I would like to see them sharing the same prison cell.MrJonno wrote:I would rather live next to a child rapist than live next to someone who owned a firearm
They could entertain each other promoting their loony obsessions.
I would like to see them sharing the same prison cell.MrJonno wrote:I would rather live next to a child rapist than live next to someone who owned a firearm
True but you won't get one unless you have some sort of rural activity that doesnt involve shooting people. I've got no problems with farmers having them to shoot foxes but I still wouldnt want to live next to onePappa wrote:Anyone can apply for a licence to use and own a rifle too.MrJonno wrote:Well shotguns are legal for farmers and while I wouldnt make any assumptions about them it would be another reason among many to avoid the countrysidePappa wrote:I assumed you meant all firearms, not just handguns. Your post was more than a little confusing because of that.
You can apply for a firearms license for a rifle in the UK if you are a member of a shooting club (and other reasons).MrJonno wrote:True but you won't get one unless you have some sort of rural activity that doesnt involve shooting people. I've got no problems with farmers having them to shoot foxes but I still wouldnt want to live next to onePappa wrote:Anyone can apply for a licence to use and own a rifle too.MrJonno wrote:Well shotguns are legal for farmers and while I wouldnt make any assumptions about them it would be another reason among many to avoid the countrysidePappa wrote:I assumed you meant all firearms, not just handguns. Your post was more than a little confusing because of that.
As long as you're member of a gun club and show you have a secure way of keeping them (plus no criminal record or whatever) you'll get a license. Legally you don't even need to be a member of a club, you just need to show some valid reason why you should have a license.MrJonno wrote:Well licensing for them is a little more relaxed but I would be surprised if you could get one in an urban area (too much chance of them getting nicked)
Haven't heard that expression for ages, very country Oz...Seraph wrote:
...it is all hat and no cattle...
Similar in Oz, plus each rifle or shotgun must be registered, and semi-automatics are banned except for farmers, and then only in .22 c alibre. Hand guns are the real issue, in any case...Pappa wrote:As long as you're member of a gun club and show you have a secure way of keeping them (plus no criminal record or whatever) you'll get a license. Legally you don't even need to be a member of a club, you just need to show some valid reason why you should have a license.MrJonno wrote:Well licensing for them is a little more relaxed but I would be surprised if you could get one in an urban area (too much chance of them getting nicked)
You're wrong. Aggravated burglary is indeed "going armed to a burglary," but if ANY violence takes place, it's not a burglary anymore at all, it's classified as a single act of robbery. This is true whether or not a weapon is used, which makes it aggravated robbery.MrJonno wrote:Is that definitely right as its different to the UK, the aggravated bit is going armed for violence even if no violence takes place. If there is violence that would just be charged as a seperate offence (with being in someone house an aggravating factor for sentencing)The term in Oz for burglary with violence is "aggravated burglary"... Just to complete the semantics..
It doesn't matter exactly why the perp trespassed, only that they entered unlawfully with the intent to commit ANY other crime therein, whether that's theft or assault or even just peeping.
18-4-202. First degree burglary.
(1) A person commits first degree burglary if the person knowingly enters unlawfully, or remains unlawfully after a lawful or unlawful entry, in a building or occupied structure with intent to commit therein a crime, other than trespass as defined in this article, against another person or property, and if in effecting entry or while in the building or occupied structure or in immediate flight therefrom, the person or another participant in the crime assaults or menaces any person, or the person or another participant is armed with explosives or a deadly weapon.
(2) First degree burglary is a class 3 felony.
18-4-203. Second degree burglary.
(1) A person commits second degree burglary, if the person knowingly breaks an entrance into, enters unlawfully in, or remains unlawfully after a lawful or unlawful entry in a building or occupied structure with intent to commit therein a crime against another person or property.
(2) Second degree burglary is a class 4 felony, but it is a class 3 felony if:
(a) It is a burglary of a dwelling; or
(b) It is a burglary, the objective of which is the theft of a controlled substance, as defined in section 12-22-303 (7), C.R.S., lawfully kept within any building or occupied structure.
18-4-204. Third degree burglary.
(1) A person commits third degree burglary if with intent to commit a crime he enters or breaks into any vault, safe, cash register, coin vending machine, product dispenser, money depository, safety deposit box, coin telephone, coin box, or other apparatus or equipment whether or not coin operated.
(2) Third degree burglary is a class 5 felony, but it is a class 4 felony if it is a burglary, the objective of which is the theft of a controlled substance, as defined in section 12-22-303 (7), C.R.S., lawfully kept in or upon the property burglarized.
And, it is possible for a person to be convicted of BOTH aggravated burglary and aggravated robbery for the same act.18-4-301. Robbery.
(1) A person who knowingly takes anything of value from the person or presence of another by the use of force, threats, or intimidation commits ro
(2) Robbery is a class 4 felony.
18-4-302. Aggravated robbery.
(1) A person who commits robbery is guilty of aggravated robbery if during the act of robbery or immediate flight therefrom:
(a) He is armed with a deadly weapon with intent, if resisted, to kill, maim, or wound the person robbed or any other person; or
(b) He knowingly wounds or strikes the person robbed or any other person with a deadly weapon or by the use of force, threats, or intimidation with a deadly weapon knowingly puts the person robbed or any other person in reasonable fear of death or bodily injury; or
(c) He has present a confederate, aiding or abetting the perpetration of the robbery, armed with a deadly weapon, with the intent, either on the part of the defendant or confederate, if resistance is offered, to kill, maim, or wound the person robbed or any other person, or by the use of force, threats, or intimidation puts the person robbed or any other person in reasonable fear of death or bodily injury; or
(d) He possesses any article used or fashioned in a manner to lead any person who is present reasonably to believe it to be a deadly weapon or represents verbally or otherwise that he is then and there so armed.
(2) Repealed.
(3) Aggravated robbery is a class 3 felony and is an extraordinary risk crime that is subject to the modified presumptive sentencing range specified in section 18-1.3-401 (10).
(4) If a defendant is convicted of aggravated robbery pursuant to paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of this section, the court shall sentence the defendant in accordance with the provisions of section 18-1.3-406.
No it's not, because what's "reasonable" in the UK is what the police say is reasonable, and they officially discourage people from using violence in self-defense if they are being burgled or robbed, saying that using force, particularly lethal force, to defend your PROPERTY is improper.Pappa wrote:In the UK, a person is permitted to use "reasonable force" to defend themselves. "Reasonable" is defined as what a normal person would consider reasonable at the time. If your life is in imminent danger, reasonable force can include killing your assailant. If somebody comes into your house armed, and you had reasonable grounds to suspect they would attack you, a court would acquit you unless you continued to use force that was no longer reasonable (by say, stabbing a burglar 10 times in the chest). This applies to any situation where a person finds themself in threat of physical harm, out in the street or anywhere else. It's simply incorrect to say that people here can't defend themselves.
Don't know what the sentencing guidelines are, which could make a difference, but yeah, once someone uses force in the taking of something, it's "robbery," whether it's from a home or on the street.Robert_S wrote:So, legally in the UK there is no difference between assaulting someone on the street and forcing your way into their homes and assaulting them?
With attitudes like those, I'm surprised you don't get thuggish effing yobs burning down major portions of your cities.
Here in Colorado they have to be INSIDE the residence, and you don't have to stop until your magazine is empty, because if you have legal justification to use lethal force, you are not required to shoot once, stop and see if it did the trick, and then shoot again. You are allowed to go ahead and kill the person if you have legal justification to do so, and it's in your best interests to always give them two to the chest and one to the head, which is why you train that way.Robert_S wrote:And actually here in Illinois I believe you are entitled to shoot at an invader all day long , but you have to stop after the first bullet hits.Pappa wrote:In the UK, a person is permitted to use "reasonable force" to defend themselves. "Reasonable" is defined as what a normal person would consider reasonable at the time. If your life is in imminent danger, reasonable force can include killing your assailant. If somebody comes into your house armed, and you had reasonable grounds to suspect they would attack you, a court would acquit you unless you continued to use force that was no longer reasonable (by say, stabbing a burglar 10 times in the chest). This applies to any situation where a person finds themself in threat of physical harm, out in the street or anywhere else. It's simply incorrect to say that people here can't defend themselves.
By that asinine definition, there is not, nor has there ever been, nor will there ever be a "civilized" country on planet earth. This is true of course because every society has criminals in it, and therefore there has been, is, and will always be a necessity for people to carry around the tools of self-defense. Now, when someone invents the Star Trek "phaser" that is 100 percent effective in instantaneously rendering an attacker unconscious from any distance, regardless of what clothing they are wearing or what degree of drug-induced mania they are under, rain or shine, then, and only then will I give up my defensive handgun. Until then, the handgun is the most effective, and most certainly effective defensive tool in the continuum of force available to citizens for their personal defense, and the only thing that's better in a deadly-force situation than a handgun is a large-caliber semi-automatic (or fully automatic) battle rifle.MrJonno wrote:I would say the very definition of a civilized country is one where people don't need to carry around deadly force, in fact if people feel the need to its probably closer to failed stateSeraph wrote:The no longer civilised society you refer to has a homicide rate of 1.28 per 100,000. The homicide rate of an equally uncivilised society I live in, Australia, is 1.3 per 100,000. You are right to be proud to live in the civilised USA where the homicide rate has dropped (yes, it has dropped) to 5.0 per 100,000. I feel so ashamed of our moral cowardice.Seth wrote:The UK, unfortunately, is no longer a civilized society, it's a society of moral cowards that has surrendered it's liberty to the thugs and thievesand no longer deserves any sympathy when its people are victimized, injured or killed by their masters...the armed criminals of their society.
You can do way more damage with a glass jar full of gasoline and Tide washing-machine detergent (poor man's napalm) and a match than I can do with my handgun.MrJonno wrote:Which is irrelevant as I wouldnt have a gun to do any disastrous anticsSeraph wrote:I would rather live next to a child raping gun owner than live next to MrJonno. If someone can get criteria that spectacularly wrong, there is no telling what disastrous antics he may get up to.Gawdzilla wrote:I feel the same way about people who own Macs. It's a single criteria for evaluating another person that can be handled viscerally, no thinking required. Just say, "You own a Mac? You're an evil person!". Easy peasy.MrJonno wrote:I would rather live next to a child rapist than live next to someone who owned a firearm
O look. He's skipped clean past it again.Seraph wrote:For the time being I am content to merely point out the threadbareness of Seth's post. He has provided no data at all to back any of it up, and what data are available seem to fly in the face of the crap he is spouting. As far as the hyperbole is concerned, it is all hat and no cattle. It's not the first time either. A few months ago he asked me for figures on crime. I provided them. His reply, and I quote it in full, went like this:MrJonno wrote:I would say the very definition of a civilized country is one where people don't need to carry around deadly force, in fact if people feel the need to its probably closer to failed stateSeraph wrote:The no longer civilised society you refer to has a homicide rate of 1.28 per 100,000. The homicide rate of an equally uncivilised society I live in, Australia, is 1.3 per 100,000. You are right to be proud to live in the civilised USA where the homicide rate has dropped (yes, it has dropped) to 5.0 per 100,000. I feel so ashamed of our moral cowardice.Seth wrote:The UK, unfortunately, is no longer a civilized society, it's a society of moral cowards that has surrendered it's liberty to the thugs and thievesand no longer deserves any sympathy when its people are victimized, injured or killed by their masters...the armed criminals of their society.
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