Go n-ithe an cat thu, is go n-ithe an diabhal an cat
When you go Home, Tell them for us and say 'For your tommorrow, We Gave Our Today.'
Last edited by Mr.Tiv; 02-27-2007 at 07:49 PM.
Go n-ithe an cat thu, is go n-ithe an diabhal an cat
When you go Home, Tell them for us and say 'For your tommorrow, We Gave Our Today.'
canuck yes they are standard issue, just not in that specification unfortunately although i dohate 16 inch barrels... who cares if it's more rigid, i like muzzle velocity, thanks
out of curiosity it says gun suicides dropped but what about suicides overall? hasn't suicide increased over the last few years?
and it has little to do with the buyback in that example, but with the storage laws that were wisely tightened up
it only takes one shot to commit suicide.... and people who gave up their semi-automatics would often still possess legal firearms. The reduced gun crime is good to hear, although i don't think the stats are perfect, and again it's not in relation to overall crime..
haha, probably, i seem to recall they didn't like us after sme refugee incident
and no, the gun is a steyr aug which i'd like the ADF to upgrade theirs to the same spec on the basis that it looks cool.
afaik it didn't rise but i often hear gun crime itself actually increased. similarily the governments own bureau of statistics has said the gun buyback didn't do much, and warned the goverment that the handgun buyback would be pointless, but hey it's only taxpayers money..
ah... the article agrees with that too, but says mass shootings have stopped, which is good.
so gun suicides were affected, gun homicide was not, and mass shootings have halted. can't find mention of overall suicides or homicides.The latter finding contrasts with a report published in October which found that half a billion dollars spent removing guns had virtually no effect on homicide rates.
That report - by two Australian academics, Jeanine Baker and Samara McPhedran, and published in the British Journal of Criminology - said gun homicide deaths were falling well before the buyback and the rate of decline hardly changed with the new laws.
Dr Simon Chapman, another author of the latest study, agreed that the rate of gun homicide was falling before the buyback. He said that while the rate had risen since then, the numbers involved were so small they were not statistically significant.
The most important impact of the buyback was that there had been no mass shootings.
He said 112 people had been killed in 11 mass shootings in the 10 years up to Port Arthur, and removing the semi-automatic weapons used in those shootings was a principal aim of the policy.
Last edited by clutch-monkey; 02-27-2007 at 09:24 PM.
Andreas Preuninger, Manager of Porsche High Performance Cars: "Grandmas can use paddles. They aren't challenging."
The proportion of murders involving a weapon peaked in 1996 (after which our new gun restrictions were introduced) at 78% while the proportion of attempted murders involving a weapon peaked in 1997 at 87%.
The proportion of robberies in which a weapon was used increased from 36% in 1995 to 46% in 1998 and has since generally declined to 36% in 2004. For those robberies that involved a weapon, the proportion involving a firearm decreased from 28% in 1995 to 14% in 2000, and has been stable from 2000 to 2004 at 15%.
A firearm was used in 5% of robberies recorded in 2004, the lowest proportion since national reporting began in 1993. The proportion of murders involving a firearm was 13% in 2004. This has decreased significantly since 1996 when 32% of murders involved a firearm. For attempted murders in 2004, a firearm was used in 23% of offences, marginally above its low of 19% in 1998 and well below its high of 31% in 1999.
http://www.abs.gov.au/Ausstats/[email protected]
These look cool but not as high tech as you ravatar.
"A string is approximately nine long."
Egg Nogg 02-04-2005, 05:07 AM
that's some good info, cheers
haha yeah, it seems to be all the rage these days for companies to fit 'tactical' front ends in a bid to be taken seriously by the military. I'm sure it has something to do with standardisation but it goes a bit far:
i'm not quite sure what those sight rails would do on a grenade launcher..
Andreas Preuninger, Manager of Porsche High Performance Cars: "Grandmas can use paddles. They aren't challenging."
the government will never git me gunz......hehehe
haha whenever i see those sight rails all over a gun, i keep thinking of it as a sort of military one-upmanship. 'who can fit the most sighting attachments to a weapon'
does the phrase "the trajectory is like a goddamned rainbow" mean anything to you?
Andreas Preuninger, Manager of Porsche High Performance Cars: "Grandmas can use paddles. They aren't challenging."
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