortitude to excel at that
particular activity.
Glad you have seen the light...
Pat
|
787.136 | | SIOG::EGRI | | Fri Mar 04 1994 06:23 | 108 |
| I read this in the Irsih Times via the New York times service.
Gun-lust spatters the blood of children on the star-spangled banner.
In 1992, handguns were used in the murder of 33 people in Britain, 36
in Sweden, 97 in Switzerland, 128 in Canada, 13 in Australia, 60 in
Japan and 13,220 in the U.S.A.
Tnhose are the latest annual statistics available. They were released
this week by Handgun Control Inc., and the Centre to Prevent Handgun
Violence.
Here is some other informamtion about guns and violence in America
(USA).
In 1991 - just one year - 38,317 people were killed by firearms in
homicides, suicides and accidents. That's more than 100 people a day.
It's also more than the total number of Americans killed in the Korean
War.
A new handgun is produce every 20 seconds.
Every year more than 24,000 Americans are killed with handguns.
An average of 14 children and teenagers are killed with guns each day.
In 1991, 18,526 Americans committed suicide with a firearm.
A child or teenager commits suicide with a gun very 6 hours.
92% of the people who commit suicide with a gun succeed.
President Clinton speaking in Chicago last Monday, said: "At the Cook
County Hospital trauma unit, from 1987 to 1992, the number of
admissions for gunshot wounds increased from 449 to 1.220 and accounted
for over 70% of the overall increase in admissions. That is a stunning
fact. And all across Illinois, 1992 was the first year in this state
where more people were killed by handguns than by auto accidents."
Dr. Mindy Statter, a paediatric surgeon at the University of Chicago
Medical Centre, told the President she had treated "a chold as young as
1 month of age who received a single gunshot wound and died in the
operating room."
She added: "With children - and we're seeing children being struck at
close range in classrooms - a simple gunshot wound can do significant
damage and damage multiple organ systems in the body. It doesn't take a
multiple gunshot wound to kill a child."
Another surgeon told Mr. Clinton that last Saturday morning, when he
came fome from work, his 6 year old son asked "Daddy what'd you do last
night?" The doctor said, " I had to tell him I was there sewing the
whole in the heart of a boy who was shot in the back multiple times in
school."
On Tuesday, a 9 year old boy who was out walking his dog on Hartford,
Conn. came home with a loaded Mac-11 submacine gun. "look what I have
," he said to his stunned father. He found the gun lying next to a
snowbank just a block from the local high school.
50% of the children who are shot accidentally are shot on their own
homes, 38% in the homes of friends or relatives.
An estimated 1.2 million latchkey kids of elementary-school age have
access to guns in their homes.
The leading cause of death for both black and white teenage boys is
gunshot wounds./
Firearms kill more people between the ages of 15 and 24 than all
natural causes combined.
Rosella Gambini (17) was murdered in Miami last month while on adate
with her boyfriend. They were travelling in his van when an angry
motorist on the passenger side of the vehicle opened fir with a 9 mm.
semi-automatic pistol.
From 1985 to 1989 gun production int hte U.S. increased by 42%.
In Bushnell, FLorida, a first-grader took a loaded handgun to school
and threatened his teacher with it.
More than 1,000 people were shot to death at work in 1992.
In 1993, 72 police officers were shot to death.
Last week, a Los Angeles police officer, Christy Lynn Hamilton, was
shot to death by a teenager with an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle. Officer
Hamilton died just 4 days after her Police Academy graduation
exercises. The boy who killed her, Chris Golly, also killed his father
and himself.
By 2003, if trends continue, the number of Americans killed by handguns
each year will be greater than the number killed in automobile
accidents.
The Bardy Law, requiring a 5 day waiting period and background checks
for handgun buyers, took effect on Monday.
It won't be enough.
How do defend all that Mr. Robinson?
Ted
|
787.137 | It's their RIGHT to kill each other. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 08:31 | 5 |
| SIOG::EGRI
It is amazing we can keep it at bay.
Derek.
|
787.138 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Mar 04 1994 08:43 | 1 |
| As long as it doesn't end up at Eaton's.
|
787.139 | | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Fri Mar 04 1994 11:04 | 6 |
| The US police and the Mounties teamed up to arrest 3 whites and one
mohawk smuggling weapons in Canada. Many of these weapons were used in
armed robberies and murder cases.
Jean
|
787.140 | PC reply...NOT! | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Mar 04 1994 12:27 | 37 |
|
RE: Jean- Glad to hear that the mounties are doing the right thing
with illegal gun smugglers, but do we really know if that i just the
tip of the iceberg?
I have a feeling some more stuff is going to hit the fan. A mountie
friend of mine, who was a SERT (SWAT) team member before it was
disbanded, has returned to Ottawa for refresher courses. He is
currently posted to a rural Canadian area as head of traffic
enforcement. What's he taking a course in, you ask? Machine gun
operation and moving target practice. I guess they have a real speeding
problem where he is posted. The range is in Dwyer Hill, BTW. He
doen't think his handgun is useless, either.
RE: Ted
You don't really expect me to defend the HCI's emotional anecdotal
unscientific numbers do you? Or analyse the complex social differences
that exist below and above the 49th? I'll send you some "pamplet
research " taken from Canadian statistics, offline, rather than clutter
this topic with acedemic references. I wonder how may of those
incedents occurred in areas where gun ban laws are in effect.
The US already has plenty of gun laws, Brady is the first national
law. I just find it strange that the areas of the US that have very
strict gun laws also have shocking crime statistics. If these gun laws
really work, like their proponents claim they do, then the only
reasonable assumption is that the laws are not enforced, or are
unenforceable.
The context of my replies is always "why are we spending our
resources (tax dollars) uselessly." When Jean writes of arrest
of gun smugglers, I cheer. When I see good capable policemen inspecting
homes of law abiding citizens, I see a criminal running free.
Re:Derek , is that the "royal we" or the "social engineer we"? Just
so I know who's working on the problem.
Pat
|
787.142 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 12:39 | 11 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.140 by POLAR::ROBINSONP "EVO Inside" >>>
>> The US already has plenty of gun laws, Brady is the first national
>> law.
Brady is the fourth major federal law that has passed. The first was in 1934,
another in 1968, one in 1986 and now Brady in 1993.
At the state, county and city level the US has over 20,000 gun laws.
Roak
|
787.143 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 12:44 | 222 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.136 by SIOG::EGRI >>>
>> In 1992, handguns were used in the murder of 33 people in Britain, 36
>> in Sweden, 97 in Switzerland, 128 in Canada, 13 in Australia, 60 in
>> Japan and 13,220 in the U.S.A.
Per capita firearm ownership is higher in Switzerland than the US, so there
must be some other variable at work than guns.
>> In 1991 - just one year - 38,317 people were killed by firearms in
>> homicides, suicides and accidents. That's more than 100 people a day.
Homicide and suicide is already illegal. Is the solution to pass *more* laws?
Seems the existing ones are already being ignored.
This 38,000+ deaths also includes police intervention. Do you suggest that
police be disarmed too in order to reduce that number?
As for accidents, they amount to about 1200 deaths a year. That actually makes
firearms rather safe, especially when the accidental deaths from cars run in the
hundreds of thousands.
>> A new handgun is produce every 20 seconds.
Interesting stat. If we take the number of handguns produced in one year,
(1576800 using the 1 every 20 second stat) and we completely ignore all the
handguns that are already in circulation, and we compare that to the 38,000+
deaths that you entered above, that ((1 - (38,317/1576800)) * 100) = 97.6% of
firearms are NOT used to kill someone, and that's only counting one year's
production! Making a *very* conservative estimate of the total number of
handguns being 20 times that (not a stretch assuming that they've been produced
for over 90 years, and they very rarely wear out) we have 99.9% of handguns
not being used for killing people. Rather odd that people are against some
item with a 99.9% safety record; I wish cars were that safe...
>> Every year more than 24,000 Americans are killed with handguns.
Given the 38,000+ number above this is reiteration. Violent American criminals
being killed by police would be included in this number, again, do you wish to
disarm the police in order to reduce the number?
>> An average of 14 children and teenagers are killed with guns each day.
We still don't have police intervention broken out of this statistic.
>> In 1991, 18,526 Americans committed suicide with a firearm.
The suicide rate in Japan is several times that of the United States, and they
don't use firearms. So what's this stat supposed to be saying?
>> A child or teenager commits suicide with a gun very 6 hours.
See reference to Japan above. More reiteration.
>> 92% of the people who commit suicide with a gun succeed.
And even more succeed in Japan without guns.
>> And all across Illinois, 1992 was the first year in this state
>> where more people were killed by handguns than by auto accidents."
Apples-and-oranges comparison. You're comparing car ACCIDENTS to deliberate
criminal misuse of an inanimate object. If you compare car accidents only to
firearms accidents, you'd be much more interested in banning cars.
>> Dr. Mindy Statter, a paediatric surgeon at the University of Chicago
>> Medical Centre, told the President she had treated "a chold as young as
>> 1 month of age who received a single gunshot wound and died in the
>> operating room."
I wonder how many children of that age she's seen die from car accidents?
Parental neglect? Crack babies? As terrible as even one death is, to have only
one does not a statistical argument make.
>> She added: "With children - and we're seeing children being struck at
>> close range in classrooms - a simple gunshot wound can do significant
>> damage and damage multiple organ systems in the body. It doesn't take a
>> multiple gunshot wound to kill a child."
Shooting someone is already illegal. Is the solution to pass *more* laws?
Seems the existing ones are already being ignored.
>> Another surgeon told Mr. Clinton that last Saturday morning, when he
>> came fome from work, his 6 year old son asked "Daddy what'd you do last
>> night?" The doctor said, " I had to tell him I was there sewing the
>> whole in the heart of a boy who was shot in the back multiple times in
>> school."
Shooting someone is already illegal. Is the solution to pass *more* laws?
Seems the existing ones are already being ignored.
>> On Tuesday, a 9 year old boy who was out walking his dog on Hartford,
>> Conn. came home with a loaded Mac-11 submacine gun. "look what I have
>> ," he said to his stunned father. He found the gun lying next to a
>> snowbank just a block from the local high school.
If it was a machine gun, this is in violation of state *and* federal laws. Is
the solution to pass *more* laws? Seems the existing ones are already being
ignored.
>> 50% of the children who are shot accidentally are shot on their own
>> homes, 38% in the homes of friends or relatives.
Even more die from accidental poisoning, like getting into the drain cleaner
or bleach under the sink, so which is more of a threat?
>> An estimated 1.2 million latchkey kids of elementary-school age have
>> access to guns in their homes.
They also have access to the drain cleaner and bleach under the sink, and even
more die from drinking them. If you really want to save the maximum number of
lives, concentrate on what's causing the most deaths. If you simply hate guns,
and saving of lives isn't a real concern, then go ahead and go after the guns.
>> The leading cause of death for both black and white teenage boys is
>> gunshot wounds./
"leading cause" is a bit misleading... If you're young, you're typically
healthy, and when you're healthy there's isn't much you die from. So even a
very small number of deaths by firearms would make it "the leading cause of
death" for such a carefully crafted statistical sample. And anyway, killing
someone is already illegal. Is the solution to pass *more* laws? Seems the
existing ones are already being ignored.
>> Firearms kill more people between the ages of 15 and 24 than all
>> natural causes combined.
Exactly the same carefully crafted statistical sample as above. Again, shooting
someone is already illegal. Is the solution to pass *more* laws? Seems the
existing ones are already being ignored.
>> Rosella Gambini (17) was murdered in Miami last month while on adate
>> with her boyfriend. They were travelling in his van when an angry
>> motorist on the passenger side of the vehicle opened fir with a 9 mm.
>> semi-automatic pistol.
A sample of one. Should we base far-reaching laws on samples of one? Besides,
shooting someone is already illegal. Is the solution to pass *more* laws? Seems
the existing ones are already being ignored.
>> From 1985 to 1989 gun production int hte U.S. increased by 42%.
Without an identical increase in firearm deaths, and in fact a *decrease* in the
number of accidents. Seems that firearms aren't as tightly coupled to crime and
death as Handgun Control Inc. would like you to believe.
>> In Bushnell, FLorida, a first-grader took a loaded handgun to school
>> and threatened his teacher with it.
Threatening someone with deadly force is already illegal. Is the solution to
pass *more* laws? Seems the existing ones are already being ignored.
>> More than 1,000 people were shot to death at work in 1992.
Assuming people in a 8 hour day at work, five days a week, they're in work for
(40/(7*24)*100) = 24% of the time, using the 38,317 deaths in 1991 (wrong year,
but let's assume it's close enough), that means that 3% of the deaths happen
where a typical person spends 24% of their time. Statistically a pretty safe
place to be.
>> In 1993, 72 police officers were shot to death.
Many by their own guns. Do you propose we disarm the police to reduce this
number? Killing a police office is even more severely punished than killing a
civilian. Is the solution to pass *more* laws? Seems the existing ones are
already being ignored.
>> Last week, a Los Angeles police officer, Christy Lynn Hamilton, was
>> shot to death by a teenager with an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle. Officer
>> Hamilton died just 4 days after her Police Academy graduation
>> exercises. The boy who killed her, Chris Golly, also killed his father
>> and himself.
Again, a sample of one. And gain, killing a police office is even more severely
punished than killing a civilian. Is the solution to pass *more* laws? Seems
the existing ones are already being ignored, and in this case the person was
even willing to take their own life. How to you make someone obey laws when
they're willing to take their own life? Even the death penality has no meaning
to them!
>> By 2003, if trends continue, the number of Americans killed by handguns
>> each year will be greater than the number killed in automobile
>> accidents.
Again an apples-and-oranges comparison of accidents to deliberate criminal
misuse.
>> The Bardy Law, requiring a 5 day waiting period and background checks
>> for handgun buyers, took effect on Monday.
>> It won't be enough.
The above three lines were in an HCI brochure? But HCI lobbied *HARD* for
the Brady Bill, saying that it *would* cut crime. And now they even admit that
they lied!
*******************************************************************************
Note that this brochure said nothing about the crime that the ownership of
firearms *prevents*. An analogy to this brochure would be a brochure that only
described all the deaths caused by *wearing* seatbelts -- people burning to
their deaths in cars because they were unable to get out of their seatbelts,
people drowning when they were unable to get out of their seatbelts when their
car went into a body of water, etc.
If all I heard about were the *deaths* caused by seatbelts, I'd be all for
banning of seatbelts too.
But you know that seatbelts save more lives than they take, and in the US that's
true for firearms too. Two and a half *million* crimes are prevented by
civilians lawfully using firearms. The vast, vast majority of them don't even
require a shot being fired -- the criminal is scared off. And because no shots
were fired, it's not "newsworthy" so you never hear about it.
Make no mistake, every death is a tragedy, and I was *not* making light of the
deaths related in the HCI brochure, but by restricting or banning firearms in
the US you'll actually cause *more* deaths, just like if you banned seatbelts.
The laws only effect the law abiding, the criminals will continue to ignore the
laws. After all, that's why we call them "criminals."
Roak
|
787.144 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Mar 04 1994 12:53 | 6 |
| Now If have a big lump in my throat and my eyes are welling up with
tears.
Sniff.
Glenn
|
787.145 | Explaination requested. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 13:01 | 29 |
| PEAKS::OAKEY
Any comparison between gun control laws in the States and Canada is
designed to make gun control laws look ineffective. Take a place like
New York City, has gun control laws, and lots of violence. Does anyone
honestly think that saying "no more guns" after millions have been
distributed would have an effect ? Those that want them either 1) already
have them, 2) can go get one with little difficulty. Where as in Canada,
if you want one to "protect" yourself, you stand little chance of getting
one. Ineffective gun control can always be used to make the concept look
bad.
Canada has strick gun control, and far less violent crime than the States.
If not gun control, what explains the difference in violent crime rates ?
Canadians are just nicer people ?
Americans have a blood lust ?
Poverty ?
Racisim ?
Please feel free to explain the difference. Most gun control people say
it is part of the reason. Since you feel this not to be true, you must have
an explaination that fits the facts.
Derek
PS Guns don't kill people, people do. So don't give people guns.
|
787.146 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 13:16 | 65 |
| Roak,
You are right, there is more to the problem than the number of guns in
circulation ... The very fact that the Swiss per-capita have more
guns than Americans says that ... The Swiss have guns for predominantly
militia purposes ... ie protecting their COUNTRY and not for protecting
their own person.
You are also right that laws as they stand now in the USA are not the
answer ... The existing laws are unenforceable because of the sheer number
of weapons in circulation.
One person shot by someone with a gun, whether killed or maimed, by accident
is one accident too many. One child playing with a real gun is an accident
waiting to happen. This is NOT the illegal use of firearms ... this is
the careless use of firearms. How do you eliminate the careless use of
firearms ?
You talk at great length about the criminal use of firearms ... That firearms
save lives. I saw a bumper sticker in the CXO3 car park the other day
"Criminals prefer unarmed victims". My reaction is simple "Victims prefer
unarmed criminals". How do you reduce the amount of armed crime ? It seems
to me that the best way is to reduce the number of firearms in circulation.
I know full well that producing statistics to show that crime with injury
and death in countries where the general public does not have easy access
to handguns is significantly lower than in the USA does not reinforce
the gun control argument in your eyes.
I know full well that in the present climate where guns are in such free
circulation amongst criminals, that to reduce the armed general public
may not be the best course of action, but it is a start towards limiting
the number of weapons in circulation.
Many weapons, legally acquired, are used illegally ... The numbers are not
large in comparison with the illegal use of illegally acquired firearms,
but they are still significant, and people are being killed and maimed
because someone who legally has a weapon goes off their rocker and takes
out their anger on someone with the weapon. But the fact remains, people
are getting injured and maimed ... and if one innocent person is killed
in this manner, that is one person too many.
Another factor to consider in this discussion is that in many jurisdictions,
the claim of self defence has a limitation on the amount of force a person
could reasonably be expected to use when he is threatened. (for example,
Vern Smalley, here in Colorado Springs, could not have used the self-defence
argument when Carmen Tagliere attacked him with his fists and Smalley shot
him, in many countries.) This applies even to police.
So the arguments for gun control are an attempt to reduce the guns in
circulation. Generally, they are ineffective in the US because of the
number of illegally acquired guns, and the total number of guns in circulation.
But the argument is that you must start somewhere. If there was an effective
way of limiting the number of guns illegally in circulation, then this would
be effective, but the question is HOW ?
What I see from the pro-gun camp is any mechanism for reducing accidents
from the careless use of firearms, any mechanism for reducing the number of
arms in the hands of criminals. Gun controls in the US have so far had
mixed results. Let's see some strong plans for making the streets altogether
safer.
Stuart
|
787.147 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 13:31 | 36 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.145 by KAOFS::D_STREET >>>
>> Canada has strick gun control, and far less violent crime than the States.
>> If not gun control, what explains the difference in violent crime rates ?
>> Canadians are just nicer people ?
>> Americans have a blood lust ?
>> Poverty ?
>> Racisim ?
3 & 4 are a good start. From those I've met, I feel that #1 has something to do
with it too. :-)
But basically for whatever reason, at this point in time crime in the US has
exceeded the police's capacity to deal with it. If you've got one detective
with 20 open murder cases, what's the chance that he'll be able to solve them
all? Even half? Crime has exceeded critical mass in the US to the point that
crime pays, so people are willing to "get into that line of work".
Murder in Canada is, shall I say, infrequent, and a lot of effort is put into
solving it; crime still does not pay (and I hope it stays that way) in Canada.
Now that crime has exceeded the capacity for the police to effectively deal with
it in the US, the *last* thing you want to do is to disarm the good guys, and
let the bad guys prey on them with impunity, since 99.9% of the time the police
are there to *solve* crimes, not to stop them.
I consider a rapist scared off by an armed potential victim a "crime control"
success.
A raped woman, no matter if they catch the guy or not, is a "crime control"
failure.
Do you disagree?
Roak
|
787.148 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:10 | 34 |
| >I consider a rapist scared off by an armed potential victim a "crime control"
>success.
>
>A raped woman, no matter if they catch the guy or not, is a "crime control"
>failure.
Under those conditions, yes, I agree.
But, if the woman actually shot and killed the rapist was that right?
It's easy to say he got what he deserved ... but is it right that the
woman was judge jury and exectutioner ? I think that even in the USA,
you'll agree that the rapist deserves his rewards according to the
laws of the land, not according to the panic of a woman fearing rape.
Therein is another problem ... that the judicial system does not
punish equitably in most countries.
To stretch this example a little further, say the woman was being
followed by someone who meant her no harm, but she had a fear of
rape, and carried a gun. She felt panicked by the footsteps behind
her as they drew closer ... and then in absolute fear, as the person
walked in front of her, pulled the trigger. It isn't that far fetched
an example ... it does happen.
The use of a firearm must be in the hands of trained individuals, who
are trained not only in the physical use of a weapon, but also in the
emotional use of a weapon. I suspect that a great many people who
carry weapons are not emotionally skilled enough to know when to use
it, and whether they really need to pull that trigger.
Americans talk about Freedom a lot ... One freedom that I enjoyed in
England and Canada was that I did not have to fear for my life from
the use or misuse of a firearm.
Stuart
|
787.149 | | VICKI::CRAIG | Shed that statist cloak! | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:13 | 73 |
| Anyone who's really (I mean *really*) interested in uncovering the truth
about firearms in America should spend a little time reading authors who
have done real research rather than listening to politicians who are merely
spewing cooked statistics. A good place to start is any of Professor Gary
Kleck, PhD's works; Kleck is a liberal non-gunowner down at Florida State
University who has brought to light the fact that there are well over
600,000 successful defensive uses of handguns (that's just handguns, not
rifles and shotguns) against violent crime in America each year. His list
of references is impressive.
Some points to keep in mind:
Cities that have restricted or banned gun ownership experience much
more violent crime than those who have not imposed such
restrictions. Look at Washington, DC; New York City; Chicago; Los
Angeles; Atlanta, Georgia. There has been virtually no crime in
Kennesaw, Georgia, which is a suburb of Atlanta; it is a town law
that every household have a loaded firearm present. If you were a
burglar, rapist, or murderer, which town would you rather conduct
business in, one in which the citizens (and remember, it's only the
honest citizens) were disarmed or one in which guns were available
freely? Kleck quotes a survey of imprisoned criminals which reveals
that criminals' greatest fear is not the police, not arrest, not
imprisonment, but rather being shot by an armed civilian.
You should not forget the concept of "net benefit." There is a net
benefit to gun ownership in the United States. More than 600,000
non-completions of violent assaults (murders, rapes, and muggings)
versus a few thousand accidents makes this concept pretty easy to
understand. Besides, people who turn guns on themselves are very
likely desperate enough to find another way to end it all if guns
are not at hand, such as ingestion of barbiturates or exsanguination.
Banning or restricting guns removes them only from hands attached to
people who obey the law in the first place. Somehow I can't picture
any significant numbers of muggers, rapists, and murderers deciding
to turn in their stolen guns because merely because it's against the
law for honest people to have them. "Gun control" disarms only the
law-abiding, leaving a fertile feeding ground for society's criminal
elements.
Even if it were possible to remove guns entirely from a society,
including from the hands of criminals (which would imply a
government that would make Stalin's purges look like a summer
lakeside picnic), crime would not magically go away. You'd still
have the threats of multiple assailants, assailants on drugs,
assailants whose weight/strength/fitness puts them at an advantage
with respect to their victims, and assailants using weapons other
than guns (cue sticks, knives, screwdrivers, and so on).
In this country, it is UNCONSTITUTIONAL for the government to
restrict the availability of firearms to its citizens. The reason
this was written into the Constitution of the United States is for
exactly the ones we are seeing today - a small segment of society,
financially well-endowed and in complicity with a similarly well-
endowed media, is trying to remove firearms from the hands of
American citizens, and in some cases are murdering them (Weaver)
and/or burning them alive (Waco) in the process. Those who are not
killing U.S. citizens in order to achieve these objectives are
trying to pass laws which will deprive Americans of their tools of
self-defense, and the only result will be more rapes, more assaults,
more murders, and more crime in general. Note that the people
trying to pass these laws invariably are members of a social elite,
secure from environments in which self-defense ever would be
necessary.
By the way, I used to abhor firearms until I began thinking rationally about
them; that was back in 1982. I could never go back. The only thing I miss
is the comfortable numbness of the anti-gun mindset, and some former friends
who apparently consider independent thought, logic, and research revolting
enough to have excluded me from their circles.
- craig pahigian
|
787.150 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:22 | 17 |
| The subject certainly has a lot more to it than simple gun control.
There can be no doubting that.
That crime goes down in enforced armed communities and up in lesser
armed communities is just evidence that criminals tend to be armed
and there are just too many armed criminals.
Therein should be the goal ...to reduce the illegal acquisition of
guns by anyone, whether in Canada, or in the US, or anywhere.
Clearly, the best way would be to put limits on weapons production,
and control their purchase and sale at every level. Where so many
weapons are in circulation, as in the USA, this is difficult.
In Canada, where there are far fewer, this should be far more
effective.
Stuart
|
787.151 | Tail chasing, Stuart | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:48 | 15 |
|
And the circular argument continues. Canada has about the same number
of firearms per capita as the US, has a fairly healthy arms and
ammunition industry, builds hanguns by the thousands in Toronto,
semi-automatic and automatic firearms components in Kitchener. It is
still fairly easy for a criminal to get an illegal gun of any type,
just spread the word and a little cash around and voila. The
transaction control at the criminal level is virtually non-existent,
and if the criminals do get caught, the gun laws are not brought
to bear with appropriate force, to the legal gun owners dismay. Repeat
offenders are turned loose on the streets, and if they don't hook up
with a gun, will substitute cross-bows or claw hammers to do their
dirty work. The system stinks.
Pat
|
787.152 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Mar 04 1994 14:50 | 8 |
| re: Note 787.145 by KAOFS::D_STREET
| Canada has strick gun control,
But, what does this mean? I've never heard of strick guns before.
Glenn
|
787.153 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 15:07 | 19 |
| Pat,
Several things ....
1) Are you certain about the number of firearms per capita ?
2) What about handguns (ie those you can conveniently carry that a
lot of crime and accidents occur with in the USA)
As you well know, Pat, I am not a particularly strong individual.
That I am not exactly likely to be very successful in hand to hand
fighting. BUT, I would be far happier to be beaten up by a criminal
than have him wave a gun at me with a strong likelihood of using it.
What arming the public does, is to increase the likelihood that the
criminal WILL use his gun, in a "I'd better shoot you before you get
me" scenario.
Stuart
|
787.154 | cultural differences? | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Mar 04 1994 15:10 | 91 |
| "IF GUNS ARE THE ANSWER, WHAT"S THE QUESTION?"
by Geoff Pevere (from recent Globe and Mail)
'Being that this is a .44 magnum and the most powerful handgun in the world,
and would blow your head clean off, you gotta ask yourself one question: Do I
feel lucky? Well do ya, punk?'
-- from "Dirty Harry" (1971)
Like American history and culture, American movies are impossible to imagine
without guns. The earliest known American narrative feature, Edwin S. Porter's
10-minute "The Great Train Robbery" (1903), consists of 13 tableaux long shots
and one medium closeup of a mustached villain pointing and firing a large
pistol directly at the camera. The latter was clearly signified as the movie's
so-called 'money shot,' even at the dawn of this century. Exhibitors were
encouraged to splice it either to the end or the beginning of the movie,
depending on which would crank up the rabble the most.
Since this primordial moment in the development of Hollywood storytelling, the
gun has evolved into the virtual "deus ex machina" of American movies: the
solution to all problems, the resolution without which no control or order is
possible. In a word, The Answer. Some of the greatest screen icons -- like
Bogart, Cooper, Wayne, Mcqueen, Eastwood -- can't even be called to mind
unarmed, and many of the most widely cherished Hollywood movies hinge upon the
eventual use of armed force -- "Casablanca", "The Maltese Falcon",
"Stagecoach", "High Noon", "The Great Escape", "Jaws", "Raiders of the Lost
Ark".
It is, of course, a sexual symbol, which makes its function as a certification
of heroism all the more significant. Heroism is possible only thorugh its use,
and that use becomes a virtual condition of masculinity. Guns make men, and
men make history: Indy Jones blasts away an Arab swordsman in a glib display of
superior weaponry in "Raiders", and presidents bomb small countries to prove
America's world leadership. Cowboy president Ronald Reagan named an American
missile after the legendary Colt Peacemaker.
Masculinity itself is only possible by the eventual use of the gun, and popular
culture thus regards pacifism as, at best, a display of well-intentioned
idiocy, or a certification of underdeveloped sexuality. In the early 1970s,
the era of "Dirty Harry" and the war America couldn't win, movies abounded that
forced pacifistic men into corners they could only shoot their way out of:
"Straw Dogs", "Deliverance", "Billy Jack". Today, in the ludicrously
unconvincing eco-sensitive butt-kicker "On Deadly Ground", Steven Seagal's
pro-native eco-terrorist reads to a Chinese actress playing an Inuit the
bottom-line riot-act about how necessary force supersedes even the spiritual
cleansing of tribal baptism. After undergoing a shamanistic rebirth that might
make even Oliver Stone wince, Seagal turns to the big guns when, as it always
must, clobbering time finally arrives. Not to shoot in such a
testosterone-charged climate is unthinkable -- almost as unthinkable as not
being a man.
Thus, in the hands of a woman, a gun becomes either a threat, a fetish object
or both. From "Johnny Guitar" and "Forty Guns" to "Ms. 45", "Point of No
Return" and "Thelma and Louise", the spectacle of girls with guns is redolent
with the dark promise of forbidden sexuality: it's dangerous by virtue of its
unnaturalness, exciting for its suggestion of woman touching the most private
part of a man.
True, popular culture offers occasional gestures to the deconstruction of such
barrel-based self-certification, movies which re-cast the use of guns in
socially and morally calamitous terms -- "Menace II Society", "Unforgiven",
"Schindler's List". But these movies are exceptional, and noteworthy precisely
because they break form the norm. The contemporary norm is defined by the
sequence that became a virtual staple of action films in the wake of "Rambo:
First Blood Part 2". I'm referring to the cathartic, pre-ejaculatory "suiting
up" sequence, in which our hero, pushed to the limit by non-negotiable evil,
pulls out the arsenal and, in terms that a saner culture might call
pornographic, begins to assemble his firepower in the most sexual terms
possible. Pushed to the limit, he's hard and he's ready. "Don't mess with
me," warns Lou Reed in a chilling song called "The Gun", "I'm carrying a gun."
Significantly, and perhaps mercifully, gun worship appears to be culturally
specific. In Canadian movies, for example, guns tend to be as rare as heroes
are, which probably says as much about heroes as it does Canadians. And when
guns do figure prominently in those rare Canadian movies that feature them,
they solve nothing, but merely exacerbate a prevailing sense of impotent gloom.
Cases in point: the accidental shooting of a moose-hunter that climaxes Francis
Mankiewicz's "Once Upon a Hunt", the post-shooting descent into madness that
finishes Cronenberg's "Videodrome", and the suicide that finishes off the
wannabe cop-hero of "I Love a Man in Uniform", itself noteworthy not only as a
movie about the corrosive consequences of buying the fabricated image of
Hollywood heroism, but also one of the rare Canadian movies that's even about
cops. And a fake cop to boot.
Culturally, we seem to shun guns, a condition that may be as rooted in our
relatively non-aggressive national origins as American gun-worship is anchored
in that country's revolutionary beginnings. While that may qualify us, in
Hollywood terms, as a nation of pansies, it's a condition I'm certain many of
us are content to live with, considering the alternatives. Personally, Harry,
I *do* feel lucky, if not exactly safe.
|
787.155 | Wot I 'erd | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Mar 04 1994 15:34 | 26 |
|
Re: Firearms per capita
These are difficult numbers to pin down, but I believe the Solicitor
General survey in the late '80s said it was about 60% of US rate (some
gun owners are mysteriously averse to telling the government what they
have), to industry surveys which base their results on production/sales
numberssince the turn of the century, or whenever they started to count
which indicates about the same rate. The unknowns are how many arms are
still functional and not just wallhangers, and how many are multiple gun
owners.
As to handguns, you'd better ask the Solicitor General. They
know all the *legal* ones. When I asked the Kanata OPP detachment
what sort of numbers own handguns in Kanata, They mumbled "You wouldn't
believe it." I personally know a half dozen handgun owners at the KAO site,
who are *collectors* on their permit. They only own one handgun,and keep
it in the bedroom, where all *collectors* should keep them. If they use
it in a home defense situation, they will need a lawyer, and probably a
second mortgage, but they(and their families) will be alive. On the street,
in the same situation, in Canada, they are history.
As far as your argument that criminals will kill armed victims,
then doesn't it follow that if there is a penalty for any crime, why
leave a simply beaten witness? Just finish them off, and walk free...
Pat
|
787.156 | Canadian solution, please. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 15:47 | 22 |
| PEAKS::OAKEY
I could care less about the "American gun problem/solution". I agree
that gun control is like closing the gate AFTER the hosre got out of
the barn. In Canada, the horse is still in the barn, and I am glad we
have no intention of opening the door.
In my opinion, in *CANADA* gun control is contributing to a safer
society. It may well be true that in the States it would be the
reverse. If that is your argument, take it to a US forum.
As for Stuart's case of a scared woman. Look at the Japanees student
shot in the southern states. His CRIME ? Got the wrong house. I have
little faith in the average person being smart enough to use a gun
wisely. Why do you think we don't hear about people being shot in
traffic? ANSWER: not enough people have guns, so the odds of a complete
idiot getting one are reduced. Let anybody have a gun, and that's what
you'll get, half wits with a gun, that think it is a "solution" to
a problem.
Derek.
|
787.157 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I was there | Fri Mar 04 1994 15:53 | 13 |
|
: I could care less about the "American gun problem/solution". I agree
: that gun control is like closing the gate AFTER the hosre got out of
: the barn. In Canada, the horse is still in the barn, and I am glad we
Hmm, so the hosre got out of the barn.Stupid Hosre. Worthless %4%!
Should be shot! Wooops, sorry Derek, should be given unemployment and
allowed to live a dignified life. right!
|
787.158 | | VICKI::CRAIG | Shed that statist cloak! | Fri Mar 04 1994 15:53 | 43 |
| 787.150> That crime goes down in enforced armed communities and up in lesser
787.150> armed communities is just evidence that criminals tend to be armed
787.150> and there are just too many armed criminals.
The logic of that statement escapes me entirely, although I agree with your
last assertion that there are too many criminals, armed or not, regardless
of the cause.
787.150> Therein should be the goal ...to reduce the illegal acquisition of
787.150> guns by anyone, whether in Canada, or in the US, or anywhere.
Agreed. It also would be nice to punish the misuse of guns far more
strongly as a deterrent and as a means to have a lesser number of violent
offenders on the street at any given time.
787.150> Clearly, the best way would be to put limits on weapons production,
787.150> and control their purchase and sale at every level.
If you mean firearm production (a weapon is *any* instrument used for
combat), then the logic of this escapes me as well. I have already stated
that the facts show that areas with the strictest "gun-control" laws
experience the most violent crime. Your recommendation would cause an
exactly-opposite effect from that which you intend.
More "gun-control" laws and less firearms will *not* reduce crime, as has
been proven by Kleck and many others who have undertaken serious scholarly
research on the matter. There are thousands of gun-control laws on the
books already in this country (and in Canada). They just plain don't work.
Criminals will always have weapons, whether they be guns, baseball bats,
monkey wrenches, tire irons, or sheer physical strength.
I know this is not what a lot of people want to hear, and I know it makes
them feel uneasy, as it did me many years ago, but nevertheless these are
facts. There is so much evidence out there that correlates "gun control"
and gun banning with death and injury of innocent civilians that, in this
country, the debate between those who uphold the Bill of Rights and the gun
banners has deteriorated into one in which the former hurls examples of
solid research at its opponents, while the latter, with the help of a
powerful electronic media and millions of "useful idiots" (those who
haven't the energy or attention span to study the issue in depth) hurls
lies and emotional rhetoric at its.
- craig
|
787.159 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:01 | 157 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.146 by CSC32::S_BROOK "There and back to see how far it is" >>>
>>One person shot by someone with a gun, whether killed or maimed, by accident
>>is one accident too many. One child playing with a real gun is an accident
>>waiting to happen. This is NOT the illegal use of firearms ... this is
>>the careless use of firearms. How do you eliminate the careless use of
>>firearms ?
Again, accidental deaths by firearms are *way* down the list. Are you willing
to go after the things that cause *more* deaths first, thus maximizing your
"return on investment" (read: saving more lives) or are you really not
concerned with saving the greatest number of lives, only saving lives that were
taken by firearms?
>> How do you eliminate the careless use of
>>firearms ?
Through education. That's the way we reduce accidental drownings (swimming
lessons) car accidents (driver's ed), etc. The NRA has for several years had an
"Eddie the Eagle" program that is free to schools. It is not pro-gun, it simply
gets across the message through coloring books (lower grades) or puzzles (upper
grades) that if you see a gun:
1) Stop
2) Don't touch
3) Leave the area
4) Tell and adult
However, because it's distributed by "The evil NRA", it's blocked from being
used in many schools. This is in fact the way HCI and the Center to End Handgun
Violence operates -- they offer NO education, actively block education, and when
a death occurs that may have been avoided by education that they blocked, they
call for more laws. They build their case on the deaths that they caused!
>>You talk at great length about the criminal use of firearms ... That firearms
>>save lives. I saw a bumper sticker in the CXO3 car park the other day
>>"Criminals prefer unarmed victims". My reaction is simple "Victims prefer
>>unarmed criminals". How do you reduce the amount of armed crime ? It seems
>>to me that the best way is to reduce the number of firearms in circulation.
What's "unarmed?" Is it only the lack of a firearm? What about knives? Would
you consider a 225 pound man "unarmed" if he was only using his fists on a 125
pound woman?
Please define the term more clearly, then we can discuss it further...
>>I know full well that producing statistics to show that crime with injury
>>and death in countries where the general public does not have easy access
>>to handguns is significantly lower than in the USA does not reinforce
>>the gun control argument in your eyes.
But as you stated at the start of this very note:
You are right, there is more to the problem than the number of guns in
circulation ... The very fact that the Swiss per-capita have more
than Americans says that ...
I'm confused; if you admit that you can produce stats of countries with both
more and less per capita ownership of firearms with a lower crime rate than the
US, why do you fall back and then imply that it's only guns that contribute to
the crime rate?
>>I know full well that in the present climate where guns are in such free
>>circulation amongst criminals, that to reduce the armed general public
>>may not be the best course of action, but it is a start towards limiting
>>the number of weapons in circulation.
Ok, let's say we took the guns away from all the good guys (remember, the bad
guys don't have them registered, and I think it's a fair assumption that they
won't turn them in). What do you think would happen to the crime rate?
I need an answer before we continue down this avenue of discussion.
>>Many weapons, legally acquired, are used illegally ... The numbers are not
>>large in comparison with the illegal use of illegally acquired firearms,
>>but they are still significant, and people are being killed and maimed
>>because someone who legally has a weapon goes off their rocker and takes
>>out their anger on someone with the weapon. But the fact remains, people
>>are getting injured and maimed ... and if one innocent person is killed
>>in this manner, that is one person too many.
How do you tell if any one person is "going to go off their rocker"? Wouldn't
you also worry about the Precillia Fords in society that drive their cars up
onto crowded sidewalks, killing and injuring? If you're going to base controls
on "if it just saves one life" there are many more dangerous things you should
concentrate on rather than firearms fatalities. Unless of course again you're
not interested in saving the maximum number of lives, only a small subset of
deaths, mainly firearm fatalities.
>>So the arguments for gun control are an attempt to reduce the guns in
>>circulation. Generally, they are ineffective in the US because of the
>>number of illegally acquired guns, and the total number of guns in circulation.
>>But the argument is that you must start somewhere. If there was an effective
>>way of limiting the number of guns illegally in circulation, then this would
>>be effective, but the question is HOW ?
Excellent question. About the only thing we know is that enacting laws that
only effect the law-abiding and restrict the access of guns to the law abiding
doesn't work in the US. But despite the overwhelming data showing this to be
true, we continue down that road...
>>What I see from the pro-gun camp...
First let me address your "pro-gun" comment. I'm not pro-gun; I'm
anti-restrictions. I don't say people should or shouldn't have a firearm.
That's a personal decision, and I may be able to help them make an informed
decision, but that's all I ever want to do. It's up to each and every person
individually.
However, the anti-gun position is anti-choice. They want to *remove* that
personal decision from you, and give it to the government. That's all I'm
against. No more, no less.
>>What I see from the pro-gun camp is any mechanism for reducing accidents
>>from the careless use of firearms, any mechanism for reducing the number of
>>arms in the hands of criminals.
I assume there's a missing "don't" in the first sentence, as in "What I DON'T
see".
First part:
NRA Eddie the Eagle program. NRA instructors. USPSA's "Introduction to IPSC"
program, USPSA National Range Officer Institute, random shooters instructing
friends on safe handling. All these and more. Two facts:
1) The TOTAL (not per capita) number of accidental firearm injuries has been
*declining* steadily since (cut me some slack here) I think it was the sixties
or seventies. Despite more total firearms, and more total shooters, accidents
are declining.
2) None of this safety training is given any media time. Imagine how effective
it would be if the nightly news, when it reported an accidental shooting would
give a 10 second blip on safe handling of firearms? As you would say "it would
be worth it if it saved only one life". But no, we have all sorts of other
"community service" messages, but *nothing* on safe gunhandling. If people (and
especially the media itself) thinks it's that big a threat, why not? Because
again, the anti-gun movement must be built on a death count, and they don't want
anything to reduce that death count; saving lives is *not* their highest
priority, controlling and banning guns is.
>> Gun controls in the US have so far had
>>mixed results. Let's see some strong plans for making the streets altogether
>>safer.
Mixed results? Where? Strict gun laws = high crime rate, lax gun laws = low
crime rate. You can even see differences year to year in some areas that have
either tightened their gun laws (Morton Grove, handgun ban, robberies doubled
the following year) or Orlando (allowed women to carry, rape dropped to a just
about insignificant number while the surrounding continues continued to climb
from the previous year's level.
Roak
Ps. Not knowing if you've ever shot before, Stuart, In keeping with training =
reduced firearm accidents, if you're interested in learning I'd be more than
happy to teach you to shoot. It's free. Consider it an open offer.
|
787.160 | Hand Guns = protection NOT!!! | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:03 | 13 |
| Pat:
You hang with a rough crowd. It dismays me to hear that in Kanata, a
two bit B&E artist is going to become an armed B&E Artist. Your friends
are irresponsible, and a menace to the safety I hold dear, your claims
they will be used to "defend" themselves not withstanding. To own a gun
as a response to the crime rate in Ottawa is a pathetic joke, without a
doubt these people have inflated perception of their risk, and are
contributing to the decline of Canada. One or two shot robbers will not
stop the robbers, it will make them arm themselves. Or is that to
complicated ? I am not willing to raise the stakes, take the VCR, but
leave me and my family alive.
Derek
|
787.161 | Is it dinner time yet? Yawn.... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:11 | 12 |
|
Derek, anyone without a criminal record can get a gun in Canada
legally. No IQ test required.
anyone with a criminal record can circumvent the system
and get one illegally if he wants one. Criminals have
their networks too.
Gun control has done virtually nothing for the state that
Canada is in today, other than make people like you feel
all warm and fuzzy.
Pat
|
787.162 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:14 | 9 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.160 by KAOFS::D_STREET >>>
Calling friends "irresponsible, and a menace..." and calling a position "a
pathetic joke..."
I thought we were having (for once) a nice, level-headed discussion. Any chance
of keeping it that way? Please?
Roak
|
787.163 | | CTHU26::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:14 | 15 |
| I'm not sure what kind of gun laws we have in Canada, or how many
people own firearms of various kinds. I do know that there are far,
far fewer shootings of people in this country than in the U.S. I think it
is very important that we avoid the kind of problems the Americans
have.
For this reason, I find it depressing when I hear Canadians voicing
arguments around gun ownership that echo the American ones so closely.
We remain a different, less violent society than the American one. Let
us do what we can to remain that way. I don't have any objection to
responsible people, sportsmen, etc. owning guns, but I hope we're a
long way from a situation in which reasonable people would think it
necessary to own firearms for self-defence.
-Stephen
|
787.164 | If the shoe fits..... | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:32 | 16 |
| PEAKS::OAKEY
Sorry, those were not insults, but accurate representations of those
people.
Irresponsible: NRA members would have a problem with that type of
storage.
Menace: In that the storage leads to increased odds that a gun would
belong to one of those criminals, yes they are.
Pathetic Joke: You have to admit it is kind of sad, and in a way funny
to think of someone in Kanata having a gun beside their bed to feel
"safe".
Derek.
|
787.165 | It would be easier to change someones religion. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:33 | 34 |
| VICKI::CRAIG
As stated earlier limited gun control is not gun control. Canada does
not have the same situations as in the States. and finally, it is not a
"choice" in Canada to own a gun for self protection.(despite the
illegal ownership described in here by PAT) We have a
completely different situation up here, and I might add a considerably
less dangerous one. Most Canadians feel that strick gun control is part
of the reason. I would be interested to know why we have less violent
crime. If I go to SOAPBOX and try to say it is because of our social
system I will get abuse, if I say it is because of our better race
relations I will get abuse, if I say it is because of gun control I
would get abuse.
You gun types tell me. Why less violent crime ? Untill given a
reasonable alternate explaination, I choose to believe it is because
guns are not considered an answer by Canadians, and Americans think it
is. Gun control enforces the idea that guns are not an answer, free and
easy access to guns enforces the idea that guns/violence is a valid
response to a given situation.
Either that or America is a sesspool of human waste that can't control
themselves. (which I think is not true) Hate to break it to you, but
guns do kill people. One (1) murder in Nepean in five (5) years, what a
surprise, it was done with a hand gun. What are the odds that gun was
stolen from a "collector" who kept it in their night table beside the
bed ?
Derek.
(PS. NEVER use the US as an example of proper gun management to a
Canadian, we abhor what goes on down there)
(PPS Except Pat, who thinks we should strive to be more like the US)
|
787.166 | | VICKI::CRAIG | Shed that statist cloak! | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:36 | 60 |
| 787.156> As for Stuart's case of a scared woman. Look at the Japanees student
787.156> shot in the southern states. His CRIME ? Got the wrong house. I have
787.156> little faith in the average person being smart enough to use a gun
787.156> wisely.
It is obvious that little effort has been made to understand the dynamics
of this admittedly-tragic event. The defendant's wife was screaming to him
to get the house gun because a masked intruder was breaking into the house.
The woman was trying to hold back the intruder but could not. The
defendant, fearing for his life and for that of his wife, yelled at the
intruder to stop. He did not. The defendant shot. In the defendant's and
in his wife's mind, they were in danger of, at the very least, imminent and
severe harm. What were they supposed to do, ask, "Pahdon me, ewld chappie,
but would you be wanting to do us mischief, or are you ewnly here for
evening tea?" You will note, also, that the defendant was found innocent
at trial. I question whether you have the right to try him again at so
great a distance and with so little understanding of what really happened
that night.
If you have little faith in the average person being able to defend
him/herself with a firearm wisely, perhaps you would like to explain why
you feel that way? Do you have data that show far more instances of
irresponsible firearm use than instances of responsible use? I have data
that show just the opposite, with the scales quite heavily-balanced in
favor of gun ownership by your so-called "average person."
787.156> Why do you think we don't hear about people being shot in
787.156> traffic? ANSWER: not enough people have guns, so the odds of a complete
787.156> idiot getting one are reduced. Let anybody have a gun, and that's what
787.156> you'll get, half wits with a gun, that think it is a "solution" to
787.156> a problem.
This is so typical of the anti-gun mind: the attempt to establish a trend
by evoking an isolated event. Yes, people have shot others in traffic. So
what would you do, disallow the ownership of firearms altogether because of
a few isolated incidents like this? What would you say to the hundreds of
thousands of people who've used guns for *good* purposes? "Gee, sorry,
Frank shot Al on Route 93 last year, so you lot of 600,000 are on your
own." Such logic ignores entirely the concept of net benefit. Far more
people stay alive each year because they have effective tools of self-
defense at hand than die each year because someone chooses to misuse a gun.
If you were deny the people of this country free access to firearms for
defense, a couple of orders of magnitude more innocent people would die
than would be the case if free access were maintained. You can "think" and
"feel" about this all you want, but the fact remains, supported by solid
scholarly research, that a society with free access to firearms is safer
from violent crime.
Look at the terminal or PC or workstation in front of which you sit as you
read this. Can you say that it does not exist? To say that "gun control"
has a net benefit in reducing crime would be just as ludicrous, individual
human-interest stories notwithstanding.
- craig
p.s. I know this probably isn't the place for further debate, but I will
gladly pursue it in another forum should you so desire; just let me
know.
|
787.167 | half truth does no become you. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:41 | 12 |
| Pat:
>>anyone without a criminal record can get a gun in Canada
>>legally. No IQ test required.
We have gone through this, and you admitted that there might be 10-20
people in the country that have a permit to carry a gun for self
protection, and that you need a court order to do it.
Yeah, too bad about the lack of IQ test, isn't it.
Derek.
|
787.168 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:48 | 45 |
| Roak,
I don't particularly want to carry on down the US examples here in the
Canadian notes conference ... Just as you would point me at the
US consititution with too many Canadian eamples in the Colorado
conference :-)
But, I think we can pretty well agree that there are too many factors
than just simply "guns" in US violence. At the same time, I do not
believe that an increase in the armed public is the answer....
I do believe in gun controls ... that is plain ... but acknowledge
that forced disarmament of the public is not the answer *at this
time*. Gun control MUST be a more broad control to attempt to at
least help to limit the guns that are capable of or do fall into
the hands of those with criminal intent. If this means that it is
a little more difficult for those who legally want / need firearms
then that should be a small price to pay, PROVIDING that the screening
is EFFECTIVE, and is capable of dealing with those that cannot be
allowed to purchase a gun. It is certainly unfortunate that the
shop owners in the US are the ones who have to tell the buyer ..."Sorry
but your record does not allow us to sell you a gun" This should
be in the hands of the police!
After all is said and done, to get a DRIVERS LICENSE in Colorado,
you must give a finger print. It is almost easier to buy a gun
than get a driver's license! People gladly go in every day and offer
up their right fore-finger! Moreover, there are tighter controls
of car ownership than there are on gun-ownership. There is clearly
soemthing out of balance here.
I still say that you've got to start somewhere, but will acknowldge
that there are good and bad places to start, and there are probably
better places than Brady!
Pat ...
Both sides of this issue can pull up circular arguments. One of the
major problems about violence increasing in Canada is the decrease
in policing. The Kanata OPP detachment has 1 officer available at
any 2 time for Stittsville, and about 2 for Kanata. Clearly this
is insufficient.
Stuart
|
787.169 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:49 | 20 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.156 by KAOFS::D_STREET >>>
In my opinion, in *CANADA* gun control is contributing to a safer
society. It may well be true that in the States it would be the
reverse. If that is your argument, take it to a US forum.
>> As for Stuart's case of a scared woman. Look at the Japanees student
>> shot in the southern states. His CRIME ? Got the wrong house.
The police in the US have been shooting innocent people in increasing numbers
due to incorrectly addressed search warrants, arrival at a scene and sizing
up who is the criminal/non-criminal incorrectly, etc.
Do you also propose we disarm the police, or is some small pecentage of failure
acceptable in the face of the benefit of an armed police?
The same answer goes for armed citizens. Some mistakes will be made. They're
tragic mistakes, I don't deny that, but the alternative is far worse.
Roak
|
787.170 | Not to muddy the waters. | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:51 | 6 |
|
Derek, it was the full truth. Anyone can get a gun, only a select
elite few can carry one on their person, other than police. Hope that
clarifies it.
Pat
|
787.171 | While we are on the subject of "facts". | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:51 | 17 |
| VICKI::CRAIG
>>You can "think" and "feel" about this all you want, but the fact remains,
>>supported by solid scholarly research, that a society with free access to
>>firearms is safer from violent crime.
Except for the obvious "fact" that in Canada we have less crime, and more
gun control. Sort of like the "fact" that government run health care is
more expensive, even though America pays way more % of GNP for healthcare
than Canada does. Please refrain from quoting American gun control
statistics, they are invalid because 1) guns are readily available within
a few miles of the "controlled" area, 2) we are not Americans, 3) who
the hell would want to live in a society like they have in Florida (the
one CAA was advising against going into by the way)
Derek.
|
787.172 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:53 | 10 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.168 by CSC32::S_BROOK "There and back to see how far it is" >>>
>> Moreover, there are tighter controls
>> of car ownership than there are on gun-ownership. There is clearly
>> soemthing out of balance here.
Question: Would you agree to placing the same restrictions on gun ownersip that
are placed on car ownership, and nothing more? Could we meet at that point?
Roak
|
787.173 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:58 | 34 |
| re .166
Remember, this is the CANADA notes conference ...
Canada does NOT have the crime per capita of the US
Canada does NOT have the same percentage of crime commited with a
firearm as the US
Canada always has had gun controls
The last time I looked at the map, free trade or not, Canada was not
a state of the USA.
So comments like
>If you were deny the people of this country free access to firearms for
>defense, a couple of orders of magnitude more innocent people would die
>than would be the case if free access were maintained. You can "think" and
>"feel" about this all you want, but the fact remains, supported by solid
>scholarly research, that a society with free access to firearms is safer
>from violent crime.
are totally out of place and proof that the your last sentence is
totally incorrect. Moreover, you don't define violent crime.
There is scholarly research and then there is scholarly research.
Research in the USA may show this to be true ... but it is not a
global thing.
Please be careful when painting the world with an American Brush!
Stuart
|
787.174 | CANADA NOTES FILE | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:59 | 7 |
| PEAKS::OAKEY
you keep pointing out American problems with gun control, believe it
or not, we have very few people shot by the police up here, and I can't
remember any instance where it happened at the wrong house.
Derek.
|
787.175 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 17:06 | 14 |
| >Question: Would you agree to placing the same restrictions on gun ownersip that
>are placed on car ownership, and nothing more? Could we meet at that point?
I would certainly agree that controls like title and renewed possession
licenses (by presentation to show that the gun is still under the
registered owner's control) are appropriate places to start ... I also
believe that he who possesses a weapon should be required to take a
test, eye test etc, much like a driver's test.
Certainly to start with, I'd meet you at that point. In Canada, that
would not be enough ... :-)
Stuart
|
787.176 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 17:10 | 16 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.174 by KAOFS::D_STREET >>>
>> you keep pointing out American problems with gun control, believe it
>> or not, we have very few people shot by the police up here, and I can't
>> remember any instance where it happened at the wrong house.
About the only stats we have to work with is what was posted from the HCI
pamphlet; those are USA stats.
Therefore I'm (as you noticed) only dealing with USA characteristics.
To deal directly with your country, it'd be nice to have some hard stats, like
what's your firearm crime doing in Canada? Increasing? Decreasing? Staying
the same?
Roak
|
787.177 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 17:14 | 17 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.175 by CSC32::S_BROOK "There and back to see how far it is" >>>
>> Certainly to start with, I'd meet you at that point. In Canada, that
>> would not be enough ... :-)
We're talking the US for the moment.
"To start with..." -- nope, why should I agree to anything if all it does is
move the starting point to favor you? I'm trying to give you a big jump, so
again:
Question: Would you agree to placing the same restrictions on gun ownersip that
are placed on car ownership, and nothing more? Could we meet at that point?
It's a serious question, Stuart...
Roak
|
787.178 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 17:37 | 22 |
| And mine was a serious answer ...
where the "to start with" does not mean I want to arbitrarily add or
take away other controls. It means I believe that this would be a
relatively good plan to implement and evaluate. It may be that it
has little impact on the bottomline, but it does give authorities the
easy ability to identify illegal and stolen weapons. It is then up
to the legal system to apply the laws in a simple and equitable manner
like owning a car. Drive a car without a license ... you're fined.
Own a gun without a license ... you're fined and either license the
gun or have it confiscated. Own a gun without legal title, have it
confiscated.
I don't know if this exists now, but it would make some sense to
require a gun owner, like a car owner, to possess liability insurance.
To own a legal gun without insurance ... fined.
That is the nature of "to start with". One of the major problems
I've heard in the US is that in many states, it is virtually impossible
to know whether anyone owns a gun legally or not.
Stuart
|
787.179 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Fri Mar 04 1994 17:44 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.178 by CSC32::S_BROOK "There and back to see how far it is" >>>
>> That is the nature of "to start with". One of the major problems
>> I've heard in the US is that in many states, it is virtually impossible
>> to know whether anyone owns a gun legally or not.
With such an open-ended proposal, I guess I will have to start resisting you
with the way the laws are here and now.
Oh well, I tried.
Roak
|
787.180 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Mar 04 1994 18:17 | 10 |
| I'm not deeming an open ended proposal per se. If, in the light of
experience (and I'm not saying a month or even a year or two) of such
a proposal, that something MORE effective could be added, then I
could accept it. If the results of such a proposal had no positive
impact and the law authorities were not taking advantage of the help
this kind of registration and control provided, then clearly, either
the controls should be abandoned as a waste of time and effort, or
the law authorities need a kick !!!
Stuart
|
787.181 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | The difference? About 8000 miles | Sat Mar 05 1994 11:53 | 11 |
| Re: <<< Note 787.180 by CSC32::S_BROOK "There and back to see how far it is" >>>
>> I'm not deeming an open ended proposal per se. If, in the light of
>> experience (and I'm not saying a month or even a year or two) of such
>> a proposal, that something MORE effective could be added...
That's the very defintion of open-ended.
Saying it isn't doesn't make it so.
Roak
|
787.182 | Too liberal for me. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Mon Mar 07 1994 08:38 | 11 |
| >>Question: Would you agree to placing the same restrictions on gun
>>ownersip that are placed on car ownership, and nothing more? Could
>>we meet at that point?
No. I do not consider a gun to be a normal requirement of Canadian
society, where as a car is (in most places) pretty hard to do without.
For this reason I expect guns to be more difficult to obtain than
cars. please remeber there is no "right" to have guns up here.
Derek.
|
787.183 | Closer to the truth... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Mar 07 1994 09:22 | 32 |
|
In keeping with notesfile etiquette, Derek, please refrain from
commenting on the legality of firearms ownership unless you can
quote the statute. You suggested in an earlier reply that I
advocated an illegal activity/use of a gun. The facts are:
1. It is legal to be a collector of "one gun"
2. It is legal to keep it anywhere in the house, including
the bedroom.
3. It must be securely stored when you leave the house.
If you are going to advocate your brand of gun control, please at
least take the time to read the law.
It has been common over the decades for rural Canadians to keep a
firearm handy to protect property, livestock and yes, life. It is
very rare for a firearm in such a situation to be fired at another
human. The usual scenario is to show the firearm, which diffuses the
situation. Of course, the response time of a call to police is
long in the country. The trend in the city, even with 911 is getting
longer, so one would expect a drift towards self defense in the
city.
It is fairly clear to me now that your true agenda is the disarming
of the law abiding, without basis in fact, because your social utopia
has failed to control criminals adequately. Rather than keep them
locked up, you give them a welfare check and turn them out on the
street to commit B&E and run everybody's insurance up.
Pat
|
787.184 | A few examples | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Mar 07 1994 09:34 | 18 |
| re: .174
Anecdotes galore on this one:
Two carpetlayers were shot to death in their motel room after
they were mistaken for bank robbers by police in the Eastern Townships
in Quebec a few years back.
Reaching under your seat to stow some grass will get you a police bullet
in a vital location in Montreal.
A bass guitar looks like an assault weapon and in a darkened room,
will also net you a hail of police lead, especially if you wear
dreadlocks in your hair in Ottawa.
There are more...
Pat
|
787.185 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Mar 07 1994 10:08 | 11 |
| Canada is generally a safer place to live when it comes to getting hit
by bullets. I don't think it's the laws that make the difference but
the attitude of the people.
Compare American history to Canadian history and you will see that
there's very little bloodshed in Canada's. American history is
remarkably bloody for such a young country. A warning though, if you
intend to read up on Canadian history, be sure that the text you are
reading is equipped with an airbag. ZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
Glenn
|
787.186 | | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Mon Mar 07 1994 15:41 | 14 |
| A gun is just a tool to get the job done; get your money!
In the US, the poor people get the money the hard way from your pockets
with the tools of the trade (weapons of any kind including guns).
In Canada, the poor people get welfare checks which are enough (barely)
to live on because we have other social programs covering things like
medical care, judicial help.....
Jean
The only good use for a gun here would be to keep the governements from
extracting ever so much money from your salary.
|
787.187 | Already been done... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Mon Mar 07 1994 16:13 | 11 |
|
Interesting concept..an armed tax revolt, Jean. Really?
Now there's a good reason to go door to door and collect those
nasty guns. Of course, it has been done already with the
War Measures Act under Trudeau when the FLQ was flying high (1970). Can't
let those separatists arm themselves, y'know. They are much easier
to subdue with rhetoric and political foot dragging if they have no
power.
Pat
|
787.188 | Fanatics are sooooo ugly..... | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Mon Mar 07 1994 16:45 | 21 |
| Pat:
You have stopped being constructive in this conversation. Comments
that the FLQ should not have been crushed like a bug really worry me.
It is interesting that the poitical seperation movement picked up steam
after the terrorists were removed from the mix. I suppose like all
other Canadians the people of Quebec are uncomfortable with terrorist
acts, regardless of their position on the issue. I personally feel the
WMA was warrented. As it turns out there were not alot of these FLQ
types, but how could we know that in advance ? PET did a great service
to Canada, (and to seperatists in Quebec) by forcing the issue to be
resolved in the political arena. Look at Nothern Irland, after
centuries of violence, they want to talk, but can't stop killing each
other long enough. I do not want Quebec to seperate, but I have to
respect the peaceful measures they are useing to try to reach their
goal. You would appear to prefer sensless death and terror.
Sad.
Derek.
|
787.189 | So much between the lines... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Tue Mar 08 1994 09:02 | 8 |
|
Derek, appearances can be deceiving.
Hmmm, you admit then that some of my comments have been contructive?
The plot thickens....
Pat
|
787.190 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:15 | 4 |
| What did Warren have to do with the implementation of the War Measures
Act during the October crisis?
Glenn
|
787.191 | Think about it. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Wed Mar 09 1994 12:45 | 9 |
| Pat:
Before you get too carried away with your pride in being constructive.
The straight man in a comedy routine is constructive, but says nothing
that actually is funny.
Derek.
|
787.192 | Thought about it. | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Wed Mar 09 1994 13:12 | 9 |
|
Let's see...
So I'm the straight man, you're the joker/comedian and
together we are notesfiles entertainment..
I can live with that. 8*)
Pat
|
787.193 | We obviously have a "problem", but it's not guns. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:27 | 16 |
| re: Note 787.136 by SIOG::EGRI
Howdy from Dawsonville Georgia, USA.
I live in the mountains.
I own "many" guns. All of them have never shot anyone. I never shot
anyone either. However, fortunantly, I'm still able to own guns for
my own protection, why? Because we have a very small police force in
this county. Around here they have to lock people up for beating up
their wives or driving around while lit up. But that's rare. Plus
many (most? I think I heard 80% somewhere) of my neighbors are armed.
When was the last murder? I don't remember hearing of one.
Hmm... sorry to hear you bought into the emotional HCI touchy-feely BS.
Regards,
MadMike
|
787.194 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:26 | 7 |
| Oh no! Not MadMike!
Next thing you know, CHELSEA will be in here!
8-)
Glenn
|
787.195 | Not that I'd want you to pass a brick or anything :^) | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:59 | 2 |
| > Oh no! Not MadMike!
Relax, I'm just passin' through... ;^)
|
787.196 | stats source: stats Canada | POLAR::PERCY | | Fri Mar 11 1994 07:36 | 10 |
| PAT,
A couple of months back, the Ontario Handgun Association published
stats in their regular news letter, from stats Canada.
I will look for that newsletter this weekend,
Tom
|
787.197 | I agree, it's too late for gun control. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Fri Mar 11 1994 08:41 | 8 |
| VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK
>>We obviously have a "problem", but it's not guns.
Care to elaborate ?
Derek.
|
787.198 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Mar 11 1994 09:42 | 7 |
| Yes, Americans like using guns on themselves, Canadians don't.
Americans have a history of using guns on themselves, Canadians don't.
Americans have a warm climate to live in, Canadians don't.
Canadians say "eh", Americans don't.
Glenn
|
787.199 | That about sums it all up | TROOA::MCRAM | Marshall Cram DTN 631-7162 | Fri Mar 11 1994 12:15 | 8 |
| And we have Glenn, and American's don't. That's why they keep
shooting each other. Sad, eh.
|
787.200 | SnArF! | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Fri Mar 11 1994 14:52 | 6 |
| I am deeply touched and I think I'm going to cry!
Sniff.
Glenn
|
787.201 | It's a very complex issue. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri Mar 11 1994 15:05 | 47 |
| .197> >>We obviously have a "problem", but it's not guns.
.197> Care to elaborate ?
Ok.
"Violence" happens here, for one reason or another. Guns are a means
to creating violence. I saw a show which compared the US vs. Canada
a while back which implied our country was founded on "violence".
Maybe your culture doesn't allow it's citizens to be armed.
In the old days, when someone did something "bad" here they were
punished. Let me clarify the word bad. If you did something wrong,
you were punished. If you killed someone, or created mayhem, they'd
hang you. Needless to say, not many folks went nuts back then.
Today, take myself for example. If I went off the deep end and shot
a whole bunch of people, "it's not my fault. It's society's fault for
turning me into a basketcase." There is no accountability, and it's
easy to avoid RESPONSIBILITY for ones actions here.
Up there, you're used to your "systems". Down here, the "system" (i.e.
gov't programs/etc..) promote needy people and create disenchantment
with the "system" Folks think they can take what they're owed and
often they take it by force. Also, we have a *HUGH* drug problem here.
It's a problem, because our gov't makes it one. And the violence.
A young boy recently got shot in a shootout, and cryed to the police
when they showed up "I didn't know it would hurt".
Our values are in the toilet. Why can over 80% of my neighbors be
armed, and we don't shoot each other? I went on vacation a few weeks
ago and left one of our cars unlocked, with the garage door opener on
the dash, thus basically leaving my house "unlocked". Nothing was
taken. _why_ do you think I live where I do?
It's a very complex issue. The way to "fix" our problem is tough.
It requires some backbone. As I'm sure your aware, we're taking some
steps in that direction, but our gov't is pussyfooting around and
"special interest groups" are stalling/screaming for peoples "rights".
What's wrong with the "rights" of honest folks getting gunned down
for their sneakers in broad daylight?
Yes, we do have a problem. Will it get fixed? Not until our gov't
deals with the real causes of the problem. Many of which they create.
Hope this provides some insight for our friends up north (or as we
say down here, " out over yonder") :^)
Regards,
MadMike
|
787.202 | How does your justice system work? | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri Mar 11 1994 15:18 | 25 |
| Let me ask a question
I'm sure you have some folks who blow a gasket now and then and kill
someone up there.
You lock them up right? Do you keep your violent people in prison?
You don't let them out for a _long_ time I assume.
Here, we release violent rapists, muderders and robbers from prison
after serving 1/3 of there term to make room for Joe Blow who got caught
with a joint. Case in point: Look at the menendez brothers who
admitted they shotgunned their parents to death. The jury couldn't
CONVICT them of wrongdoing! WHY? If I told "you", yes, I just shot
so&so, how hard is it to _think_ that I *MAY* be telling the truth!
Our justice system fell apart. I hope yours is ok. It sounds like
it is ok. Thus you don't get to read about gun battles everyday
and a women mudereing her husband over a bigmac hamburger....
If I blow someones brains out, and there is only a 40% chance of
even being caught, and if I'm caught, a (?)% chance of being convicted,
and then after conviction, I only serve 18 MONTHS in prison....
You see where I'm coming from? That's why I like to open .136's eyes.
It's not the guns that are the issue friend.
|
787.203 | send lawyers guns and money... | REFDV1::MURPHY | Symbolic stack dump follows... | Mon Mar 14 1994 11:19 | 33 |
| .198> Yes, Americans like using guns on themselves, Canadians don't.
.198> Americans have a history of using guns on themselves, Canadians don't.
.198> Americans have a warm climate to live in, Canadians don't.
.198> Canadians say "eh", Americans don't.
I agree with three of your points Glenn. But a warm climate?? Nyet!
.199> And we have Glenn, and American's don't. That's why they keep
.199> shooting each other. Sad, eh.
Whenever I go on my weekend shooting spree's ... I always think of Glenn.
.201> often they take it by force. Also, we have a *HUGH* drug problem here.
I wouldn't go blaming Hugh for all of our problems. HOWEVER... If Hugh is
a lawyer, then he's certianly part of the problem. "our problem" is not guns
*but* they are a certian catalyst. "our problem" is an ineffective judicual
system. Coupled with greed, it is a system that allows the rich to go free
and the poor to blame the society, and also go free.
I don't mean to critisize all lawyers here. They are meerly the mechanism that
allows our corrupt judicial system to work. They're messengers (or client
servers if you wish to get technical).
The sad thing is - these folks go into law for all the right reasons, and it
is the system itself that lends to their corruption. Sit down and watch the
Al Pacino flick "And Justice for All" and you'll have a better understanding.
Steve
p.s. Do Canadian lawyers advertise on TV?
|
787.204 | Don't think so | KAOA09::OTOP95::Buckland | Chit Te Naw | Mon Mar 14 1994 12:06 | 9 |
| >> p.s. Do Canadian lawyers advertise on TV?
Don't believe they're allowed to, certainly never seen one.
And, at least in Ontario, it's illegal for a lawyer to take a case for a
percentage of the settlement or no fee. This stops frivolous cases as if
you lose it's your money.
|
787.205 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Mar 14 1994 12:45 | 7 |
| It's nice to know I'm being thought of during a shooting spree.
I am, once again, moved to tears.
Sniff.
Glenn
|
787.206 | | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Mon Mar 14 1994 12:46 | 27 |
| Re -.1
In Toronto while driving on the 401, I saw a sign from a lawer's firm
"If we lose, you don't pay"!!
So much for percentage issues! This only means lawers are getting to
be too numerous here too and they have not yet developped the genetic
heritage which keeps lemming populations within reasonable numbers.
Re Mr Mad Mike (I ALWAYS call someone with a gun Mister)
I disagree, here it is not part of our culture to have access to
HANDguns (the sixshooter of your folklore). Many people have rifles or
shotguns because they are hunters, but that is not a majority of
people. Any gun is an easy answer to a problem because you can defeat
your opponent from a distance, and the bigger and meaner your gun is
the better your chances are of winning (why do you think you have an 8
liter engine in your car? answer: it's better than the 2 liter engine
the guy in the other car has {unless of course he has NOX and a
turbo}). But that's United Stater's usual solutions, bigger is
always better, unfortunately it doesn't always work as intended, if
every one has a gun there *are* chances they will be used for purposes
other than self protection (get rid of your -->insert here<-- because
-->insert cause here<-- for good).
Jean
|
787.207 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Mar 14 1994 12:48 | 5 |
| I didn't know I had an -->insert here<-- .
I'm very worried!
Glenn
|
787.208 | -->insert here also<- | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Mon Mar 14 1994 12:59 | 5 |
| I tought we all had one
Jean -->insert here<--
|
787.209 | Yipes | TROOA::MCRAM | Marshall Cram DTN 631-7162 | Mon Mar 14 1994 14:46 | 13 |
| <<< Note 787.205 by POLAR::RICHARDSON "Sick in balanced sort of way" >>>
<<It's nice to know I'm being thought of during a shooting spree.
<<I am, once again, moved to tears.
Boy, you sure move a lot! Is that near Ottawa?
I always thought this was a PG-rated notes file, but with all this
talk of insertions I'm having my doubts.
|
787.210 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Mon Mar 14 1994 14:52 | 8 |
| Well, at least my name isn't CRAM.
;-)
Sniff.
Glenn
|
787.211 | rated I | REFDV1::MURPHY | Symbolic stack dump follows... | Mon Mar 14 1994 15:14 | 7 |
| .207> I didn't know I had an -->insert here<-- .
.207> I'm very worried!
Yah... it's directly above your -->CRAM here<-- .
|
787.212 | Fun stuff | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Mon Mar 14 1994 15:16 | 17 |
| Wow what a nifty file:
Someone (REFDV1::MURPHY) comes and beats me up due to a typo
I meant huge, not hugh. I suspect he didn't read .202 yet when he
answered. (Plus I probably got more guns than he does :^))
No one answered my ? on the Justice system y'all have in Canada. I
assume you LOCK UP your violent criminals.
RE: the "Mister" reply. You can call me what you want :^), I'm not a
violent person. Hell, you can come down here and we'll have a beer (is
Molsen considered %^$%&$& up there?) together.
re: Glenn, <sniff>, getta life boy. I mean really, you should get yer
head checked. :^)
MadMike
|
787.213 | you've been injured in an accident | REFDV1::MURPHY | Symbolic stack dump follows... | Mon Mar 14 1994 15:31 | 14 |
|
um... do you really think I thought you meant Hugh?
I don't own a gun. I don't want a gun. I don't even like to say
g-g-gg-g-g--ggggg-g---gg-ggggun.
p.s. I hadn't read .202 yet - but I think it kinda blames the same
thing.
and as far as commercials for Lawyers... we're bombarded with them down
here --- "you've been injured in an accident - you should know your
rights -- come to the law offices -->insert here<-- and we'll see to it
that you rightfully screw others"
|
787.214 | FWIW: 1-800-SUE-THEM commercials make me wanna BARF | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Mon Mar 14 1994 15:39 | 29 |
| >(why do you think you have an 8
>liter engine in your car? answer: it's better than the 2 liter engine
>the guy in the other car has {unless of course he has NOX and a
>turbo}). But that's United Stater's usual solutions, bigger is
>always better, unfortunately it doesn't always work as intended, if
I assume You noticed my PN, eh?
Why I have a 454 CID engine is because of economics. The last 5.8 liter
engine I had exploded at 8500 RPM (revolutions per minute) and I spent
a mint having it built. So I figured, what the hell. I can build an engine
cheaper than these folks that works just as well. Go BIG. So I did.
One of my 454's came from a big HUGE (not hugh) utility truck. Car runs
nice. yes.
RE: Nitrous &/or Turbos
Bzztt, don't bother. I took a 300zx turbo and put 100 feet (30 meters) on
him in seconds. I think I messed him up so bad he shut it down. I got
clocked by our local fuzz for Zero to 60 miles per hour in 4 seconds. Needless
to say I paid a big wad of a fine for "exhibition of excelleration". (and
could have lost my license, but the insurance company never (yet) found out
and I BSed my out of the deal, see the system works! :^) ).
Same deal with the mustang GT on the freeway at 70MPH. Hosed him badly too
I did. And the...
Ah yes, the facial... I luv it when "you" try me. :^)
MadMike
|
787.215 | | R2ME2::HINXMAN | In the range of strange | Mon Mar 14 1994 15:48 | 7 |
| Absolutely fascinating. Loads of replies from Americans saying how the
social fabric of the U.S.A. has broken down.
Looks like the incoming head of the CBC is right in his
strong belief that Canada is the "best country in the world.
Tony
|
787.216 | Mine's o.k. too... | REFDV1::MURPHY | Symbolic stack dump follows... | Mon Mar 14 1994 15:58 | 9 |
|
Don't get me wrong, I still love my country. I happen to think a lot
for Canada too.
It's part of a country's spirit to label itself "Best". We all
do it. But we must always remember what we're "shooting" for.
Steve
|
787.217 | | TROOA::SOLEY | Carbon Blob, Sector 7G | Mon Mar 14 1994 18:14 | 14 |
| Lawyers can advertize in Ontario but the Law Society has set rules around
it are so strict that few bother.
The sign on the 401 is legal for 2 reasons. That particular law applies
to civil litigation, you don't win, you don't pay is perfectly legal
for criminal cases, and those poeple aren't lawyers, heck it's
stretching it to call them paralegals. They're mostly ex-police
officers, it's a roulette game, chances are, when you show up in court
to fight a traffic ticket, the arresting officer will not be available,
if you stand up at the right time, sit down when you're supposed to,
use the correct respectful language etc. the JP will usually throw
the charge out, unless you're offence is impaired driving, it gets
treated a little more seriously than 20 cliks over.
|
787.218 | Fascinating, yes. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Mon Mar 14 1994 23:56 | 14 |
| {I can't help myself}
re: Note 787.215 by R2ME2::HINXMAN
PSSTT... wanna buy some cigarettes? $13/carton, er, for you I'll
do ya a deal, say $45. :^)
Howbout some booze, eh? Er, distilled out back it is.
> strong belief that Canada is the "best country in the world.
Your country is nice. Been there several times. Work hard to keep it
nice. That's what we're doing here (locally). 60 miles south of here
Atlanta is falling apart. You only hear about the trash from Atlanta. You
don't hear about normal nice stuff in Dawsonville, or elsewhere else USA.
|
787.219 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Tue Mar 15 1994 09:42 | 6 |
| Who ever thought a note about Cornwall would ever give the Sarnia note
a run for its money?
I certainly didn't.
---> insert here <---
|
787.220 | | R2ME2::HINXMAN | In the range of strange | Tue Mar 15 1994 16:05 | 16 |
| re .218
> Your country is nice.
I'm sure John Major will be pleased to hear that.
> don't hear about normal nice stuff in Dawsonville, or elsewhere else USA.
Don't know what passes for normal in Dawsonville, but the following
incident occurred recently in Chelmsford, MA.
Two teenagers shot each other in order to add convincing verisimilitude
to their story that the $200 they had extracted from the till of a
fast food outlet had been stolen by an armed robber.
Tony
|
787.221 | that's $100 for me *bang* and $100 for you *bang* | REFDV1::MURPHY | Symbolic stack dump follows... | Tue Mar 15 1994 17:11 | 10 |
| Gee Tony
I thought you were a Canadian. I live two towns north of Chelmsford,
MA (Nashua NH) and I hadn't even heard of it.
It kinda reminds me of the Charles Stewart thing - just to a lesser
degree.
Steve
|
787.222 | verisimilitude | REFDV1::MURPHY | Symbolic stack dump follows... | Tue Mar 15 1994 17:14 | 9 |
|
and... oh yah Tony...
Thanks for the new word;
"Verisimilitude"
I plan to use it often in casual conversation :-)
|
787.223 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in balanced sort of way | Tue Mar 15 1994 17:24 | 5 |
| I'm shedding "Verisimilitude" tears...
sniff.
Glenn
|
787.224 | Young offenders act should be changed. Murder is Murder. | KAOFS::D_STREET | | Tue Mar 15 1994 17:32 | 23 |
| VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK
>>I assume you lock up violent criminals.....
As yet we have no fallen into the "society made me do it" trap, but
our lawyers are (unfortunatly) learning from the US experience. Case
recently:
Teenagers have a fight at a bar. After, one drives home with 3 others
in his car. The guy they fought with follows them, and appears to have
rammed their car from behind, causing it to collide with on comming
truck. All kids killed in first car. Perp charged with murder, and a
host of other not nice things. Perp's lawyer says, he is a kid, if he
were older he would have figured another way to deal with the
situation, so he should be cut some slack. I suspect (hope) that this line
of defense will go down in flames. If you're old enough to drink and
drive, you are old enough to take responsibility for your actions while
drinking and driving. If not, according to your view on the US "problem"
we are right behind you.
Say it ain't so.....
Derek.
|
787.225 | mama don't let your children grow up to be lawyers | REFDV1::MURPHY | Symbolic stack dump follows... | Wed Mar 16 1994 13:26 | 13 |
|
.224> As yet we have no fallen into the "society made me do it" trap
your society hasn't digressed to the point where it can be blamed.
Don't allow your government to let it's system of justice
deterioriate! Keep 'dem lawyers under control.
These are words I NEVER want to hear...
"Dad, I want to be a Lawyer".
Steve
|
787.226 | Prediction..no murder conviction | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Fri Mar 18 1994 09:24 | 16 |
|
Heck, I go away for a week of R&R and you guys have the gall to
continue without me???
Re-.2 by Derek about the car murders by young offender, age 17.
Typical Ottawa Citizen feel good editorial this week stated that the new
progressive licensing system would have prevented this tragedy, since
he would not have been on the road at 4:30 am. What a load of @#$%.
They forgot to mention that he was also too young to drink, even in
P.Q.
Hey, let's ban cars, and save everyone. But then, you might get
electrocuted in your home office while cruising down the information
superhighway.
Pat
|
787.227 | Smuggle smuggle, toil and trouble | POLAR::ROBINSONP | EVO Inside | Tue Apr 26 1994 12:28 | 22 |
|
Re: Smuggling
Reports from statistics Canada released today indicate that cigarette
sales in Ontario are up over 60% and that export of cigarettes to the
US are down by over 80% from levels before the tax reduction.
Liquor seizures are increasing in volume, so much that it is not
possible to dump it into the environment and the gov't is arranging
to have the alcohol distilled for use in automobile fuels. No reports
on how much this is costing the taxpayer.
Smuggling of firearms is also up, as recent reports of seizures of arms
gain media attention.
Sound like an unstable smuggling environment to me, with markets
changing so fast that the suppliers are struggling to adapt.
Watch for trouble in OKA, Cornwall and Montreal this summer....
Pat
|
787.228 | To stir the pot | POLAR::ROBINSONP | Bring back the stubby | Tue Aug 02 1994 13:45 | 23 |
|
<><><><><><><><> T h e V O G O N N e w s S e r v i c e <><><><><><><><>
Edition : 3127 Tuesday 2-Aug-1994 Circulation : 5843
VNS MAIN NEWS ..................................... 38 Lines
VNS COMPUTER NEWS ................................. 236 "
For information on how to subscribe to VNS, ordering backissues, contacting
VNS staff members, etc, send a mail to EXPAT::EXPAT with a subject of HELP.
Gun attacks on police in London increased by almost 600 per cent last
year, prompting Sir Paul Condon, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner,
to call yesterday for stricter regulation of the firearms trade.
********************************************************************************
(of course it works, we just need more of it....)
|
787.229 | | XAPPL::HINXMAN | Be not too hard | Tue Aug 02 1994 14:08 | 11 |
| For a fuller account of what he said see
loblo::ef94
note 5.1808, in particular,
Police chief Sir Paul Condon said: "We are not a gun culture like the
United States. We have still the possibility to keep on top of it and
the answer is not to arm the police but to stay on top of the
acquisition of guns."
Tony
|