And also in the UK, they give gun licences back to violent criminals who have served prison time for violent and abuse related offences, despite vigorous opposition from the police, who rightly claim they are a danger to society.
Shell, there is zero confusion in your above wording... "they give gun licenses back to violent criminals who have served prison time..." Maybe it is my wording that is incorrect to get my message across to you. I got your message... you have a personal involvement in the specifics of 'one' person being given a gun license who was the person who offended against you, and then you have used that to portray as though the UK has sloppy gun laws. That is so far from the facts it just isn't even funny... and then Abstract responded from another country believing:
Shellbell, in the UK? I am surprised. Sorry to hear that. I somehow assumed it was the states.
Then you outlined more specifics... adding your vested interest in this 'one' case, yet not really clarifying your prior intent as incorrect.
Yes it was in the UK. I found out by it being in an online local newspaper, where it even stated his criminal convictions for kidnapping and serious assult and an 'accident' causing the death of a former girlfriend. Fortunately, I had already left having had threats to me and my son.
Obviously because you are directly affected, you are emotional about this type of discussion because your offender was given a weapons license after abusing you. Does that suck? Yes... but it doesn't change the overall point, which is that the UK has exceptional gun control laws, and especially in comparison to the US. You shouldn't even use both the countries in the same sentence when comparing gun laws, as they are complete opposites.
That is one thing most Commonwealth country laws have over US and other countries, in that our criminal systems are small and insignificant compared to other countries, and that is because jail breeds criminals... and jail and ongoing punishment for the rest of your life breeds further crime. The US system is a world joke about this very thing, and other countries do the exact opposite, which works.
Shell... your experience has nothing to do with the specifics of the overall discussion in what is being said, and that is that an isolated incident that is related to yourself should not be portrayed as normal in the UK, which is incorrect. That is what has happened in this thread... and it is completely false and misleading.
This isn't discounting your trauma Shell... but to be perfectly honest, I believe my points above are valid and should not be portrayed by you as though the UK has a gun problem that even comes close to the US issues of gun control. The US beats us all hands down when it comes to gun problems, and our countries aren't even on the same plain of existence in this discussion. Isolated events are not the norm.
Trying to remember about the US mass shooting... I think it is Obama's 14th or 15th mass shooting since being President, yet the US media and world media attempt to cite it as the 2nd or such into his second term. Yet a week later there is another in Pennsylvania... but a shootout versus mass shooting, yet still enough people died at one event to make world news.
If you cannot see the point above about comparison and portraying a single event in a country context, then I honestly don't know what will. You have to let go of this attachment you have to your event versus what is happening in America versus what happens in the UK, Australia, France, Ireland, etc, in relation to guns. The problems are just nothing alike for us... regardless of our individual traumas.