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accadacca
12-07-2010, 09:16 PM
Sweet! A Utah state gun! :haha:

--

December 7th, 2010 @ 6:00pm
By ksl.com
SALT LAKE CITY -- Soldiers used it in both World Wars and gun enthusiasts say it has defended American values, but does that mean the Browning 1911 handgun, designed by Ogden native John Browning, deserves a spot as Utah's state firearm? The idea is getting mixed reviews.

The Browning 1911 would be in the same class as the seagull, the state bird; the Sego Lily, the state flower; and the Dutch oven, the state cooking pot. The question some have is whether a state gun is somehow different.

Steve Gunn, with the Gun Violence Prevention Center, said, "I would prefer that if we adopt a firearm as our symbol, that we use something more modern like a .50 caliber sniper rifle or perhaps an assault rifle."

It's a sarcastic response to the idea of a state firearm from a man concerned about gun violence. Rep. Carl Wimmer, (R) Herriman,is serious about elevating this historic, semi-automatic .45 caliber handgun, though.

"This is not an implementation of death, this is an implementation of freedom. This is the firearm that helped win World War II, that helped win World War I and defend American values," Wimmer said.

John Moses Browning, who was born in Ogden, created the gun along with many others. Wimmer says the Browning 1911 is the most proficient firearm in the history of the United States. He also said next year would be the perfect year to honor Browning and this particular gun as it is the 100 year anniversary that it was adopted by the United States Army. Its design is virtually unchanged today.

"Next year, 2011, will be the 100 year anniversary that it was adopted by the U.S. Army. So I think it's very fitting and appropriate that we designate this as the state firearm of Utah," Wimmer said.

Not everyone is thrilled with the state firearm but there's not a huge appetite for a big fight at the Capitol.

Scott Hyatt said, "I think it's good recognition for the state, and good to recognize Mr. Browning, but I don't know if we need to designate a gun for our state."

Cory Alexander said, "If we had a state gun it would be cool I guess, but there's no real relevance to it."

Instead of a fight, there might simply be more sarcasm.

"I would nominate arsenic as our state poison, because, of course arsenic is often a by-product of our state mining industry," Gunn told KSL.

Gunn said Wimmer's proposal is in bad taste at best.

Wimmer said he'll propose the state gun designation in the upcoming legislative session, although he said he doesn't want to spend a lot of time debating it because there are more important issues that need to be addressed.

Several lawmakers are opposed to the idea, but none of them expressed any appetite for putting much effort into opposing it.

Compiled with contributions from Richard Piatt and Randall Jeppesen

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=13561290

denaliguide
12-07-2010, 11:11 PM
utah has a state cooking pot? whodathunkit?

StudChild
12-08-2010, 02:27 AM
I vote for the browning 1911 :2thumbs:

asdf
12-08-2010, 05:35 AM
wow... what a HUGE waste of time and energy.

Wasn't Obama supposed to take away my all of my guns way last year?

Sombeech
12-08-2010, 06:35 AM
Can we shoot the state bird with it?

On a serious note, I thought it was interesting how the Browning guns alone had such an impact in the World Wars, and in effect a great impact on world history.

State Gun? Meh, sure, but like he said, there are much more important things to solve right now. Hopefully they just mention the idea and get a Yea or Nay vote out of the deal and move on without spending too much $$$.

StudChild
12-08-2010, 11:14 AM
Can we shoot the state bird with it?

Only if you cook it in a Dutch oven, the states cooking pot. :lol8:

moabfool
12-08-2010, 02:44 PM
I think it's funny that the anti-gun wack job's name is Gunn.

Sombeech
12-08-2010, 02:50 PM
I think it's funny that the anti-gun wack job's name is Gunn.

:haha: He might have gotten so much crap with it growing up, he decided to turn against guns, ignoring all logic.

trackrunner
12-08-2010, 06:21 PM
Hopefully they just mention the idea and get a Yea or Nay vote out of the deal and move on without spending too much $$$.

they don't. I worked at the state capital and you will not believe the time lost debating the state vegetable. many important bills couldn't be debated because time ran out for the legislative session. much more important than the state vegetable

canyonphile
12-09-2010, 07:49 AM
they don't. I worked at the state capital and you will not believe the time lost debating the state vegetable. many important bills couldn't be debated because time ran out for the legislative session. much more important than the state vegetable
:facepalm: :roll:

Life was so much simpler, with its very easy-to-define priorities, when we [humans] were living caves or cliff dwellings, wasn't it? :lol8:

That being said, I think the *idea* of a state gun is very :cool2:.

stefan
12-09-2010, 08:03 AM
wow... what a HUGE waste of time and energy.

x2 and i thought conservative politicians promoted small and efficient government and wow utah's soooo edgy :2gun::2guns: :roll:




Wasn't Obama supposed to take away my all of my guns way last year?yeah and turn the united states into some socialistcommunistfascist regime ...

but, man, what a sales pitch all that gun fear rhetoric was from the endless organizations and groups promoting it ... with stores across the nation running out of guns and bullets. stunning. anyone heard of pavlov?

stefan
12-09-2010, 08:17 AM
..
A state gun
Op/Ed
Salt Lake Tribune




Utah lawmakers continue to struggle to find just the right way to honor the late firearms inventor John Moses Browning. Unfortunately, their latest idea, naming the Browning model 1911 pistol the state gun, is another miss.


Earlier this year, one senator wanted to attach Browning’s name to an existing holiday, perhaps Memorial Day, Veterans Day or Pioneer Day. That plan didn’t gain much support, thank goodness, so, now, a different lawmaker is back with a different idea. Rep. Carl Wimmer, R-Herriman, wants to declare the Browning model 1911 .45-caliber pistol the state gun.


As far as we can tell, no other state has a state gun, so that would make Utah the first. But that isn’t the kind of notoriety the state needs. Like all places, Utah has its peculiarities. This surely would be another.


Naming a state gun is problematic because a gun is, after all, a killing tool. It’s not like honoring the state flower, state bird, or even the state dinosaur, which happens to be a rather nasty carnivore. A gun necessarily carries the connotation of violent death, not the sort of thing Utah would want to appear to celebrate.


While the naming of the state gun would eventually lapse into obscurity, as most official state symbols do, it would give Utah an awkward 15 minutes of, “Say, what?” “A state gun?”


We don’t question that Browning is worthy of commemoration. He was undoubtedly one of the greatest firearms inventors in U.S. history, perhaps the greatest in history, period. That he contributed significantly to the U.S. victories in World War I and World War II is settled history.


The model 1911 .45 semiautomatic pistol was the standard U.S. sidearm for decades. His Browning Automatic Rifle and machine guns were critical to American fighting efforts.


Browning was a native Utahn, born in Ogden in 1855 of pioneer stock. At his death in 1926, his accomplishments were widely recognized. One reason to name the model 1911 pistol the state gun now is that it would coincide with the centennial of its invention (hence its name).

But instead of naming a state gun, why not honor Browning with a statue at the State Capitol?


Utah already has an outstanding, though modest, state museum devoted to Browning and his firearms at Union Station in Ogden. If you’re interested in firearms and haven’t seen it, you should check it out. It’s wonderful.


Still, naming a state gun would be a public relations misfire.

http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/opinion/50827724-82/state-gun-browning-utah.html.csp

mattandersao
12-09-2010, 10:27 AM
because a gun is, after all, a killing tool Guns dont Kill people, people kill people?
Isnt that the typical comeback for second amendment people

I originally said wacko's but that wasnt really appropriate! :)

greyhair biker
12-09-2010, 11:14 AM
I want to support a state gun idea but even Wyoming doesnt have a state gun. They DO however have a gun museum in Cody (very cool)...but I digress:wink: ANYHOO...it's kinda funny wyoming doesnt already have a state gun when legislation like this is in the works:
http://www.bullsandbeavers.com/2010/02/24/one-small-step-for-wyoming-one-giant-leap-for-gun-rights/

moabfool
12-09-2010, 11:26 AM
Guns dont Kill people, people kill people?
Isnt that the typical comeback for second amendment wackos (and I mean wacko's in the nicest way :crazy:)

I represent that statement...uh...I mean I resemble that remark :haha:

Since this thread is destined to "go there" let's give it the last little shove it really needs. :kicknuts::argue: :kbasa::targetpractice: :amazon: :boxing: :duel: :flamer: :chairshot: :wedgie: :deadhorse:

Post your favorite trite but true pro-gun slogan here. :cool2: Or if you got your deductive skills in college :topes: post your favorite catchy but false anti-gun slogan (the only other kind of anti-gun slogan is "not catchy but false"). I'll start with some that are true.

9mm is faster than 9-1-1.

The west wasn't won with a registered gun.

When guns are outlawed only outlaws will have guns.

When seconds count the police are just minutes away.

You can have my gun when you pry it from my cold, dead fingers.

God made men. Colonel Colt made them equal.

Forget the dog, BEWARE of owner.

fourtycal
12-09-2010, 11:57 AM
This is Awesome I can put my Utah gun next to my Olympic edition dutch oven. I think there is no better handgun than the 1911 and I bet there will be a special one issued as a collectible as Utah's state gun. I might hold out for the Browning anniversary edition though :2thumbs:

"Because I can't carry a Cop"

ratagonia
12-09-2010, 12:13 PM
:haha: He might have gotten so much crap with it growing up, he decided to turn against guns, ignoring all logic.

Whack job? Ignoring all Logic? uh, wait, isn't my languaging for all y'alls gun-fetish Whack Jobs, who seem to think lots and lots of guns will give the good guys the upper hand, ignoring all logic and evidence?

Whew! Got my languaging back.

You guys are whacked!

Tom :moses:

denaliguide
12-09-2010, 12:31 PM
they don't. I worked at the state capital and you will not believe the time lost debating the state vegetable. many important bills couldn't be debated because time ran out for the legislative session. much more important than the state vegetable

Utah has a state vegetable? who did they pick?

stefan
12-09-2010, 02:42 PM
Guns dont Kill people, people kill people?


it should be: Guns dont Kill people, people use guns to kill people

Sombeech
12-09-2010, 03:41 PM
it should be: people use guns to defend themselves and their nation

fix't it for ya

stefan
12-09-2010, 03:57 PM
fix't it for ya

except 'beech fixin' the comment the way you have makes it no longer relevant to the original 'slogan' but maybe that was your point

BruteForce
12-10-2010, 04:41 AM
it should be: people use guns to defend themselves against their nation

And I fixed it for you.

hank moon
12-10-2010, 09:19 AM
And I fixed it for you.

triple fixed!

People once used guns (and other stuff) to establish their fledgling nation and have since developed a fetishistic collector's bent toward guns using the same tired logic but without actually doing anything about the problem of the most powerfully corrupt government on the planet.

DaveOU812
12-10-2010, 09:25 AM
How about this...

I use gun to protect my family and home from people who wish to do us harm.

ratagonia
12-10-2010, 09:37 AM
Utah has a state vegetable? who did they pick?

They selected one of their own - Chris Buttars.

T :moses:

ratagonia
12-10-2010, 09:42 AM
triple fixed!

People once used guns (and other stuff) to establish their fledgling nation and have since developed a fetishistic collector's bent toward guns using the same tired logic but without actually doing anything about the problem of the most powerfully corrupt government on the planet.

:2thumbs:

Rev. Coyote
12-10-2010, 10:41 AM
Dave -- it's worked for me! In that case it was a Higgins 16 ga with a shortened barrel and a home-made pistol grip. All he had to do was see it.

On the Utarrr gun: How about the Browning Hi-Power 9 mm? (Didn't know Browning was a Utation.. pretty cool.)

moabfool
12-10-2010, 12:02 PM
I promise to not defend any of you who don't like guns. Will any that feel this way please put up a sign in your yard or wear a pin or a hat that lets us all know how you feel? I'd hate to deny any of you the privilege of being a victim.

trackrunner
12-10-2010, 07:23 PM
They selected one of their own - Chris Buttars.

T :moses:

:five::thumb:

mtthwlw
12-10-2010, 09:31 PM
I think I'm going to make a comment here that will make everyone unhappy... and because it's long it may not even get read. What I don't want to do is turn this super negative. I've enjoyed reading what people have had to say so far and even though this is a subject people seem to get fired-up about, it's been rather tame. I don't want to change that.

First, I'm a gun owner. I have rifles for hunting and for target shooting. I like owning a rifle. I wouldn't mind owning a pistol... but I don't have a need for one.

What I can't understand about the gun debate... What I just don't get is why people believe that we need to have untraceable and unregistered guns around. And why conceal and carry type classes aren't required for ALL gun purchases. My logic: Law abiding gun-toters are generally safe-- or feel safe. We don't have a problem with marauding NRA handgun owners running through the streets terrorizing people (at least, not in the 21st Century, and I never lived in the South when the "law-abiding" folks were terrorizing people in their white suits.)

The problem with easy gun purchases are that many guns are being purchased lawfully (with a "straw buyer" in a US gunstore. See http://tinyurl.com/33n8s3g) and unlawfully distributed to kids, criminals, and gangs in the inner city and drug lords in Mexico.

I hear the argument about "protecting ourselves from the government" but I don't know many reasonably armed folks who have had guns taken away. And I don't know anyone who pays taxes and follows the laws and has trouble with jack-booted federal thugs.

I have heard of cities becoming lawless with poor inner-city youth armed with guns and killing each other with cheap and easily purchased guns. (Remember the time after Rodney King, or Katrina, or after most Raider games?) All of us have read about the power of drug lords in Mexico with their US made guns.

The way I see it, there's a cycle:
Gun makers tell middle class folks that they need easy access to guns to keep safe. We buy guns because we want to or feel that we need to. Then, with a glut of guns on the market, guns become cheap and available to everyone. Poor inner city kids in gangs get ahold of cheap guns. Gun makers tell middle class people that they need easy access to guns to keep safe. White people get scared and arm themselves. With an abundance of cheap guns on the market, poor inner city and gangs arm themselves. Gun makers...:angryfire:

But if guns were less readily available, wouldn't that slow down the cycle? If every gun were registered upon purchase, we'd be able to tell who was buying these guns and shipping them to Mexico. If every purchaser of a firearm had to take a class and pass a test (know how to load and unload, shoot and store) with their weapon in order to buy... wouldn't that slow the process down?

What am I missing here? I know it can't be that easy. I also know that it will never happen. Any other suggestions for limiting the huge numbers of guns that flow into inner cities and into the hands of drug cartels across the border? We all have to realize that too many guns get into the wrong hands. How do you limit that?

StudChild
12-11-2010, 11:48 AM
I promise to not defend any of you who don't like guns. Will any that feel this way please put up a sign in your yard or wear a pin or a hat that lets us all know how you feel? I'd hate to deny any of you the privilege of being a victim.
:2thumbs::2thumbs::2thumbs::clap::clap::clap:

stefan
12-11-2010, 11:59 AM
I promise to not defend any of you who don't like guns. Will any that feel this way please put up a sign in your yard or wear a pin or a hat that lets us all know how you feel? I'd hate to deny any of you the privilege of being a victim.


:2thumbs::2thumbs::2thumbs::clap::clap::clap:

you gotta love when a thread on designating a "state gun" to honor browning gets reduced to this drivel

LOAH
12-11-2010, 04:22 PM
mtthwlw (http://www.bogley.com/forum/member.php?17895-mtthwlw) -

The biggest problem with micro-managing firearm purchases is that the information all goes toward the biggest potential enemy: The government.

If your enemy knows how much of what you have, they know how much of what they'll need to subdue you. Keep your enemy guessing and there may never be an attack (which is why, I believe, we haven't seen a massive disarming campaign yet).

With that same principle in mind, let's make it easier (how it is meant to be from the beginning) to obtain firearms. Now everyone is potentially armed, even in the inner cities (it's still the USA).

Now let's say I'm a burglar, mugger, rapist, or whatever scumbag. Am I really going to risk my life by crawling through a window if I know there could be a gun on the other side? Am I going to think twice about dragging someone into an alley for their wallet if they could be packing?

The answer is obviously no.

You want inner city crime to drop? Encourage everyone to own firearms and make them readily available.

Of course there will be cases where people misuse them. Those people, however, will be promptly corrected by the responsible gun owners.

If someone has a major gripe with the way this nation was founded and designed to exist, they need to GTFO. They are, in fact, free to leave.

Australia has banned private gun ownership. Their crime rate has also gone way up since the ban. Go fig!




"An armed society is a polite society."

LOAH
12-11-2010, 04:27 PM
Oh, and for the topic, I don't believe it's the state's obligation to designate a "state" gun. It really isn't a very important topic to waste time debating about and it doesn't address any issue in regard to protecting the freedom of the citizens. I echo that sentiment toward most of the garbage they squabble about on the hill.

ratagonia
12-12-2010, 10:04 AM
Australia has banned private gun ownership. Their crime rate has also gone way up since the ban. Go fig!


Except that it hasn't, and they haven't.

http://www.snopes.com/crime/statistics/ausguns.asp

(Snopes does not allow easy swiping text from their website, so I will only quote a little bit):

Snopes Says:

Although the old adage says that "Figures don't lie, but liars figure," those who seek to influence public opinion often employ a variety of means to slant statistical figures into seemingly supporting their point of view:

Percentages by themselves often tell far from a complete story, particularly when they involve small sample sizes which do not adequately mask normal fluctuations or the potential influence of a number of extraneous factors affecting the phenomenon under study. A statement such as "The number of deaths attributable to cancer increased by 2% between 1973 and 1983" is probably much more significant if the number of cancer deaths increased by twenty thousand among a population of one million than if they increased by two among a population of one hundred. (In the latter case, for example, two people who already had cancer could have moved into an otherwise cancer-free small town, but it's far less likely that immigration would completely account for an increase of twenty thousand cancer cases amidst a city of one million.)

Context is especially important, and percentages alone don't provide context. A statement such as "The home run total in the American League jumped by an astounding 50% between 1960 and 1961" sounds misleadingly impressive if you don't know that after 1960, the American League expanded by two teams and increased the length of its schedule, thereby adding two hundred more games to the season.

Most importantly, percentages don't establish cause-and-effect relationships - at best they highlight correlations which may be due to any number of factors. If (to continue our previous example), the total number of home runs hit by all teams increased by 30% from one year to the next while the number of games remained the same, a great many people might claim that the baseballs used in the latter year had obviously been "juiced" (i.e., manufactured in such a way as to cause them to travel farther when hit). But a number of other unconsidered factors (individually or collectively) might be responsible for the increase, such as an abundance of warm weather, or an expansion in the number of teams which brought more inexperienced and ineffective pitchers into the league.

In the specific case offered here, context is the most important factor. The piece quoted above leads the reader to believe that much of the Australian citizenry owned handguns until their ownership was made illegal and all firearms owned by "law-abiding citizens" were collected by the government through a <A HREF="http://web.archive.org/web/20060225125951/http://www.handgunbuyback.gov.au/" TARGET=_buyback><NOBR>buy-back</NOBR></A> program in 1997. This is not so. Australian citizens do not (and never did) have a constitutional right to own firearms &mdash; even before the 1997 buyback program, handgun ownership in Australia was restricted to certain groups, such as those needing weapons for occupational reasons, members of approved sporting clubs, hunters, and collectors. Moreover, the 1997 buyback program did not take away <I>all</I> the guns owned by these groups; only some types of firearms (primarily semi-automatic and pump-action weapons) were banned. And even with the ban in effect, those who can demonstrate a legitimate need to possess prohibited categories of firearms can petition for exemptions from the law.

Given this context, any claims based on statistics (even accurate ones) which posit a cause-and-effect relationship between the gun buyback program and increased crime rates because "criminals now are guaranteed that their prey is unarmed" are automatically suspect, since the average Australian citizen didn't own firearms even <I>before</I> the buyback. But beyond that, most of the statistics offered here are misleading and present only "first year results" where long-term trends need to be considered in order to draw valid cause-and-effect conclusions.

For example, the first entry states that "Homicides are up 3.2%." This statistic is misleading because it reflects only the absolute number of homicides rather than the homicide <I>rate</I>. (A country with a rapidly-growing population, for example, might experience a higher <I>number</I> of crimes even while its overall crime <I>rate</I> decreased.) An examination of statistics from the Australian Institute of Criminology (<A HREF="http://www.aic.gov.au" TARGET=_aic>AIC</A>) reveals that the overall <A HREF="http://www.aic.gov.au/publications/cfi/cfi003.html" TARGET=_homicid><NOBR>homicide rate</NOBR></A> in Australia has changed little over the past decade and actually dipped slightly after the 1997 gun buy-back program. (The chart found at this link also demonstrates how easily statistics based on small sample sizes can mislead, as when the homicide rate in Tasmania increased nearly eight-fold in one year based on a single incident in which <NOBR>35 people</NOBR> were killed.)

stefan
12-12-2010, 08:05 PM
well, since this thread is so off-topic now, i thought i'd post a video from fox news sunday with justice stephen breyer (worth watching all the way through)


http://video.foxnews.com/v/4456313/justice-stephen-breyer-on-fns/?playlist_id=86858

ilanimaka
12-15-2010, 04:28 PM
Nevermind...

I just realized pretty much everything I said has already been stated by so many others.

ratagonia
12-15-2010, 11:13 PM
Nevermind...

I just realized pretty much everything I said has already been stated by so many others.

The silence is deafening. Yup, fun to throw around colorful slogans. Fun to toss out *information* that is actually fabricated. But a thundering silence when BS is called. :nono:

Tom :cool2:

oldno7
12-16-2010, 06:07 AM
I think they should spend many days in legislature getting the state gun picked, once they have that, it should be
mandatory for all citizens of Utah to have this gun. If they choose not to purchase this gun the state should fine them for failure to do so.
Once signed by the Governor, they could call it "HerbertCare".

Sombeech
12-16-2010, 08:09 AM
well, since this thread is so off-topic now, i thought i'd post a video from fox news sunday with justice stephen breyer (worth watching all the way through)


http://video.foxnews.com/v/4456313/justice-stephen-breyer-on-fns/?playlist_id=86858

Very revealing at 4:23 actually. During the discussion of the right for THE PEOPLE to have guns, Breyer asks if Wallace likes to shoot as a sportsman, and then states he can still do that if he hops on over to Maryland to do it.

You can't Bear Arms in DC but you can easily go somewhere else to shoot it. Will there be gun rental shops in Maryland? If Wallace wanted to go to Maryland to shoot, would he still be able to own his gun in DC so he can transport it there? ...and then be arrested once he carries it back to DC.

Giving THE PEOPLE the right to Bear Arms is quite different than forcing them to travel across state lines just to physically "bear" it. This defeats the purpose of the Right given to the people to defend themselves.

In 1976, Washington, D.C. enacted one of the most restrictive gun control laws in the nation. Since then, the city's murder rate has risen 134% while the national murder rate has dropped 2%.

Sombeech
12-16-2010, 08:15 AM
...and frankly I'm shocked that you would quote anything from Fox News :wink:

stefan
12-16-2010, 02:28 PM
...and frankly I'm shocked that you would quote anything from Fox News :wink:


actually it shouldn't at all be surprising, where've you been?

stefan
12-16-2010, 03:02 PM
In 1976, Washington, D.C. enacted one of the most restrictive gun control laws in the nation. Since then, the city's murder rate has risen 134% while the national murder rate has dropped 2%.

so, i'm not sure where you're getting your numbers from, but last year was the lowest number of homicides in D.C. since 1966. and this year may come out even lower. (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/07/AR2010080700048.html)

if you want to see the number of murders in D.C. (total and per 100,000) since 1960 you can see them here:

http://www.disastercenter.com/crime/dccrime.htm

look at the trends and decide for yourself. and do keep in mind there are many factors that contribute to the murder rate, and that it's not straightforward to attribute anything to a gun ban just by looking at them.

stefan
12-16-2010, 03:24 PM
in the D.C. statistics you'll see a similar trend as was seen across the united states in the 90s


US homicides by weapons 1976-2004
Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics

accadacca
12-16-2010, 03:58 PM
in the D.C. statistics you'll see a similar trend as was seen across the united states in the 90s


US homicides by weapons 1976-2004
Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics

Knives have taken a major hit. Lazy society... :lol8:

ilanimaka
12-16-2010, 04:25 PM
The problem with easy gun purchases are that many guns are being purchased lawfully (with a "straw buyer" in a US gunstore. See http://tinyurl.com/33n8s3g) and unlawfully distributed to kids, criminals, and gangs in the inner city and drug lords in Mexico.


What am I missing here? I know it can't be that easy. I also know that it will never happen. Any other suggestions for limiting the huge numbers of guns that flow into inner cities and into the hands of drug cartels across the border? We all have to realize that too many guns get into the wrong hands. How do you limit that?

Took me a little while to find the counter to this. No offense intended, but your informaiton is influenced by the desire to bump ratings & produce more false information.

http://www.ncpa.org/pub/ba735

This talks a bit more indepth about the whole Mexican Cartel arms facts. :2thumbs:

ilanimaka
12-16-2010, 04:27 PM
Knives have taken a major hit. Lazy society... :lol8:

And blunt objects get no love... :roll:

Sombeech
12-16-2010, 05:09 PM
so, i'm not sure where you're getting your numbers from, but last year was the lowest number of homicides in D.C. since 1966. and this year may come out even lower.
Don't judge too quickly, that's a copy and paste from one of your most quoted sites. :mrgreen:

stefan
12-16-2010, 05:46 PM
Don't judge too quickly, that's a copy and paste from one of your most quoted sites. :mrgreen:

no need to judge, the numbers tell you everything.

the last time the murder rate was 134% higher than in 1976 was back in 1996.

the murder rate has declined steadily from a peak in 1991 and is now below what it was in 1976 (lowest all the way back to 1967, though in 1985 it was ever so slightly lower than in 2009)