"That rifle on the wall of the labourer’s cottage, or working class
flat, is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays
there."
– George Orwell
I was sent these stats, which buttress the points and support the data that I raised in Jimmy's Got A Gun:
Australia: Readers of the USA
Today newspaper discovered in 2002 that:
"Since Australia's 1996 laws banning most guns and
making it a crime to use a gun defensively, armed robberies rose by 51%,
unarmed robberies by 37%, assaults by 24% and kidnappings by 43%. While murders
fell by 3%, manslaughter rose by 16%."2
Canada: After enacting
stringent gun control laws in 1991 and 1995, Canada has not made its citizens
any safer:
"The contrast between the criminal violence rates in
the United States and in Canada is dramatic," says Canadian criminologist
Gary Mauser in 2003. "Over the past decade, the rate of violent crime in
Canada has increased while in the United States the violent crime rate has
plummeted."3
England: According to the BBC News:
Handgun crime in the United Kingdom rose by 40% in the two
years after it passed its draconian gun ban in 1997.4
Japan: One newspaper
headline says it all:
Police say "Crime rising in Japan, while arrests at
record low."5
Fact: British citizens are now more likely to become
a victim of crime than are people in the United States:
*
In 1998, a study conducted jointly by statisticians from the U.S. Department of
Justice and the University of Cambridge in England found that most crime is now
worse in England than in the United States.
"You are more likely to be mugged in England than
in the United States. The rate of
robbery is now 1.4 times higher in England and Wales than in the United States,
and the British burglary rate is nearly double America's."6
- Reuters News
Agency
The
murder rate in the United States is reportedly higher than in England, but
according to the DOJ study, "the difference between the [murder rates in
the] two countries has narrowed over the past 16 years."7
“The United Nations confirmed these results in 2000
when it reported that the crime rate in England is higher than the crime rates
of 16 other industrialized nations, including the United States.”8
It
is a fact that British authorities routinely underreport crime statistics.
Comparing statistics between different nations can be quite difficult since
foreign officials frequently use different standards in compiling crime
statistics.
The
British media has remained quite critical of authorities there for
"fiddling" with crime data. Consider some of the headlines in their
papers:
"Crime figures a sham, say police."9, 10
"Police figures under-record offences by 20
percent."11
"Police are accused of fiddling crime data."11
British
police have also criticised the system because of the "widespread
manipulation" of crime data:
"Officers said that pressure to convince the
public that police were winning the fight against crime had resulted in a long
list of ruses to 'massage' statistics."12
"The crime figures are meaningless. Police everywhere know exactly what is going
on."13
- Sgt. Mike Bennett, who says officers have become
increasingly frustrated with the practice of manipulating statistics
"Officers said the recorded level of crime bore
no resemblance to the actual amount of crime being committed."14
- The Electronic
Telegraph
"One former Scotland Yard officer told The
Telegraph of a series of tricks that rendered crime figures 'a complete sham.'
A classic example, he said, was where a series of homes in a block flats were
burgled and were regularly recorded as one crime. Another involved
pickpocketing, which was not recorded as a crime unless the victim had actually
seen the item being stolen."15
Under-reporting
murder data: British crime reporting tactics keep murder rates artificially
low:
"Suppose that three men kill a woman during an
argument outside a bar. They are arrested for murder, but because of problems
with identification (the main witness is dead), charges are eventually dropped.
In American crime statistics, the event
counts as a three-person homicide, but in British statistics it counts as
nothing at all. 'With such differences in reporting criteria, comparisons of
U.S. homicide rates with British homicide rates is a sham,' [a 2000 report from
the Inspectorate of Constabulary] concludes."16
Many
nations with stricter gun control laws have violence rates that are equal to,
or greater than, that of the United States. Consider the following rates:
High Gun
Ownership Countries
|
Low Gun
Ownership Countries
|
|||||||
Country
|
Suicide
|
Homicide
|
Total*
|
Country
|
Suicide
|
Homicide
|
Total*
|
|
Switzerland
|
21.4
|
2.7
|
24.1
|
Denmark
|
22.3
|
4.9
|
27.2
|
|
U.S.
|
11.6
|
7.4
|
19.0
|
France
|
20.8
|
1.1
|
21.9
|
|
Israel
|
6.5
|
1.4
|
7.9
|
Japan**
|
16.7
|
0.6
|
17.3
|
* The figures listed
in the table are the rates per 100,000 people.
**
Suicide figures for Japan also include many homicides
The
United States has experienced far fewer TOTAL MURDERS than Europe does over the
last 70 years. In trying to claim that gun-free Europe is more peaceful than
America, gun control advocates routinely ignore the overwhelming number of
murders that have been committed in Europe.
Over
the last 70 years, Europe has averaged about 400,000 murders per year, when one
includes the murders committed by governments against mostly unarmed people.17 That murder rate is about 16 times higher than the murder
rate in the U.S.18
Why
hasn't the United States experienced this kind of government oppression? Many
reasons could be cited, but the Founding Fathers indicated that an armed
populace was the best way of preventing official brutality. Consider the words
of James Madison in Federalist 46:
"Let
a regular army, fully equal to the resources of the country, be formed; and let
it be entirely at the devotion of the federal government; still it would not be
going too far to say, that the State governments, with the people on their
side, would be able to repel the danger . . . a militia amounting to near half
a million of citizens with arms in their hands."19
***********************************************************
1 Kleck,
Point Blank, at 393, 394; Colin Greenwood, Chief Inspector of West Yorkshire
Constabulary, Firearms Control: A Study of Armed Crime and Firearms Control in
England and Wales (1972):31; David Kopel, The Samurai, the Mountie, and the
Cowboy: Should America Adopt the Gun Controls of Other Democracies (1992):91,
154.
2 Dr.
John R. Lott, Jr., "Gun laws don't reduce crime," USA Today (May 9,
2002). See also Rhett Watson and Matthew Bayley, "Gun crime up 40pc since
Port Arthur," The Daily Telegraph (April 28, 2002).
3
Gary A. Mauser, "The Failed Experiment: Gun Control and Public Safety in
Canada, Australia, England and Wales," Public Policy Sources (The Fraser
Institute, November 2003), no. 71:4. This study can be accessed at http://www.fraserinstitute.org/shared/readmore.asp?sNav=pb&id=604.
4 "Handgun
crime 'up' despite ban," BBC News Online (July 16, 2001) at http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/uk/newsid_1440000/1440764.stm.
England is a prime example of how crime has increased after implementing gun
control. For example, the original Pistols Act of 1903 did not stop murders
from increasing on the island. The number of murders in England was 68 percent
higher the year after the ban's enactment (1904) as opposed to the year before
(1902). (Greenwood, supra note 1.)
This was not an aberration, as almost seven
decades later, firearms crimes in the U.K. were still on the rise: the number
of cases where firearms were used or carried in a crime skyrocketed almost
1,000 percent from 1946 through 1969. (Greenwood, supra note 1 at 158.) And by
1996, the murder rate in England was 132 percent higher than it had been before
the original gun ban of 1903 was enacted. (Compare Greenwood, supra note 1,
with Bureau of Justice Statistics, Crime and Justice in the United States and
in England and Wales, 1981-96, Bureau of Justice Statistics, October 1998).
5 "Crime
rising in Japan, while arrests at record low: police," AFP News (August 3,
2001); "A crime wave alarms Japan, once gun-free," The Philadelphia
Inquirer, 11 July 1992.
6 "Most
Crime Worse in England Than US, Study Says," Reuters (October 11, 1998).
See also Bureau of Justice Statistics, Crime and Justice in the United States
and in England and Wales, 1981-96 (October 1998).
7 See
BJS study, supra note 6 at iii.
8 John
van Kesteren, Pat Mayhew and Paul Nieuwbeerta, "Criminal Victimisation in
Seventeen Industrialised Courtries: Key findings from the 2000 International
Crime Victims Survey," (2000). This study can be read at http://www.unicri.it/icvs/publications/index_pub.htm.
The link is to the ICVS homepage; study data are available for download as
Acrobat pdf files.
9 Ian
Henry and Tim Reid, "Crime figures a sham, say police," The
Electronic Telegraph (April 1, 1996).
10 Tim
Reid, "Police are accused of fiddling crime data," The Electronic
Telegraph (May 4, 1997).
11 John
Steele, "Police figures under-record offences by 20 percent," The
Electronic Telegraph (July 13, 2000).
12 See
supra note (Crime figures a sham...)
13 Ibid.
14 Ibid.
15 See
supra note (fiddling).
16 Dave
Kopel, Dr. Paul Gallant and Dr. Joanne Eisen, "Britain: From Bad to
Worse," NewsMax.com (March 22, 2001).
17 The
number of people killed by their own government in Europe averages about
400,000 for the last 70 years. This includes Hitler's extermination of Jews,
gypsies and other peoples (20,946,000); Stalin's genocide against the Ukrainian
kulaks (6,500,000); and more. R.J. Rummel, Death by Government (2000), pp. 8
and 80.
18 At
our historic worst, murders in the United States approached 25,000 in 1993 --
or 23,180 to be exact. So even applying our highest single-year tally over the
past 70 years would mean that Europeans have experienced 16 times as many
murders as we have in the United States.
19 THE
FEDERALIST 46, James Madison
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