
When I see stories like
this story from Australia it reminds me of how much I hate laws that ban guns.
First, the majority of gun bans are in fact racist in nature. Take for example the ban of "Saturday Night Specials" in some states. When you look at what type of gun is considered a "Saturday Night Special" you will see its nothing more than any inexpensive handgun.
Who buys inexpensive handguns? People who can't afford an expensive handgun for protection. All of them are poor, and most of them are minorities of some sort. So this type of gun ban basically makes it so that only upper middle-class people can afford to protect themselves while poor people are left
relying upon the police to protect them.
Then there is the other type of gun ban, where either a state or country decides that guns are the reason why they have crime. None of them ever examine their society as a whole, they just scapegoat guns. Their people go along with it, as no one wants to think that perhaps the problem lies
within themselves, everyone wants to place blame elsewhere. What better place to lay blame than an inanimate object that isn't capable of defending itself?
Australia has one of the strictest bans on weapons of all types, with their gun laws being cemented after
The Port Arthur Massacre which shocked the Australian people to their core. As we've now learned after enacting the Patriot act after 9/11, the wrong time to legislate anything is right after a national tragedy.
This article is really not anything shocking, however it shows that gun bans never remove guns nor do they reduce crime. Guns are now only available to the wealthy, or criminal gangs. No one is safer, no one has been protected. Only innocent law abiding Australians have been hurt.
Boom times on underworld gun market
By EDMUND BURKE
02-04-2006
From: The Sunday Mail (Qld)
ILLEGAL guns can be bought "as easily as a pack of cigarettes" through a booming weapons black market in Queensland.
Despite official denials, The Sunday Mail has been told that weapons are freely available through underworld dealers.
Prices start at $300 for a pistol and range to $4000 for the firepower of an Uzi sub-machinegun, capable of firing 10 heavy-calibre rounds a second.
Police Minister Judy Spence assured Parliament this week that tough laws had brought gun crime under control.
However, Opposition Leader Lawrence Springborg, leading criminologist Paul Wilson, retired hero policeman John "Bluey" O'Gorman, legal gun dealers and even an ex-bank robber have confirmed the illegal trade is thriving.
The revelations about the extent of the firearms black market comes as Australia approaches the 10th anniversary on April 28 of the Port Arthur massacre in which a lone gunman killed 35 people.
It also follows questions about how rival bikie members involved in a shootout at a Gold Coast resort two weekends ago were able to obtain their weapons.
Some of the bikies had travelled from interstate and police have confirmed they were under surveillance in the lead-up to the incident, in which five people were either shot or stabbed.
In a statement to The Sunday Mail, the Queensland Police Service maintained there was no black market in weapons, conceding illegal guns were only sold "from time to time" by individuals.
Unlawful possession of a firearm carries a maximum penalty of seven years in jail or a $22,500 fine .
Yet an underworld source who contacted The Sunday Mail said "guns are everywhere" in a flourishing black market.
"Buying a firearm is as easy as buying a packet of cigarettes if you have the right connections," the source said.
"You can get anything you want. The new laws didn't change anything except push them further underground."
The unnamed source said a Glock 19 pistol could be bought in Brisbane for $2500. The Sunday Mail was sent a photograph of the weapon.
The high-powered Glock is similar to those issued to police. It has a shorter-than-average barrel length of 100mm, making it easily concealed and more attractive to criminals.
The source said a lightweight Uzi sub-machinegun could be bought "from the right people" in Brisbane for $4000. The Israeli-designed 9mm automatics are favoured by special forces troops -- and crime gangs -- around the world.
Mr Springborg confirmed that police officers had privately told him of an estimated "hundreds of thousands" of weapons on the black market.
"They tell me that they get traded around the bars, among organised criminal outfits and between the bikies," he said.
"It's organised and there is lots of it. It's not just one or two -- there is a whole subculture that exists and anyone that says it isn't is just telling fibs."
Mr Springborg called on the Government to target gun dealing "rings".
"The resources aren't put in to the covert operations like they are with checking licensed shooters because they are the easy touches," he said.
Decorated former policeman John "Bluey" O'Gorman said denying the existence of a guns black market was "insulting the intelligence of average people".
"It's always going to be there -- anyone who tries to trot out figures to say the black market has been reduced is really fooling themselves," he said.
"The figures might be going down in the detection rate but there is no possible way that anyone could claim to have accurate figures of the number of criminals who have got handguns because they don't participate in surveys.
"Some groups around the place have no difficulty in getting a handgun.
"People who have a criminal lifestyle don't care about any legislation. "
Bond University criminologist Dr Paul Wilson said there was "universal agreement" that it was easy for criminals to buy guns in Queensland.
"There are huge numbers of illegal handguns circulating on the black market," he said.
"It's not very difficult getting a handgun. If you are a semi-professional criminal and you know which pub to go to it is that easy. People have told me that, people I trust."
Dr Wilson said he believed weapons continued to be smuggled through Customs and that separate parts could be mailed to people and then reassembled in Australia. He said home-made handguns were also available on Brisbane's streets.
Reformed armed robber and journalist Bernie Matthews revealed that a weapon he was arrested with in 1996 had been bought in Queensland.
"I have no problem going on the record to say there is a black market in weapons in Queensland," he said. "It was easy when I was a bank robber and my sources give me no reason to think that it is any more difficult now."
Note:
Australian gun ban is not working, there are plenty of guns available on the black market. This article shows how foolish the idea of banning guns can be.