The UK Wants to Ban WHAT?

in #uk2 months ago

Here in the US, we complain about governments passing absurdly vague and nonsensical laws about firearms. In the UK, they're several steps further down the road of civilian disarmament insanity. Now crossbows and "broadhead arrows" are in the crosshairs of Parliament.

And this is on top of the news from a few weeks ago that due to escalating knife crime in the UK, the Labour Party and actor Idris Elba want to ban... swords.

Is there a problem of rampant medieval reenactors raiding villages? Are Renaissance Faires hotbeds of homicide? Are antiquarians committing assault? Obviously not. As is always the case, politicians respond to crime primarily by targeting innocent people and inanimate objects instead of getting to the root of criminal activity.

Swords and crossbows are apparently used in such a minuscule number of crimes that it has no statistical significance. It's a bit like how legislation in the US fixates on modern semiautomatic rifles like the AR15 despite the rarity of their use in crime. Machetes are very useful tools in many environments. So are hatchets. Hammers, too. If people use hand tools as weapons, it does not invalidate the primary purpose or justify regulation.

When critics point out a slippery slope from "common-sense regulation" to total disarmament, it isn't a fallacy, it's an observation of a common trend in regulatory overreach based on the fundamental problem of regulation and the persistence of the politician's syllogism. Don't be a sucker. Don't buy the prohibition rhetoric. Don't surrender an inch of liberty.

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They're banning all the stuff they don't want shot at them when they come at you.

Sorry UK, no pointy sharp things for you. Bring your vegetables and meats to the Ministry of Sharp Objects for cutting. Angle grinders and knife sharpeners need a permit to purchase, obtained by submitting a £200 non refundable tax, your fingerprints, and a 12-month wait time.

Wait, you're crazy enough to think people can be trusted with power tools? Even with a license?

Ok, tack on a thorough background check and psychologist evaluation too.

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I feel criminals will still do what they want even though the government bans it
Let’s see how it goes though

If the government outlaws something I own, I'm an outlaw. I haven't done anything wrong, but I am a "criminal" somehow? I still refuse to comply.

Next will be steak knives.

Like criminals care that shit's banned. Seriously, Governments depress me; and it tends to get worse with time as we allow brainless ppl into power

I have personally never seen a 'wild sword' out there, trust me, they don't exist in the mainstream, not even in the derpiest of derps that I seek out.

What about the ruffians who bombard urbex teams with arrows? Surely that is a constant problem?

Not been impaled yet, or threatened beyond a rusty saw.

NY State is so rabidly anti-conservative and anti-NRA, that they want to end NRA gun education programs, the best safety instruction there is. You'd think they want more gun accidents, and perhaps they do.

Next up? Nerf guns.

I have come to discover that most of the time the bans is to go against the citizens

Meanwhile stateside:

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Source: https://t.me/LauraAbolichannel/55005

Fun fact: nowhere in the 2nd amendment is the right to keep and bear arms contingent upon citizenship status.

I know, which begs the question: why the restrictions on citizens, but not on non-citizens?
Oh, BTW, I should probably mention that citizenship isn't a requirement in order to get a firearms license in a lot of countries.

At some point, we need to ask whether there is any benefit to "citizenship" status.

Depends on what perks come with it, and again, that varies by country.