The fancy is all in Peter's head. Poor soul.
> The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist. The arms
> used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources. They are
> not home-made, they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
> especially for the criminal market.
pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:
>harmless. It's the ready availability of firearms that bugs me. Where do
>you think the people who haven't bothered registering their weapons get
>their firearms? Some underground arms bazaar, perhaps? No, the weapons
>originate from legal sources.
Brian Miller
^^^^^^^^^^^^
Yes, the guns are purchased from an "underground arms bazaar". It's the
same
bazaar which allows cocaine, heroine, and marijuana to be readily
available.
Of course all the guns originally came from a legal source: A legal gun
owner
whose weapon is stolen. (Police also get weapons stolen from them.)
Oh, yes,
let's not forget the bazaar where that German woman purchased a live
hand
grenade for a Christmas mass. The even tighter controls on grenade
distribution didn't stop that purchase.
--
Jim Nicholson
http://www.tsra.com
Read John Ross' Unintended Consequences while you still can.
Birth is the main cause of death. B.C.-J. Hart (Jan. 13,'97)
Now, I ask you folks. Who was talking what.
Peter
^^^^^
> I can't help but notice the shrieks of silence on
>this topic from the dedicated gun enthusiasts. They pick up on every minor
>detail, and split hares, but on this point, they let it through to the
>keeper.
Allan Peyton
^^^^^^^^^^^^
I see them ignoring the very worst of your buffoonery, Peter, as do I.
Such a lot of your stuff is simply not worth responding to, and your
"Bald + fat + lots of sweat glands = gun-owner" equation would have to
be even sillier than your usual fare.
It's hard to believe he was having that much fun. To wit:
Peter
^^^^^
>The point is, if he'd used a bolt action rifle, some one would have walked
>up and grappled with him or beat him over the head with a wine bottle or
>something. Bryant wasn't a trained marksman or anything. It requires bugger
>all training to pull the trigger on an SLR, but if you want a decent rate
>of fire with a bolt action *and* accuracy, you've got to be very skilled.
addinall
^^^^^^^^
Not so Pete. Remember this loony took _hours_ to off all his victims.
Why not grapple him anyway, semi-auto or not? It would be better
if someone was carrying a .357 in a coat and blown the dick into bits.
Given the accuracy and rate of fire issue. A very good shooter
Brian Seargent recently shot a perfect with a 103 year old swede
against M1's AR15, M16's and not a few old .30's. Although he is
_very_ skilled. So what do we ban next, skilled people?
It really got too hot for Peter:
Here's a sample where Stacey C. ripped his illogic:
Peter
^^^^^
: Yeah, but it's relatively easy to defend yourself against clubs and
sticks
: and knives. Hold up a stout chair and your clubber's blows are
diverted.
: Takes a longer time to kill someone too. But it's difficult to deflect
a
: bullet.
Stacey C.
^^^^^^^^
Where are you going to find a holster for a chair, Peter? (Mental
picture of McKay carrying a chair with him where-ever he goes; :-))
Also,
you're ignoring the fact that guns are a very SIMPLE item to make; I've
seen and fired guns that were made entirely IN PRISON. If someone can
make
a gun in prison, they can sure as hell make one on the outside. Here in
Canada, you can walk into a hardware store with $10 and buy everything
you
need to make a 12-gauge (single-barrel, double-barreled, sawed-off,
etc.),
and it'll work just as well for killing someone or robbing a bank as any
commercially-made gun. Maybe your next step is to ban all tubing, gas
furnaces, toilets, etc.?
Stacey C.
I guess his misreader or his ranting ran past the post I gave him on
6'1", 198 pounds. Not bald either folks. Not gonna make any wild claims
on that age. Point is. Prithee tell me what that has to do with the RKBA
debate that he prolonged.
>
> Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
> I think I speak for all aus.politics readers when I suggest that this
> discussion has gone on long enough.
>
In other words, I'm right, so shut up already.
>
> In Australia, self-defence is not a valid reason to own a firearm,
>
In other words, no right to life.
>
> we have
> a low firearm-related death rate, and the Uniform Firearm Legislation is
> well-supported by all major political parties (and the Democrats and
> Greens) as well as the general community, and is a significant victory for
> the Prime Minister in the wake of the Port Arthur tragedy.
>
Everybody agrees its so, so it must be so.
>
> The arguments for general or wider availability are specious in the
> extreme, and boil down to a few points:
>
> The US Second Amendment. Not applicable here, and a load of crap anyway.
>
Obviously specious! No need to consider serious questions that men
have been debating for hundreds if not thousands of years, just
call it "a load of crap". (Don't think, just shout down your
opponents. Might is right.)
>
> The armed forces are the proper defenders of national sovereignty, and if
> citizens have to carry firearms in case their government turns nasty, well,
> what can I say that hasn't been said about Waco or Oklahoma City?
>
Indeed, we wonder -- what can you say? Apparently, nothing at all.
>
> The right of self-defence. We don't need firearms in Australia to defend
> ourselves.
>
Sheeesh. I knew Australians were special people, but I had no
idea they were innately invulnerable. Sort of like that
good ole American hero, Superman. I guess you all really don't
need guns!
>
> Maybe some people feel a need to sleep with an unsecured and
> loaded gun, but not here.
>
Note: its not whether you need to have a firearm, but "how
you feel" about it thats important. (Don't, whatever you do,
think. Feel.)
>
> I rather think that in the US, the problem is the
> number of gun owners and armed citizens, regardless of attempts to convince
> me that criminals are neither owners nor citizens, or that the law-abidin'
> gun-toters are immune from committing crimes.
>
Yep, the problem is all those gun owners. Not to mention all
those guns out shooting people.
>
> The notion that armed criminals will somehow not defend themselves against
> attempts by sleepy armed householders to shoot them. This really needs no
> debate.
>
Note: you are not to defend yourself in your own home, because
an armed criminal might "defend himself". No need for debate!
>
> The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist.
>
Imagine that. Decades of serious criminological research down
the drain. No need to look for the answer, we know it already.
>
> The arms
> used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources. They are
> not home-made, they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
> especially for the criminal market.
>
> And then there's all the sidetracks we've explored over the various
> firearms, the dimensions of their ammunition and whether they are designed
> to kill or not. Millions of soldiers killed in wars, tens of thousands of
> US citizens and 35 people killed at Port Arthur are good enough reason for
> me to believe that they are indeed lethal.
>
> Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
> arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
> beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter,
>
Not resorting to ad hominen, are we? Why do this when its so
EASY to defeat all those obviously specious arguments?
>
> but
> in fairness to my fellow aus.politics members, I'll refrain from commenting
> on the subject unless it relates to Australian politics or I can get in a
> really good shot at some muggins.
>
> So if the nutters want the last word, go for it. I won't be listening. I'm
> going to reinstall that "gun" filter on my newsreader and get back to some
> real debate, which is shooting down the myths of the republicans, sniping
> at the Democrats, blazing away at ATSIC, discussing the prospects in
> by-elections and trying to inject a little fun into the group.
>
> Thanks for all the fun, fellows, but there's not a lot of point in
> continuing. The Uniform Firearm Legislation is a done deal and is not going
> to be reversed. You want to demonstrate that I'm wrong, go get a few people
> elected to Parliament. Hell, I sincerely hope you do get a few senators up
> - that'd wipe the smile from Kernot's dial.
>
> But if you want to talk shit, stick to the gun groups.
>
Howabout eating shit? Seriously, we can only pray that we live
to see the day that teaming hordes of Chinese Communists land
on your shores. As you are dragged off to the death camp, will
you wish you had a gun to fight back? Probably not.
Actually, you probably already have one or two stashed away
already. Sort of like our famous Mr. Rowan, another big
gun control advocate.
_
8<---------------------------------------------------
Peter Nield, Systems Engineer, Datacom Systems Limted
mailto:pet...@datacom.co.nz
aka Pidge aka P-Jay aka Peter-John
--------------------------------------------------->8
In Australia, self-defence is not a valid reason to own a firearm, we have
a low firearm-related death rate, and the Uniform Firearm Legislation is
well-supported by all major political parties (and the Democrats and
Greens) as well as the general community, and is a significant victory for
the Prime Minister in the wake of the Port Arthur tragedy.
The arguments for general or wider availability are specious in the
extreme, and boil down to a few points:
The US Second Amendment. Not applicable here, and a load of crap anyway.
The armed forces are the proper defenders of national sovereignty, and if
citizens have to carry firearms in case their government turns nasty, well,
what can I say that hasn't been said about Waco or Oklahoma City?
The right of self-defence. We don't need firearms in Australia to defend
ourselves. Maybe some people feel a need to sleep with an unsecured and
loaded gun, but not here. I rather think that in the US, the problem is the
number of gun owners and armed citizens, regardless of attempts to convince
me that criminals are neither owners nor citizens, or that the law-abidin'
gun-toters are immune from committing crimes.
The notion that armed criminals will somehow not defend themselves against
attempts by sleepy armed householders to shoot them. This really needs no
debate.
The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist. The arms
used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources. They are
not home-made, they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
especially for the criminal market.
And then there's all the sidetracks we've explored over the various
firearms, the dimensions of their ammunition and whether they are designed
to kill or not. Millions of soldiers killed in wars, tens of thousands of
US citizens and 35 people killed at Port Arthur are good enough reason for
me to believe that they are indeed lethal.
Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter, but
in fairness to my fellow aus.politics members, I'll refrain from commenting
on the subject unless it relates to Australian politics or I can get in a
really good shot at some muggins.
So if the nutters want the last word, go for it. I won't be listening. I'm
going to reinstall that "gun" filter on my newsreader and get back to some
real debate, which is shooting down the myths of the republicans, sniping
at the Democrats, blazing away at ATSIC, discussing the prospects in
by-elections and trying to inject a little fun into the group.
Thanks for all the fun, fellows, but there's not a lot of point in
continuing. The Uniform Firearm Legislation is a done deal and is not going
to be reversed. You want to demonstrate that I'm wrong, go get a few people
elected to Parliament. Hell, I sincerely hope you do get a few senators up
- that'd wipe the smile from Kernot's dial.
But if you want to talk shit, stick to the gun groups.
Thank you.
~ m
u U Cheers!
\|
|> -Peter Mackay
/ \ pete...@netinfo.com.au
_\ /_
>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
>I think I speak for all aus.politics readers when I suggest that this
>discussion has gone on long enough.
Hey! Allan Peyton Smith!!! Is this what old peter does when things
start getting to tight for him? Takes his 'filter' and goes home!
Knowing Peter, this is just a feint!
>pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:
Sure does. He did the same thing around June last year. If you think
his crap was bad this time around, you oughta check Deja News around
that period. He ran totally out of arguments, and was relying on
making fun of a certain person's hyphenated name. :-)
Shortly after that, he turned on his filter.
I'm disappointed that he's left again so soon, there are quite a few
questions I asked which he ignored totally. Also, I would have liked
an answer to an excellent one Col asked. Aah, who cares.
Please try to go a bit easier on Bwian, eh, else we're going to run
out of gun-grabbers. :-) (I must say, you did a thorough job on Bwian,
especially in the debate about GW. Great stuff!)
>Knowing Peter, this is just a feint!
Dunno. We'll have to see. He's a fascinating character, there's no
doubt whatsoever.
"Ideas are more dangerous than guns. We wouldn't let our enemies
have guns, why should we let them have ideas?
-Joseph Stalin
>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
ROTFL!! Sorry Petey, you're that one getting cut to ribbons lately...
>I think I speak for all aus.politics readers when I suggest that this
>discussion has gone on long enough.
Awfully nice of you to speak for "all" aus.politics readers...
>In Australia, self-defence is not a valid reason to own a firearm,
...according to politicians...
we have
>a low firearm-related death rate,
As do we in Canada...
and the Uniform Firearm Legislation is
>well-supported by all major political parties (and the Democrats and
>Greens) as well as the general community, and is a significant victory for
>the Prime Minister in the wake of the Port Arthur tragedy.
>
>The arguments for general or wider availability are specious
Sez you.
in the
>extreme, and boil down to a few points:
>
>The US Second Amendment. Not applicable here, and a load of crap anyway.
>The armed forces are the proper defenders of national sovereignty, and if
>citizens have to carry firearms in case their government turns nasty, well,
>what can I say that hasn't been said about Waco or Oklahoma City?
>
>The right of self-defence. We don't need firearms in Australia to defend
>ourselves.
Nice of you to speak for all Australians.
Maybe some people feel a need to sleep with an unsecured and
>loaded gun, but not here. I rather think that in the US, the problem is the
>number of gun owners and armed citizens,
What "problem"? Violent crime? This is due to gun owners?
regardless of attempts to convince
>me that criminals are neither owners nor citizens, or that the law-abidin'
>gun-toters are immune from committing crimes.
The vast, vast majority, are in fact, law abiding.
>The notion that armed criminals will somehow not defend themselves against
>attempts by sleepy armed householders to shoot them. This really needs no
>debate.
The fact is that there's more burlaries/break and enters per capita
in Oz than either the US or Canada. Could it have something to do with
"more guns" per capita in the latter two countries?
>The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist.
No, not in your utopia.
The arms
>used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources.
All of them? Simply amazing!
They are
>not home-made,
None of them?
they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
>especially for the criminal market.
>
>And then there's all the sidetracks we've explored over the various
>firearms, the dimensions of their ammunition and whether they are designed
>to kill or not. Millions of soldiers killed in wars, tens of thousands of
>US citizens and 35 people killed at Port Arthur are good enough reason for
>me to believe that they are indeed lethal.
Most firearms can be used with lethal effect, yes.
>Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
>arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
>beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter,
Amazing. Ad hominems usually indicate (as in this case) that the
debator is losing badly.
but
>in fairness to my fellow aus.politics members, I'll refrain from commenting
>on the subject unless it relates to Australian politics or I can get in a
>really good shot at some muggins.
You just don't get it. Oz passed a law banning semi-auto and pump
long guns. The reason that we Canadians and Americans have been posting
is to simply voice our opinion that your gov't is wasting a horrible
amount of YOUR money, will be confiscating personal property (some of
which is generations in the family), and will be "creating" criminals
out of otherwise perfectly law-abiding folks. But this doesn't bother
you, no, of course not, and you know why, Petey? Because it doesn't
effect YOU (other than your tax dollars being wasted).
>So if the nutters want the last word, go for it.
More desperate ad hominems.
I won't be listening. I'm
>going to reinstall that "gun" filter on my newsreader and get back to some
>real debate,
Could smell this coming a mile away (1.6 kms for y'all).
which is shooting down the myths of the republicans, sniping
>at the Democrats, blazing away at ATSIC, discussing the prospects in
>by-elections and trying to inject a little fun into the group.
>
>Thanks for all the fun, fellows, but there's not a lot of point in
>continuing.
Hmm, the closest I may have actually come to agreeing with you.
It's really, really sad what's happened in Oz, though. Both the
tragedy and the knee-jerk "law" from Jackboot Johnnie.
The Uniform Firearm Legislation is a done deal and is not going
>to be reversed.
Ah, never say never!
You want to demonstrate that I'm wrong, go get a few people
>elected to Parliament. Hell, I sincerely hope you do get a few senators up
>- that'd wipe the smile from Kernot's dial.
>
>But if you want to talk shit, stick to the gun groups.
>
>Thank you.
Yer welcome.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fred M. Davis VA3FD | These opinions are mine
Nepean, ON. | fmd...@nortel.com
http://www.magi.com/~freddo | fre...@magi.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
Andrew Toppan --- el...@wpi.edu
Rail, Sea and Air InfoPages and FAQ Archive (Military & TC FAQs)
[http://www.membrane.com/~elmer/] mirror [http://www.announce.com/~elmer/]
If Yoda so strong in force is, why words in right order he cannot put?
Peter Mackay <pete...@netinfo.com.au> wrote in article
<AF0CD8CC...@betty-p05.netinfo.com.au>...
> Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
> I think I speak for all aus.politics readers when I suggest that this
> discussion has gone on long enough.
Oh sure, how neat and tidy, just call off the debate because you think
you've won something.
>
> In Australia, self-defence is not a valid reason to own a firearm,
What a pity.
> we have
> a low firearm-related death rate, and the Uniform Firearm Legislation is
> well-supported by all major political parties (and the Democrats and
> Greens) as well as the general community, and is a significant victory for
> the Prime Minister in the wake of the Port Arthur tragedy.
>
> The arguments for general or wider availability are specious in the
> extreme,
Not when all the facts speak for themselves.
> and boil down to a few points:
>
> The US Second Amendment. Not applicable here, and a load of crap anyway.
Coming from someone that does not live under or seem to
have even a rudimentary comprehension of it, your lable of "load of
crap" does nothing but show your ignorance.
> The armed forces are the proper defenders of national sovereignty,
No more or no less than the people's militia.
> and if
> citizens have to carry firearms in case their government turns nasty, well,
> what can I say that hasn't been said about Waco or Oklahoma City?
It's not a matter of have to, it's a matter of the system being
setup that way from the very start.
>
> The right of self-defence. We don't need firearms in Australia to defend
> ourselves.
Speaking for yourself only, of course. It is this very "I know what's good
for you better than you do" attitude that's the probelm. However, it is
apparent
that you Aussies are quite willing to accept control of your lives. I do,
however
know of at least one Aussie that disagrees, and as a result, is now a U.S.
citizen.
> Maybe some people feel a need to sleep with an unsecured and
> loaded gun, but not here.
Again, speaking for yourself, of course.
> I rather think that in the US, the problem is the
> number of gun owners and armed citizens, regardless of attempts to convince
> me that criminals are neither owners nor citizens, or that the law-abidin'
> gun-toters are immune from committing crimes.
And it quite apparent that your thought processes are entirely incorrect.
>
> The notion that armed criminals will somehow not defend themselves against
> attempts by sleepy armed householders to shoot them. This really needs no
> debate.
And your point is?
>
> The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist. The arms
> used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources. They are
> not home-made, they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
> especially for the criminal market.
So you've been there mate? You know this for fact? Interesting
considering that every industrialized nation on this planet produces firearms
of one sort or another, and they all export them to other countries.
Let's see, I can name a few off the top of my head.....
Rossi (South America), Sig Sauer (Germany), Baretta (Italy), Kalashnikov
(Russia). Oh, and they all export to this country too.
Speaking of specious and a load of crap.....
>
> And then there's all the sidetracks we've explored over the various
> firearms, the dimensions of their ammunition and whether they are designed
> to kill or not. Millions of soldiers killed in wars, tens of thousands of
> US citizens and 35 people killed at Port Arthur are good enough reason for
> me to believe that they are indeed lethal.
And I don't think anyone is arguing against that.
>
> Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
> arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
> beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter, but
> in fairness to my fellow aus.politics members, I'll refrain from commenting
> on the subject unless it relates to Australian politics or I can get in a
> really good shot at some muggins.
Probably for the best. However, if you really are interested
in ending the discussion on your end, just say so and leave. Just
couldn't resist these parting shots though, eh?
>
> So if the nutters want the last word, go for it. I won't be listening. I'm
> going to reinstall that "gun" filter on my newsreader and get back to some
> real debate, which is shooting down the myths of the republicans, sniping
> at the Democrats, blazing away at ATSIC, discussing the prospects in
> by-elections and trying to inject a little fun into the group.
>
> Thanks for all the fun, fellows, but there's not a lot of point in
> continuing. The Uniform Firearm Legislation is a done deal and is not going
> to be reversed. You want to demonstrate that I'm wrong, go get a few people
> elected to Parliament. Hell, I sincerely hope you do get a few senators up
> - that'd wipe the smile from Kernot's dial.
>
> But if you want to talk shit, stick to the gun groups.
>
> Thank you.
>
> ~ m
> u U Cheers!
> \|
> |> -Peter Mackay
> / \ pete...@netinfo.com.au
> _\ /_
>
Good bye and good riddence!
Translation for Peter's post: I have no real logic and fact to argue with, so I
will just go back and stick my head in the sand with the rest of my
socialist brothers.
Your conceit is only exceeded by its complete lack of justification.
As one who does not now and has never owned a gun, I have seen
your arguments and unrelated side tracks (OKC had something
to do with guns?) totally dismantled by those who believe gun
ownership is a necessary right. I hope that the other causes you
believe in have more effective defenders than yourself.
Regards
On Thu, 23 Jan 1997 08:58:52 +1000, pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter
Mackay) wrote:
>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
>I think I speak for all aus.politics readers when I suggest that this
>discussion has gone on long enough.
>
>In Australia, self-defence is not a valid reason to own a firearm, we have
>a low firearm-related death rate, and the Uniform Firearm Legislation is
>well-supported by all major political parties (and the Democrats and
>Greens) as well as the general community, and is a significant victory for
>the Prime Minister in the wake of the Port Arthur tragedy.
>
>The arguments for general or wider availability are specious in the
>extreme, and boil down to a few points:
>
>The US Second Amendment. Not applicable here, and a load of crap anyway.
>The armed forces are the proper defenders of national sovereignty, and if
>citizens have to carry firearms in case their government turns nasty, well,
>what can I say that hasn't been said about Waco or Oklahoma City?
>
>The right of self-defence. We don't need firearms in Australia to defend
>ourselves. Maybe some people feel a need to sleep with an unsecured and
>loaded gun, but not here. I rather think that in the US, the problem is the
>number of gun owners and armed citizens, regardless of attempts to convince
>me that criminals are neither owners nor citizens, or that the law-abidin'
>gun-toters are immune from committing crimes.
>
>The notion that armed criminals will somehow not defend themselves against
>attempts by sleepy armed householders to shoot them. This really needs no
>debate.
>
>The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist. The arms
>used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources. They are
>not home-made, they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
>especially for the criminal market.
>
>And then there's all the sidetracks we've explored over the various
>firearms, the dimensions of their ammunition and whether they are designed
>to kill or not. Millions of soldiers killed in wars, tens of thousands of
>US citizens and 35 people killed at Port Arthur are good enough reason for
>me to believe that they are indeed lethal.
>
>Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
>arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
>beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter, but
>in fairness to my fellow aus.politics members, I'll refrain from commenting
>on the subject unless it relates to Australian politics or I can get in a
>really good shot at some muggins.
>
>>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
>ROTFL!! Sorry Petey, you're that one getting cut to ribbons lately...
I think Peter Mackay is actually one of the few people in aus.politics
who doesn't either speak out of their arse, or speak viewpoints that
are someone else's poorly thought out idioms. Then again, I am biased
towards those who use their brain during the posting process.
Blackthorne
>
>
> Peter Mackay <pete...@netinfo.com.au> wrote in article
> <AF0CD8CC...@betty-p05.netinfo.com.au>...
> >
> > The right of self-defence. We don't need firearms in Australia to defend
> > ourselves.
>
> Speaking for yourself only, of course. It is this very "I know what's good
> for you better than you do" attitude that's the probelm. However, it is
> apparent
> that you Aussies are quite willing to accept control of your lives. I do,
> however
> know of at least one Aussie that disagrees, and as a result, is now a U.S.
> citizen.
So what?
I know of at least a dozen Americans whom have immigrated to
Australia exactly because they want to feel safer and not live in a
country which is so fucked up that everybody has to have a gun in order
to feel safe.
In one state (South Australia, if you're interested) the state
government ran a series of those "feel good" television adverts where
they interviewed public figures about why they liked living there. One
was an ex-American who made the statement that the reason why he like
living in Adelaide was because, "its just like Southern California,
except its a hell of a lot safer!"
If your ex-Australian left because of the gun control laws, I'd
be very surprised but so what? You're example proves little IMO (as does
mine). People live where they like, because they like it there. Such
choices are made upon many factors, some of which concern lifetstyle
(likes guns) or feelings of personal safety.
--Brian Ross--------------------------------------------------------------------
"Caius testiculos habes, habeas cardia et cerebellum"
Julius Caesar
http://mulder.waite.adelaide.edu.au/~bross/
A non-Aussie,
Jason
--
Jason Gottlieb
Come check out my home page!
http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~zj5j-gttl
Hmm, amazing what some media hysteria can achieve.
I didn't think it had such widespread support of the general public.
Politicans have to support the minority groups, as it is a "tyranny of
the minority" (Peter Drucker) where 5% of the vote is enough to decide
an issue as the other 95% cannot or willnot react in time or can't be
bothered.
Geoff
Ph/ Fax 64-9-2669936
Radar FAQ and Forte Agent automation FAQ both at
http://crash.ihug.co.nz/~geoff/
> fmd...@nortel.com (Fred Davis VA3FD) writes:
> >In article <AF0CD8CC...@betty-p05.netinfo.com.au>,
> >pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:
>
> >>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
>
> >ROTFL!! Sorry Petey, you're that one getting cut to ribbons lately...
>
> I think Peter Mackay is actually one of the few people in aus.politics
> who doesn't either speak out of their arse, or speak viewpoints that
> are someone else's poorly thought out idioms. Then again, I am biased
> towards those who use their brain during the posting process.
Thank you. I think that the ad hom, unthinking responses, as typified by
Fred, merely underscore my position.
>fmd...@nortel.com (Fred Davis VA3FD) writes:
>>In article <AF0CD8CC...@betty-p05.netinfo.com.au>,
>>pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:
>>>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
>>ROTFL!! Sorry Petey, you're that one getting cut to ribbons lately...
>I think Peter Mackay is actually one of the few people in aus.politics
>who doesn't either speak out of their arse, or speak viewpoints that
>are someone else's poorly thought out idioms. Then again, I am biased
>towards those who use their brain during the posting process.
Petey is quite brilliant when the facts are on his side. When they
aren't, he attempts to bury the entire debate under a pile of, well,
shit.
I recently counted near 70 posts in one day from him, most of them
aimed at the fire-arm debate, and most of them chock-full of absolute
rubbish. This behaviour is not normal.
His tactic appears to be to totally disrupt any debate (and the
fire-arm debate in particular) that he realizes he can't win. He has
been remarkably succesful. My guess is that very few people (other
than the actual participants) have been following the gun debate
threads, due to the tremendous amount of overburden that he's dumped
on them. I believe that's exactly what Mr Mackay set out to acheive.
I don't like what he's done, but I would defend (though not to the
death) his right to do it.
I do think it's a shame, though.
> Peter Mackay wrote:
> > Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
> > arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
> > beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter, but
>
> I guess his misreader or his ranting ran past the post I gave him on
> 6'1", 198 pounds. Not bald either folks. Not gonna make any wild claims
> on that age. Point is. Prithee tell me what that has to do with the RKBA
> debate that he prolonged.
I can only guess that Peter would like to ban guns from anyone over,
hmm, 60 or so? Basing this on his comments about the 85 year old
woman who killed her would-be rapist with her deceased husbands
handgun. Remember, Peter said it would have been OK if she had
spilled the criminals guts on the floor with a knife, but it was
definitely NOT OK with him that she used a gun.
Strange. Very strange.
>fmd...@nortel.com (Fred Davis VA3FD) writes:
>>In article <AF0CD8CC...@betty-p05.netinfo.com.au>,
>>pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:
>>>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
>>ROTFL!! Sorry Petey, you're that one getting cut to ribbons lately...
>I think Peter Mackay is actually one of the few people in aus.politics
>who doesn't either speak out of their arse, or speak viewpoints that
>are someone else's poorly thought out idioms.
ROTFL!!!
He may well be good at aus.politics, but he's the one being the arse
about the gun debate and says so himself!
>Then again, I am biased
>towards those who use their brain during the posting process.
Using your brain to publish bullshit = bullshit!
> Translation for Peter's post: I have no real logic and fact to argue with, so I
> will just go back and stick my head in the sand with the rest of my
> socialist brothers.
He wasn't doing *too* badly until that point. Peyton-Smith, perhaps you and
Done can debate exactly how much of a socialist I am!
Do it by e-mail. You won't embarrass yourselves in public.
PN> Peter Mackay wrote:
> The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist. The arms
> used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources. They are
> not home-made, they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
> especially for the criminal market.
PN> Where do stolen firearms go to?
Most of them are sold to the slightly grubby people who buy thing
from a bloke in the pub. That is where the money is if
you loot turns out to have some shooters in it.
Mostly guns would be stolen to order for people posing as
respectable members of the community, but not themselves into
armed robbery or similar, and for the sam reason cny other
person fancied to have a couple of guns in the cabinet. Whatever
that is.
-RodH-
___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.11
Excuse me. I think that the ad hom, unthinking responses, as typified by
Peter Mackay, merely underscore the position of the vast majority.
> I recently counted near 70 posts in one day from him, most of them
> aimed at the fire-arm debate, and most of them chock-full of absolute
> rubbish. This behaviour is not normal.
1. You're a fine one to talk about rubbish.
2. You weren't here during the election campaign, this time last year.
> I don't like what he's done, but I would defend (though not to the
> death) his right to do it.
Like being defended by a plate of warm lettuce. Er, thanks, Alan.
>In article <5c968a$9...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please (Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.co wrote:
>> I don't like what he's done, but I would defend (though not to the
>> death) his right to do it.
>Like being defended by a plate of warm lettuce.
Hmm. :-)
Well, anyway, it's the thought that counts, isn't it?
>Er, thanks, Alan.
No problemo, I'm sure you'd do the same for me.
"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniencies
attending too much liberty than those attending too
small a degree of it."
-Thomas Jefferson
: > I don't like what he's done, but I would defend (though not to the
: > death) his right to do it.
: Like being defended by a plate of warm lettuce. Er, thanks, Alan.
Of course, intelligent people understand that the rule of law survives
not becuasae of people being willing to die for it, but because of people
who are willing to kill for it.
--
---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------
Ring around the neutron, | "OK, so he's not terribly fearsome.
A pocket full of positrons,| But he certainly took us by surprise!"
A fission, a fusion, +--------------------------------------------------
We all fall down! | "Was anybody in the Maquis working for me?"
---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------
"I'd cut down ever Law in England to get at the Devil!"
"And what man could stand up in the wind that would blow once you'd cut
down all the laws?"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This message may not be carried on any server which places restrictions
on content.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
e-mail will be posted as I see fit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kris
Kris
This information flows both ways, sport. That was a size 9 shoe, wasn't
it? Lace on the underwear?
> Not that it makes any difference to me *what* Jim looks like, but it is
> amusing to see the fellow squirm.
What's amusing is to see a guy who has been ran off and hid and is now
trying to crawl back with gobbledegook.
> But gaze around your next NRA meeting, and look at the tall, trim, fit and
> healthy young men and women. Contrast them with the fat, overweight balding
> slobs at your army base. There should be one nearby - you fellows have
> quite a large standing army, not to mention the militia.
Looks like you're still driving around Canberra aimlessly with your left
blinker on.
: >Like being defended by a plate of warm lettuce.
: Hmm. :-)
: Well, anyway, it's the thought that counts, isn't it?
Please keep this discussion out of the .military newsgroups, as it has
little to do with them.
Edit your headers accordingly.
--
Roope J. Lehto
rjl...@kruuna.helsinki.fi
>In article <5c968a$9...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please (Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.co wrote:
>> I recently counted near 70 posts in one day from him, most of them
>> aimed at the fire-arm debate, and most of them chock-full of absolute
>> rubbish. This behaviour is not normal.
>1. You're a fine one to talk about rubbish.
Oh raspberry, Peter. It's not only me that thinks you're full of shit.
Our mates Longbow and Jim and Fred have been debating the gun issue
for a lot longer than you and I have, and they've all at some time
commented that you are the the worst they've ever seen.
I mean ter say.. When you start lampooning (unjustifiably, as it turns
out) someone's physical appearance.. Hey, Peter, all those fools who
attack Hanson because they think her eyes are too far apart, instead
of attacking her ideas.. are you really any better than they are?
>2. You weren't here during the election campaign, this time last year.
Hopefully the quality of your posts was better in those days.
>In article <5c7ush$bau$1...@wumpus.its.uow.edu.au>,
>sc...@uow.edu.au (Blackthorne) wrote:
>
>> fmd...@nortel.com (Fred Davis VA3FD) writes:
>> >In article <AF0CD8CC...@betty-p05.netinfo.com.au>,
>> >pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:
>>
>> >>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the gun fanciers,
>>
>> >ROTFL!! Sorry Petey, you're that one getting cut to ribbons lately...
>>
>> I think Peter Mackay is actually one of the few people in aus.politics
>> who doesn't either speak out of their arse, or speak viewpoints that
>> are someone else's poorly thought out idioms. Then again, I am biased
>> towards those who use their brain during the posting process.
>
>Thank you. I think that the ad hom, unthinking responses, as typified by
>Fred, merely underscore my position.
>
Hey, watch what you say about Fred!
I place an extremely high value on his opinion. I favour the recently
introduced gun controls and absolutely everything Fred has said
reinforces my views.
> >I think I speak for all aus.politics readers
____________________________________________________________________________
All three of you?
Take care, Kevin
> Peter Mackay wrote:
> > Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
> > arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
> > beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter, but
>
> I guess his misreader or his ranting ran past the post I gave him on
> 6'1", 198 pounds. Not bald either folks. Not gonna make any wild claims
> on that age. Point is. Prithee tell me what that has to do with the RKBA
> debate that he prolonged.
That height and weight can give you a paunch, Jim, and I notice you don't
tell us how much hair you have, just that you are not bald, nor your age,
nor your level of fitness. Yet you want to go toe to toe with the Russkis
(or someone). They'd be laughing so much they won't be able to shoot
straight, is that it?
Not that it makes any difference to me *what* Jim looks like, but it is
amusing to see the fellow squirm.
But gaze around your next NRA meeting, and look at the tall, trim, fit and
healthy young men and women. Contrast them with the fat, overweight balding
slobs at your army base. There should be one nearby - you fellows have
quite a large standing army, not to mention the militia.
~ m
>Yet you want to go toe to toe with the Russkis
>(or someone). They'd be laughing so much they won't be able to shoot
>straight, is that it?
Well now,Pete,aren't you the little fellow who blurted out the AK-47
was "wildly inacurate" and was only good for "spitting distance"?
(We know it was you) and of course the russkie's would be half
drunk on vodka or russian brake fluid (oh yes they do distil it ),so
add laughing now and they'd be easy prey for a little old lady
and a bolt action rifle! ;-)
Newsgroups: aus.politics,
talk.politics.guns,
can.talk.guns,
nz.general,
soc.culture.australian,
can.politics,
soc.culture.usa,
soc.culture.british,
alt.military,
alt.military.cadet,
alt.military.aas,
alt.military.police,
sci.military.naval,
alt.war,
soc.veterans
There is an excellent chance that the readers of those groups DON'T
WANT TO READ ABOUT GUN DEBATES. If we want to read about guns, we will
visit gun groups. Please PUT THIS DEBATE WHERE IT BELONGS.
Even if "the other guy" won't do it, be a mature, intelligent person and
cut the irrelevant newsgroups from the headers when you post an article.
Include a Followup-To: line to redirect further discussion to the
appropriate forums.
If you don't know how to choose which groups you are posting to,
you are not qualified to be posting at all.
Followups set.
---
Andrew Toppan --- el...@wpi.edu
Rail, Sea and Air InfoPages and FAQ Archive (Military & TC FAQs)
[http://www.membrane.com/~elmer/] mirror [http://www.announce.com/~elmer/]
If Yoda so strong in force is, why words in right order he cannot put?
Iceland?
miguel
Look bright-eyes. Australian culture is not American culture.
Aussies have their own way of looking at rights and their own laws
ensuring those they believe to be important. So to ask which of the
Bill of Rights he'd object to is, at its basis, a nonsensical
question.
> An old American saying is "God created man, Col. Colt made him equal"
Do you really not understand that other nations do not have the same
culture of violence that we have in the U.S.? Is it really that
difficult for you to understand that other nations do not feel the
need to be heavily armed? I mean really; all you're managing to do is
reinforce every negative stereotype the rest of the world has toward
Americans, since you seem incapable of accepting the fact that not
everyone on earth thinks like an American or wants to think like an
American.
=Bob
Sorry, Roope. It was one Peter Mackay that spammed you.
> In Message-ID <AF0F596B...@betty-p03.netinfo.com.au>,
> pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:-
>
> >In article <5c968a$9...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
> >Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please (Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.co wrote:
>
> >> I recently counted near 70 posts in one day from him, most of them
> >> aimed at the fire-arm debate, and most of them chock-full of absolute
> >> rubbish. This behaviour is not normal.
>
> >1. You're a fine one to talk about rubbish.
>
> Oh raspberry, Peter. It's not only me that thinks you're full of shit.
> Our mates Longbow and Jim and Fred have been debating the gun issue
> for a lot longer than you and I have, and they've all at some time
> commented that you are the the worst they've ever seen.
I think you should exempt Jim from your little group. Jim has some good
ideas, and his heart's in the right place.
>
> I mean ter say.. When you start lampooning (unjustifiably, as it turns
> out) someone's physical appearance.. Hey, Peter, all those fools who
> attack Hanson because they think her eyes are too far apart, instead
> of attacking her ideas.. are you really any better than they are?
Sorry, I really shouldn't. It's the thought of your average group of NRA
members imagining that they can defend the nation after the regulars and
the militia have swung and missed that brings tears to these weary old
eyes.
>>Much as I enjoy shooting down the emotional arguments of the
>>gun fanciers, I think I speak for all aus.politics readers when
>>I suggest that this discussion has gone on long enough.
>>
>>Thank you.
> Well, Peter, old man...throwing in the towel are you?
No, Yank. We're just terminally bored by idiotic cross-posts from
the world weaponry capital.
- -
alan
L
\-/
Goodness. APS is now a self-appointed arbiter of "normality".
On the banana republic!
--
R. Kym Horsell
KHor...@EE.Latrobe.EDU.AU k...@CS.Binghamton.EDU
http://WWW.EE.LaTrobe.EDU.AU/~khorsell http://CS.Binghamton.EDU/~kym
>In article <5c968a$9...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.com.au <Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please> wrote:
>>In Message-ID <5c7ush$bau$1...@wumpus.its.uow.edu.au>,
>>[talking about someone else]
>>This behaviour is not normal.
>Goodness. APS is now a self-appointed arbiter of "normality".
>On the banana republic!
Kym, I'm impressed! Not one single spelling mistake in your entire
post.
Well done, old man!
(BTW, are you fat and bald and sweaty? There seems to be a bit of a
fascination with these things around these parts lately.)
And violent crime capital, and murder capital, and hate crime capital,
and child abuse capital.
The gun nuts never see a correlation between guns and crime and
violence. All they, with their tunnel vision, see is what they want to
see. And what they want to see does not correspond with reality.
So work hard to keep guns out of Australia. If guns ever get as
prevalent in your country as they are here, your country will,
unfortunately, become more like us than you are now, which will be too
bad for you.
>In article <5cbq9p$v...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please (Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.co wrote:
>> In Message-ID <AF0F596B...@betty-p03.netinfo.com.au>,
>> pete...@netinfo.com.au (Peter Mackay) wrote:-
>>
>> >In article <5c968a$9...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>> >Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please (Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.co wrote:
>>
>> >> I recently counted near 70 posts in one day from him, most of them
>> >> aimed at the fire-arm debate, and most of them chock-full of absolute
>> >> rubbish. This behaviour is not normal.
>>
>> >1. You're a fine one to talk about rubbish.
>>
>> Oh raspberry, Peter. It's not only me that thinks you're full of shit.
>> Our mates Longbow and Jim and Fred have been debating the gun issue
>> for a lot longer than you and I have, and they've all at some time
>> commented that you are the the worst they've ever seen.
>I think you should exempt Jim from your little group. Jim has some good
>ideas, and his heart's in the right place.
>>
>> I mean ter say.. When you start lampooning (unjustifiably, as it turns
>> out) someone's physical appearance.. Hey, Peter, all those fools who
>> attack Hanson because they think her eyes are too far apart, instead
>> of attacking her ideas.. are you really any better than they are?
>Sorry, I really shouldn't. It's the thought of your average group of NRA
>members imagining that they can defend the nation after the regulars and
>the militia have swung and missed that brings tears to these weary old
>eyes.
That may or may not be a tear-jerker scenario, Petey, but so far I
think you're the only one that has offered up that particular
strawperson. Maybe Bwian did, too, I don't remember.
Maybe it's because he can can look at the issue from outside. He if
anyone would be able to avoid subjectivity. (Although he may exhibit
some bias against those different from him, those burdened with
"normality").
Rgds
Warwick
You is eesily impressed. So I can't take thus as evidunce of enythung
very mush.
Now! If you'd said "that was well-reasoned you lefty pinko scumbag", I
would have takin ut as a comploment.
>In article <5c968a$9...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.com.au <Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please> wrote:
>>In Message-ID <5c7ush$bau$1...@wumpus.its.uow.edu.au>,
>>[talking about someone else]
>>This behaviour is not normal.
>
>Goodness. APS is now a self-appointed arbiter of "normality".
>
>On the banana republic!
I must say Kym, you've been very quiet lately. I've almost missed you.
Don't tell me you have to pay for your internet account now ;-)
Owen Dare
>In article <32E6E0...@iamerica.net>,
>"James D. Nicholson" <jam...@iamerica.net> wrote:
>
>> Peter Mackay wrote:
>> > Now, I enjoy this stuff - it's amusing for me to knock holes in specious
>> > arguments and watch poor Jim Nicholson try to pretend that he isn't an
>> > beer-bellied, balding, middle-aged and most unlikely freedom fighter, but
>>
>> I guess his misreader or his ranting ran past the post I gave him on
>> 6'1", 198 pounds. Not bald either folks. Not gonna make any wild claims
>> on that age. Point is. Prithee tell me what that has to do with the RKBA
>> debate that he prolonged.
>
>That height and weight can give you a paunch, Jim, and I notice you don't
>tell us how much hair you have, just that you are not bald, nor your age,
>nor your level of fitness. Yet you want to go toe to toe with the Russkis
>(or someone). They'd be laughing so much they won't be able to shoot
>straight, is that it?
Whattsa matter Petey, these fellas don't fit your idea of the master race?
> ~ m
> u U Cheers!
> \|
> |> -Peter Mackay
> / \ pete...@netinfo.com.au
> _\ /_
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fred Davis VA3FD http://www.magi.com/~freddo
Stittsville, ON fre...@magi.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The thing that amazes me is the number of people in the world who don't
want to immigrate to the United States, and who think that the United
States is socially a Third World Nation.
>In article <5chun6$8...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.com.au <Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please> wrote:
>>In Message-ID <5ch9ta$9...@laplace.ee.latrobe.edu.au>,
>>khor...@ee.latrobe.edu.au (Kym Horsell) wrote:-
>>
>>>In article <5c968a$9...@reader1.reader.news.ozemail.net>,
>>>Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.com.au <Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please> wrote:
>>>>In Message-ID <5c7ush$bau$1...@wumpus.its.uow.edu.au>,
>>>>[talking about someone else]
>>>>This behaviour is not normal.
>>
>>>Goodness. APS is now a self-appointed arbiter of "normality".
>>
>>>On the banana republic!
>>
>>Kym, I'm impressed! Not one single spelling mistake in your entire
>>post.
>You is eesily impressed. So I can't take thus as evidunce of enythung
>very mush.
>Now! If you'd said "that was well-reasoned you lefty pinko scumbag", I
>would have takin ut as a comploment.
Dream on.
--------------------------------------------------------
"As with the Christian religion, the worst advertisement
for Socialism is its adherents."
-George Orwell.
-------------------------------------------------------
I notice that you're from Maine. This explains not all, but much.
You see, New England is calm, serene, and peaceful to much an extent.
Kind of like the Atlantic provinces with money all the same colour.
From what people have been saying here: Vermont, New England, Maine,
etc. have the lowest gun abuse rate in the States despite having similar
levels of gun ownership.
--
Lars Ormberg
(I don't know where Mr. T lives. Stop phoning my home)
la...@gpu.srv.ualberta.ca
__
The Commodore's webpage is bigger, badder, and more Java-packed than
ever before! Take a tour at http://www.ualberta.ca/~larso/ and have
an experience only categorizable as Lars On-Line!
* The Borg--our most lethal enemy--have begun an invasion of the
Federation. The assimilation continues...STAR TREK:FIRST CONTACT is
still showing in theatres across the country. (Oh, and some Star Wars
thing is supposedly on as well. Like anybody cares).
Why do people smoke, drink and gamble?
On the other hand, seems an increasing number of Americans want to
emmigrate. Looking through some Reports of the President in past years,
I noted a jump from around 4 mn Americans living outside the US
in 1989 to more than 14 mn by 1992. (I also note the Report no longer
distingusihes between those American citizens living permanently outside
the country, or just on extended trips as MD's of "O/S" companies).
In Australia we've seen (and has been recently remarked even on the
more staid news services) a marked increase in US-citizen MD's of
Aussie-based banks and economic consultancies (and quite a lot else).
No doubt this partly explains the increasing complaints about US-style
bank charegs (e.g. $25 to get a duplicate statement; and similar charges
for cancelling cheques &ct at one such Aus-side example thereof), and
soaring exec sallaries ("to be consistent with ``international'' standards
for executive sallaries").
No doubt -- in the case of Aus -- this is made all the more convenient
by the recent streamlining of visa requirements for business visitors;
something the US was more-or-less trying to strong-arm through the Fed
govt for the past few years.
On the other hand, "we" always have Uncle Rupert and one Hell of a lot of
ex-pat medical researchers State-side. ;-)
>>Do you really not understand that other nations do not have the same
>>culture of violence that we have in the U.S.? Is it really that
>>difficult for you to understand that other nations do not feel the
>>need to be heavily armed? I mean really; all you're managing to do is
>>reinforce every negative stereotype the rest of the world has toward
>>Americans, since you seem incapable of accepting the fact that not
>>everyone on earth thinks like an American or wants to think like an
>>American.
>>
>>=Bob
>>
>>
>>
>Funny, why is it that so many want to immigrate here?
Exactly. Many thousands of refugee men, women and children risk their
lives each year, trying to get to a place where they have some sort of
protection against government and non-government criminals.
>> >I think I speak for all aus.politics readers
Don't do that...
Just speak for yourself...
As for this incessant crossposting????
B. S.
It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
>Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.com.au wrote:
>>
>> In Message-ID <32eccd02...@news.agate.net>,
>> b...@time.net (LL) wrote:-
>>
>> >>Do you really not understand that other nations do not have the same
>> >>culture of violence that we have in the U.S.? Is it really that
>> >>difficult for you to understand that other nations do not feel the
>> >>need to be heavily armed? I mean really; all you're managing to do is
>> >>reinforce every negative stereotype the rest of the world has toward
>> >>Americans, since you seem incapable of accepting the fact that not
>> >>everyone on earth thinks like an American or wants to think like an
>> >>American.
>> >>
>> >>=Bob
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >Funny, why is it that so many want to immigrate here?
>>
>> Exactly. Many thousands of refugee men, women and children risk their
>> lives each year, trying to get to a place where they have some sort of
>> protection against government and non-government criminals.
>It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
>forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
>Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
I would expect so. The more oppressive the government, the more likely
they are to have total gun prohibition.
To answer the last question: The US provides free, free, free food, medical
care, housing, and the everyday citizen provides in addition the latter
protection. LOCK THE GATES, save our hard earned dollars.
>Do you really not understand that other nations do not have the same
>culture of violence that we have in the U.S.? Is it really that
>difficult for you to understand that other nations do not feel the
>need to be heavily armed? I mean really; all you're managing to do is
>reinforce every negative stereotype the rest of the world has toward
>Americans, since you seem incapable of accepting the fact that not
>everyone on earth thinks like an American or wants to think like an
>American.
>
>=Bob
>
>
>
Ll> Funny, why is it that so many want to immigrate here?
Ll> J
Well that might be because US corporations with the encouragement
of the US government have gotten their hands on an unreasonably
large fraction of the planets money. Some would say that this has
been brought about rather often by means foul as well as by means
fair.
People migrating to the USA clearly do so in trepidation of the
known personal dangers but in order to get ther hands on some of
that money.
There is also the problem that many immigrants to the USA come from
countries where the danger in the streets (and other social ills)
is greater than in the USA because there are de-facto civil wars
going on as surrogate for (among other things) the failure of the
US society to curb cocain use by its corporate and administrative
elites. That is, the external drug war is an externalization of
the stresses caused by the US's failure to be a moral society.
-RodH-
___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.11
>Alan Peyton-Smith=av...@tpgi.com.au wrote:
>>
>> In Message-ID <32eccd02...@news.agate.net>,
>> b...@time.net (LL) wrote:-
>>
>> >>Do you really not understand that other nations do not have the same
>> >>culture of violence that we have in the U.S.? Is it really that
>> >>difficult for you to understand that other nations do not feel the
>> >>need to be heavily armed? I mean really; all you're managing to do is
>> >>reinforce every negative stereotype the rest of the world has toward
>> >>Americans, since you seem incapable of accepting the fact that not
>> >>everyone on earth thinks like an American or wants to think like an
>> >>American.
>> >Funny, why is it that so many want to immigrate here?
Why is it that the jingoists on here can never come up with a better
argument than "they want to immigrate here". There are around 4 or 5
billion people on this planet. The fact that a few million want to
immigrate to the U.S. doesn't mean a whole hell of a lot.
>> Exactly. Many thousands of refugee men, women and children risk their
>> lives each year, trying to get to a place where they have some sort of
>> protection against government and non-government criminals.
And a hell of a lot of them go to Canada or European countries. The
U.S. is hardly the only country that takes in refugees.
>It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
>forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
>Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
And virtually all of those people who left East Berlin settled in
Germany, not the U.S. I repeat; not everyone wants to be an American.
Learn to live with it.
=Bob
>LL wrote:
>> >
>> Funny, why is it that so many want to immigrate here?
>> J
>
>To answer the last question: The US provides free, free, free food, medical
>care, housing, and the everyday citizen provides in addition the latter
>protection. LOCK THE GATES, save our hard earned dollars.
No, they can get that in Oz.
The Aussie's I know moved here for economic freedom. Compared to Oz
our markets are like a street bazar.
Rick
I thought you had to buy medical insurance in the states, I didn't know
you had free medical care. When did this happen?
Nooo not every nation has the same culture of violence . but pick up any
issue of SOF from vol. 1 on and count the pictures of 9 yr olds carrying
Heavy weapons, and a big national geo. smile for the camera. How bout S.
Africa where a good time is sticking a tire full of gasoline soaked rags
around the neck of your political opponants and lighting it. As far as
everyone on earth, Idi Amin, Saddam Ass-ain, Pol POt and all the rest of
the tyrants Know that an unarmed population prevents anyone from
fighting back, so they damn sure dont't want to Think like americans.
As for the random Kook shooting up a bunch of people, I'd like to think
that the janitor of that school in scotland, or some poor anzac vet
wishes they had the right to keep and bear arms.Some damn fool would
then have had to hold memorial services for the Kooks after the fired
their first few rounds instead of burying innocent kids by the truck
load.
Finally, this is SCI.MILITARY.NAVAL! cross post this crap to alt binery
bugger me or some place else.
--
Timothy J. "SNORKLE" McCorkle
ex.MM1(ss)nuc [SSN-575,SSN-607]
"Gun Control is being able to hit the correctly designated Target before
it screws you."
>,_;-**o\oHo/o**-;_,<
>On Thu, 30 Jan 1997 23:56:35 GMT, Mary & Jim Roble <mro...@fyi.net>
>wrote:
>>LL wrote:
>>> >
>>> Funny, why is it that so many want to immigrate here?
>>> J
>>
>>To answer the last question: The US provides free, free, free food, medical
>>care, housing, and the everyday citizen provides in addition the latter
>>protection. LOCK THE GATES, save our hard earned dollars.
>No, they can get that in Oz.
>The Aussie's I know moved here for economic freedom. Compared to Oz
>our markets are like a street bazar.
>Rick
You are kidding right? The US is the last country in the world to believe in
free trade.
regards, Tim...
: I thought you had to buy medical insurance in the states, I didn't know
: you had free medical care. When did this happen?
A good many years ago. Government funded medical care for those over 65
and those on welfare. Those with good jobs get medical coverage as part
of their employment benefits, and the really wealthy can pay it out of
their personal funds.
The only problem is the working poor lack coverage. The solution for
this is to improove the employment of the working poor, not more
tax-financed medical coverage.
--
---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------
Ring around the neutron, | "OK, so he's not terribly fearsome.
A pocket full of positrons,| But he certainly took us by surprise!"
A fission, a fusion, +--------------------------------------------------
We all fall down! | "Was anybody in the Maquis working for me?"
---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------
"I'd cut down ever Law in England to get at the Devil!"
"And what man could stand up in the wind that would blow once you'd cut
down all the laws?"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This message may not be carried on any server which places restrictions
on content.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
e-mail will be posted as I see fit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Its been that way for a long time. If you are poor and can't pay you just
wait untill you are very sick and go to the emergency room at any
hospital. If you aren't near death they may ask you to wait some more but
if you are near death you'll get treated. Babies and trauma cases always
get treated too.
You sure are stupid, is it all that cold weather or what?
BiNM
-snips-
JDN> It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
JDN> forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
JDN> Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
And if they were armed they could have taken on the army of the
USSR and later the army of the Warsaw Pact?
Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
overthrow of the DDR?
The Soviets were too smart to allow them to be armed. Armed well
enough, the imprisonment would have ended sooner. Do you remember those
that were gunned down helplessly trying to crash the wall and the barbed
wire? Surely you have some compassion for the helplessness.
> Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
> overthrow of the DDR?
Do you mean the GDR?
>
> ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.11
--
Jim Nicholson
http://www.tsra.com
Read John Ross' Unintended Consequences-Now available from TSRA
Self-defence is Nature's eldest law.
John Dryden (1631-1700), English poet, dramatist, critic. Absalom and
Achitophel
>@unb.ca wrote:
>: > To answer the last question: The US provides free, free, free food, medical
>: > care, housing, and the everyday citizen provides in addition the latter
>: > protection. LOCK THE GATES, save our hard earned dollars.
>
>: I thought you had to buy medical insurance in the states, I didn't know
>: you had free medical care. When did this happen?
>
>A good many years ago. Government funded medical care for those over 65
>and those on welfare. Those with good jobs get medical coverage as part
>of their employment benefits, and the really wealthy can pay it out of
>their personal funds.
>
>The only problem is the working poor lack coverage. The solution for
>this is to improove the employment of the working poor, not more
>tax-financed medical coverage.
Oh, I see. So you're going to improve the employment of every working
person in the country to the point where they only work for companies
that offer health care as a benefit. There's a brilliant idea. Guess
we'll see an end to fast food restaurants (or restaurants in general),
warehouses, courier services, large farms and ranches, dry cleaning
establishments and the thousands of other small businesses that don't
currently offer health coverage. Guess everyone will be a bank
president.
Do you actually live in the real world?
=Bob
DLE> The only problem is the working poor lack coverage. The solution for
DLE> this is to improove the employment of the working poor, not more
DLE> tax-financed medical coverage.
As an aside I will point out that a properly organized public
medical system does, in many countries, provide a very high
standard of medical care at a much lower unit cost than the
private medical services in the USA. See what Ross Perot has
to say in that subject.
But I take it from you proposed remedy that you propose a major
hike in the mandatory minimum wage. I don't disagree with this
but are you ready for the consequences of this proposal.
> -=> Quoting James D Nicholson to All <=-
>-snips-
> JDN> It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
> JDN> forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
> JDN> Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
>And if they were armed they could have taken on the army of the
>USSR and later the army of the Warsaw Pact?
Had they been armed, they'd not have been in that position in the
first place, IOW, they'd not have been so easily placed under the heel
of a dictatorial, opressive regime.
>Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
>overthrow of the DDR?
Unquestionably so.
>___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.11
: Unfortunately, the working poor tend to be those with inadequate education, or
: saleable skills, sometimes coupled with a lack of motivation to emprove their
: conditions. There is a substaintial demand at all times for plumbers,
: electricians, brick masons, pipe fitters and a wide variety of so called
: skilled and semi-skilled labor. Do they fair well? certainly they do. It's
: well know among those who track such things, that during of poor econimic
: times those in the "trades" do very well. Consequently, I don't think it's a
: matter of providing more or better employment so much as it is providing
: better and more skilled employees.
: What we need to give people is not money (because they give that away for
: stuff) but skills (which they can dispense and get money for).
And this comes down to the same thing: Improving the employment by
improving the employee.
: You know...The old "give a fish-catch a fish" routine.
: Adam
>The only problem is the working poor lack coverage. The solution for
>this is to improove the employment of the working poor, not more
>tax-financed medical coverage.
Yeah, good one David... how long do you expect your employment programme (I
assume you have one all figured out) to have to operate before the problem
of low pay is eliminated? Please express your answer in either decades or
"tens of millions dead from curable illness".
Cheers.
Tony
======================================Have=You=Killed=A=Sig=Today?==
Tony Sutorius Aspiring Groover to...@central.co.nz
12 Reserve Road Mobile (025)479683
Plimmerton, New Zealand Ph(+644)2339090 Fx(+644)2330990
documentaryfilmmakerresearcherwriterconsultanttupfaqerfirefighteretc
============| "Hukt on Foniks" - It werkt fore mee! |===============
> In Message-ID <8D13337.027A...@mcc.com.au>,
> rod.h...@mcc.com.au (ROD HIBBERD) wrote:-
>
> > -=> Quoting James D Nicholson to All <=-
>
>
> >-snips-
>
>
> > JDN> It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
> > JDN> forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
> > JDN> Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
>
> >And if they were armed they could have taken on the army of the
> >USSR and later the army of the Warsaw Pact?
>
> Had they been armed, they'd not have been in that position in the
> first place, IOW, they'd not have been so easily placed under the heel
> of a dictatorial, opressive regime.
Errr, last time I read a history book Allen, the Germans _were_
armed and resisting that "dictatorial, opressive[sic] regime" - or have
you forgotten that they were fighting WWII and lost it to the USSR, which
then allowed the USSR to set up what ever regime they wanted?
Oh, and BTW, they weren't defending democracy either. They were
defending their own "dictatorial, opressive[sic] regime"
Sheesh, another example of Allen's thumb being in his bum.
"He who forgets history is doomed to repeat it" said a famous man once.
> >Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
> >overthrow of the DDR?
>
> Unquestionably so.
Que?
Really? I don't remember any running gun battles in the streets
of Berlin in 1989 Allen.
--Brian Ross--------------------------------------------------------------------
"Caius testiculos habes, habeas cardia et cerebellum"
Julius Caesar
http://mulder.waite.adelaide.edu.au/~bross/
: >The only problem is the working poor lack coverage. The solution for
: >this is to improove the employment of the working poor, not more
: >tax-financed medical coverage.
: Yeah, good one David... how long do you expect your employment programme (I
: assume you have one all figured out) to have to operate before the problem
: of low pay is eliminated? Please express your answer in either decades or
: "tens of millions dead from curable illness".
You know what happens when socialists are allowed to run a country.
You're living through the results.
> On Sat, 25 Jan 1997 09:34:49 -0800, Kris Honeycutt& Joy Eddy
> <kri...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
>
> >Peter Mackay wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> The US Second Amendment. Not applicable here, and a load of crap anyway.
>
> >> Intresting that you think the 2nd ammend. is a load of crap. Which
> >other of out Bill of Rights do you find objectionable? Free Speech, Right
> >to an Attorney, Jury Trial, Right to Confront Accusers etc? Why don't we
> >just scrap the whole thing?
> > I am happy that you feel safe in your bed. I do not. Several times in
> >the past year in my city, people have broken into occuped homes, raped
> >the women and murdered the occupants (yes I am trying to move) Have you
> >ever been mugged, or had a gun pointed at you in traffic? I have. I have
> >never had to draw my pistol, but knowing that it is there is VERY
> >comforting.
>
> Look bright-eyes. Australian culture is not American culture.
> Aussies have their own way of looking at rights
Or rather not looking at them until its too late!
and their own laws
> ensuring those they believe to be important. So to ask which of the
> Bill of Rights he'd object to is, at its basis, a nonsensical
> question.
Not really, for without the second ammendmant the first cannot be enforced
by the populace. Without no 2 youre just putting your hope in a
'benevolent' government. (If there were such a thing)
>
> > An old American saying is "God created man, Col. Colt made him equal"
>
> Do you really not understand that other nations do not have the same
> culture of violence that we have in the U.S.?
Wake up you brain dead leftist! Look at the Mid-East Half the world is at war!!!
Man is not basically good, so quit believing the Liberal fairy tale that
he is!!!
Is it really that
> difficult for you to understand that other nations do not feel the
> need to be heavily armed?
Israel does! Go tell them to disarm!!! And they will tell you what an
ignorant fool you are!!! You would have told England to give up to Hitler!
I mean really; all you're managing to do is
> reinforce every negative stereotype the rest of the world has toward
> Americans, since you seem incapable of accepting the fact that not
> everyone on earth thinks like an American or wants to think like an
> American.
So if you dont want to, DONT BE AN AMERICAN!! MOVE TO CUBA!! Land of State
socialism, government health care and GUN CONTROL!!! A Liberal jellyfish
like you would love it there!!! Too bad youd have to lose your freedom of
speech!!
Jack D Papin
>
> =Bob
>On Sun, 2 Feb 1997 Aim_Jun...@sum1.else.please wrote:
>> In Message-ID <8D13337.027A...@mcc.com.au>,
>> rod.h...@mcc.com.au (ROD HIBBERD) wrote:-
>>
>> > -=> Quoting James D Nicholson to All <=-
>>
>>
>> >-snips-
>>
>>
>> > JDN> It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
>> > JDN> forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
>> > JDN> Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
>>
>> >And if they were armed they could have taken on the army of the
>> >USSR and later the army of the Warsaw Pact?
>>
>> Had they been armed, they'd not have been in that position in the
>> first place, IOW, they'd not have been so easily placed under the heel
>> of a dictatorial, opressive regime.
> Errr, last time I read a history book Allen, the Germans _were_
>armed and resisting that "dictatorial, opressive[sic] regime" - or have
>you forgotten that they were fighting WWII and lost it to the USSR, which
>then allowed the USSR to set up what ever regime they wanted?
Briny, I wasn't talking about WWII itself. I was talking about the
period since then, and up to the time the Wall came down. During that
time, the people had to live under a rather opressive government, a
government which, obviously, wouldn't have allowed civilian fire-arm
ownership. That's all I'm saying, it's quite simple really.
>> >Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
>> >overthrow of the DDR?
>>
>> Unquestionably so.
> Que?
> Really? I don't remember any running gun battles in the streets
>of Berlin in 1989 Allen.
Neither do I, Brian. The whole thing happened without a shot being
fired. Pretty much the same as the "freeing up" (such as it is) of the
rest of the USSR.
BiNM
Actually, the problem will solve itself. The sick and injured working
poor will all die off because they cannot afford medical attention.
That will also solve our working poor problem - who needs them? Some
people feel that the working poor deserve medical care also, but only if
it doesn't cost anything. Some Americans even think like Australians!
>: Yeah, good one David... how long do you expect your employment programme (I
>: assume you have one all figured out) to have to operate before the problem
>: of low pay is eliminated? Please express your answer in either decades or
>: "tens of millions dead from curable illness".
>
>You know what happens when socialists are allowed to run a country.
>You're living through the results.
Clearly your expertise on political economy is only exceeded by your
expertise on world geography and history.... where exactly do you think New
Zealand is?
Or do you have some bold new definition of socialism you'd like to share?
In anticipation....
.... Tony Sutorius
>
>The mythical underground arms supermarket. This doesn't exist. The arms
>used for criminal activities originate from legitimate sources. They are
>not home-made, they are not imported from Libya, and they are not made
>especially for the criminal market.
>
One question, how does all that herion get into our country?
It's smuggled in you fucking idiot.
Gotta wonder whether some people read thread titles.
~ m
u U Cheers!
\|
|> -Peter Mackay
/ \ pete...@netinfo.com.au
_\ /_
Leave us OUT of this. Following Dunblane, there is a strong debate on
gun control between the gun lobby, who wish to keep our existing
(strict) gun control laws (but enforce them better) and those who wish
to ban all guns altogether. The vast majority of UK public opinion
supports strict gun control in one form or another. The snowdrop
petition organised by the Dunblane parents called for a total ban on
handguns and attracted about 750,000 signitures. Not all other nations
feel the need to be heavily armed.
>> I mean really; all you're managing to do is
>> > reinforce every negative stereotype the rest of the world has toward
>> > Americans, since you seem incapable of accepting the fact that not
>> > everyone on earth thinks like an American or wants to think like an
>> > American.
>>
>> So if you dont want to, DONT BE AN AMERICAN!! MOVE TO CUBA!! Land of State
>> socialism, government health care and GUN CONTROL!!! A Liberal jellyfish
>> like you would love it there!!! Too bad youd have to lose your freedom of
>> speech!!
No. I don't want to be an American (though I admire many things about
the USA). I'll stay in UK (or Oz). Land of (new) socialism, government
health care (it's great!) and gun control (it works). As for freedom of
speech, well matey, what does this count as, eh ?
Seriously, we Brits do not understand the American obsession with guns.
I understand, and respect, an obsession for free speech, religious
freedom and justice but I do not understand why you allow thousands of
US citizens to be gunned down every year. Just what is the 2nd
ammendment, who are these weapons to be used by and against? Any
coherent answers would be appreciated.
regards
--
Dave Hill
> -=> Quoting James D Nicholson to All <=-
>-snips-
> JDN> It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
> JDN> forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
> JDN> Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
>And if they were armed they could have taken on the army of the
>USSR and later the army of the Warsaw Pact?
AP> Had they been armed, they'd not have been in that position in the
AP> first place, IOW, they'd not have been so easily placed under the heel
AP> of a dictatorial, opressive regime.
Back to the facts, please. At the time they were occupied by the
Russian Army while the Four Powers agreed to their interim fate.
There were also a large British and Russian armies sitting on the
border, the newly reconstituted Polish, Czech, and French armies
hemming them in; all of them hostile. A 'feedom loving' german
nationalist in the (later to become) DDR couldn't have farted and
gotten away with it.
>Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
>overthrow of the DDR?
AP> Unquestionably so.
Now I know you are pulling our legs.
JDN> ROD HIBBERD wrote:
>
> -=> Quoting James D Nicholson to All <=-
>
> -snips-
>
> JDN> It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
> JDN> forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
> JDN> Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
>
> And if they were armed they could have taken on the army of the
> USSR and later the army of the Warsaw Pact?
JDN> The Soviets were too smart to allow them to be armed.
Of course not. The Krauts were the bad guys at the time, remember?
JDN> Armed well enough, the imprisonment would have ended sooner.
What! Wedged in between the Warsaw Pact and Nato with not a
friendly face for thousands of kilometers around? The Red Army
sitting right on top of them, the Brits and Uncle Sam determined
that East Germany will be used as a gunnery range to nuke the
Russian armoured divisions to cinders. These people had no
friends at all.
JDN> Do you remember
JDN> those that were gunned down helplessly trying to crash the wall and the
JDN> barbed wire? Surely you have some compassion for the helplessness.
Yes I do remember. I was in Germany the day they started building
The Wall, and I spent some time visiting in the DDR a few months later.
Some of my friends are people who got out, one way or another, or
who had found their family divided by the end of the war. But I don't
see how my compassion for the people doing a runner or for the people
who felt trapped in the DDR serves any purpose. Any armed insurrection
would have had zero chance of success. And such an effort would not have
had any support from the West.
> Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
> overthrow of the DDR?
JDN> Do you mean the GDR?
GDR is the english translation of DDR.
One DOES wonder whether Peter Mackay reads Newsgroup names. Trim
your headers and take this senseless childlike bickering back to
aus.politics and LEAVE THE REST OF US ALONE!!!!
Dave Thompson
The question is, when your government ignores your vote, punishes you
when you speak out, persecutes religious practitioners, and generally
declares war on the populace, what can you do if you've allowed
yourself to be disarmed? This hasn't happened in the US, but can
anyone give me a guarantee that that fact has nothing whatsoever to do
with the deterring thought in some would-be despot's mind that a large
percentage of its citizens are well-armed?
What appears to be an obsession is in many US citizen's mind the
drawing of the line in the sand. All of the other usurpations of
fundamental human rights by a tyranical government *must* be precluded
by the disarming of the populace. Those who don't understand the
concept, step right up and let me put these handcuffs on you. I
promise I won't hurt you, they're only for your own protection.
--
Eric Williams | wd6...@netcom.com | WD6CMU@WD6CMU.#NOCAL.CA.USA.NOAM
Dost Thou know that the ages will pass, and humanity will proclaim by
the lips of their sages that there is no crime, and therefore no sin;
there is only hunger? In the end they will lay their freedom at our
feet, and say to us, "Make us your slaves, but feed us!" They will
understand themselves at last, that freedom and bread enough for all
are inconceivable together.
-- Fyodor Dostoyevsky, The Brothers Karamazov
And how does this relate to firearms? Bryant bought his military weapons
over the counter.
>>> Is it really that
>>> > difficult for you to understand that other nations do not feel the
>>> > need to be heavily armed?
>>>
>>> Israel does! Go tell them to disarm!!! And they will tell you what an
>>> ignorant fool you are!!! You would have told England to give up to Hitler
>Leave us OUT of this. Following Dunblane, there is a strong debate on
>gun control between the gun lobby, who wish to keep our existing
>(strict) gun control laws (but enforce them better) and those who wish
>to ban all guns altogether. The vast majority of UK public opinion
>supports strict gun control in one form or another. The snowdrop
>petition organised by the Dunblane parents called for a total ban on
>handguns and attracted about 750,000 signitures.
What, 750,000 out of the whole population of the U.K.? Or just
Scotland? or where? Your figure is a bit meaningless without this
information.
Our largest anti-prohibition rally was about 160,000 very vocal and
determined (though totally non-violent) individuals. The gun control
mob have never been able to herd together more than a couple of
thousand embarrassed-looking sheeple, most of whom looked to me as
though they'd rather be sailing.
> -=> Quoting Alan Peyton-smith=avpsAllp to All <=-
> > -=> Quoting James D Nicholson to All <=-
>
> >-snips-
>
> > JDN> It is amazing how quickly the risks at the Berlin Wall have been
> > JDN> forgotten and the conditions that caused people to take those risks.
> > JDN> Civilians were disarmed in East Berlin, were they not?
>
> >And if they were armed they could have taken on the army of the
> >USSR and later the army of the Warsaw Pact?
> AP> Had they been armed, they'd not have been in that position in the
> AP> first place, IOW, they'd not have been so easily placed under the heel
> AP> of a dictatorial, opressive regime.
>
>Back to the facts, please. At the time they were occupied by the
>Russian Army while the Four Powers agreed to their interim fate.
>There were also a large British and Russian armies sitting on the
>border, the newly reconstituted Polish, Czech, and French armies
>hemming them in; all of them hostile. A 'feedom loving' german
>nationalist in the (later to become) DDR couldn't have farted and
>gotten away with it.
See my later post.
> >Did guns, civilian or otherwise, play a significant part in the
> >overthrow of the DDR?
> AP> Unquestionably so.
>
>Now I know you are pulling our legs.
Ding ding! One of yers has got bells. :-) Not balls, bells.
>
>Seriously, we Brits do not understand the American obsession with guns.
>I understand, and respect, an obsession for free speech, religious
>freedom and justice but I do not understand why you allow thousands of
>US citizens to be gunned down every year. Just what is the 2nd
>ammendment, who are these weapons to be used by and against? Any
>coherent answers would be appreciated.
We retain the old Whiggish theory that popular firearms are essential as
a makeweight against government tyrrany. Also, it come from our frontier
history, where firearms were as much a tool as an axe.
As for which Americans kill each other: over half of all American
murders invlove 3% of the population ( inner city black males ). In turn,
this is secondary to complex social forces to complicated to explain here.
Cultural forces seem to overwhelm the availabilty of firearms as a variable--
Thus, firearms murder rates in the US are strongly correlated with the
firearms rate in the country their ancestors can from.
Many of us not think that we should pay the price because some
American subcultures misuse firearms. Why blame us ? we didn't do it.
It is like taking automobiles away from everyone because a few people drive
while drunk.
Dr. P
>regards
>--
>Dave Hill
How would you respond to the act that comparing Vancouver and Seattle,
cities practically identical from just about every point of view
(climate and economic comparisons, even favourite TV and dario stations)
the only significant difference is the homicide rate, which is MUCH
higher in Seattle? The only possible explanation for this goes by the
gun control legislation, which is much more conservative in Canada.
Weapons ARE permitted but not just over the counter to anyone like in
the USA...
Paul Goyette, very happy NOT to be an American. I'd rather be
Australian, French, British, Dutch, Belgian,...(the list is pretty long)
than an American.
It's not quite like that in the USA either, Paul.
> Paul Goyette, very happy NOT to be an American. I'd rather be
> Australian, French, British, Dutch, Belgian,...(the list is pretty long)
> than an American.
To each his own, right? Home is where the heart is, and the grass is not
always greener on the other side of the fence. I like it where I am
because I can see how hard it would be for anybody to ever rule the USA.
As long as the 2nd is in effect, my descendants will share the same
freedoms that I have.