I'm not suggesting Australia's pre-1996 gun culture is analogous to that of the USA; only that many of the seemingly unquestioned orthodoxies of US gun policy are inaccurate.
Basically nobody in Australia has a gun for 'protection'. People are more likely to keep a cricket bat or something around for that, because no two-bit burgalar in australia is going to be packing heat.
Anyone that can afford an illegal gun in Australia is obviously involved in some lucrative criminal enterprise - thus these guns (which cost a hell of a lot to procure) are generally not used for random shootings, by petty crooks or wannabe gangsters.
Illegal guns are generally owned by real gangsters, which to be honest with you, doesnt have much to do with me as i dont associate with them.
We do have hunters here - my state has banned duck season because many of our waterfowl species are under enough threat from development and habitat destruction that allowing people to shoot them for fun is not justifiable.
Other forms of hunting certainly are practiced in Australia (and other states from mine do have duck season) - but people don't seem to think they need uzis to participate.
It does seem to define "overkill" to use that kind of weapon to hunt an animal, right?
As for "bushmeat" as droppers calls it - we do have animals that are hunted for their meat (namely kangaroos) and for 'recreation' (wild pigs and the like) but many of our native species are protected by law from hunters, which still doesnt stop some people - but in terms of hunting, we don't have a lot of apex predators that are a threat to human life, or even to livestock.
A lot of farmers do have rifles to shoot foxes, feral dogs and the like, but people don't need automatic weapons for that.
We have a very different environment and ecosystem to that of North America, and a lot of threatened species - that because of introduced predators such as cats and foxes, need conservation in order not to die out.
Australia doesn't have the sort of wildlife that people proudly shoot and mount on their walls. Most of our fauna is considered a vital part of the country itself, not something that needs to be shot at and conquered. I fully understand that North America has a number of species of animal that are big, wild and capable of killing humans, and this makes a difference in people's attitudes towards gun ownership; it is a component of the wider culture. I don't think this really plays a big part in the arguments for urban gun ownership, and i'm not really trying to make a point in favour of one outcome or another - by that, i mean that i don't have an opinion about what US legislators should or shouldn't do in regards to firearm restrictions.
I'm simply offering a different perspective in relation to my own experience.
And i'm interested in discussing the issue with my stateside brothers and sisters.
I can see that some people take this personally and get defensive, but i'm not criticising america, americans or claiming my country to be some perfect, idealised place. It isn't. But i appreciate and agree with our restrictive gun laws. I'm not saying they would work in the states, but i'm interested in discussing why that might be the case.
I have a particular interest in this topic because i have immediate family that live in the states, and these massacres bother me a lot.
None of my family (here or in any other country) are gun owners. So forgive me if i don't quite "get it".
That's a very emotional argument. I thought you were all about being "objective", "impartial" and dispassionate?
And no, droppers, we don't have "deer season" because we don't have deer in Australia. Which "only predators" are you referring to?
Perhaps you don't know much about australia at all, mate?
The thing that was like a horror movie was the Port Arthur massacre that led to the gun buyback. You've been watching too much propaganda if that is your understanding of the situation here.
Your snipes about how "easy to control" Australians are seem pretty ironic to me, considering the obvious unease you have in even discussing gun control. The NRA and various other gun lobby advocates have succeeded in making this a virtually taboo subject, or one that is automatically deemed "too hard" - an impasse - so let us never speak of it again.
To me, that is being "controlled".
It is far from utopian to aim for a better, safer society. To claim otherwise is a cop-out. Plus, i am the last person to take some kind of patriotic stand on this; i see australia's faults and flaws as clearly as anyone - this is not "my country is better than yours" - it is simply someone coming from a (slightly) different culture explaining how some of the misconceptions about guns can - and have - been pretty successfully overcome here. I don't love Australia or being Australian - and i sometimes worry about friends and family that live in the US, because to me, gun culture is irrational and absurd.
For those that don't know what i'm talking about, there was a big massacre in Tasmania in 1996 by an aggrieved loner who shot dozens of tourists - families, couples, elderly people and children.
Due to public sentiment, the federal government of the day decided to ban a range of automatic and semiautomatic firearms - which was implemented via a "buyback" scheme, where the government paid people to return their now-banned guns.
Despite anger amongst some gun owners, the government pushed ahead with the plan, and the prime minister even addressed a rally of pro-gun demonstrators (in a bullet-proof vest) to argue his case.
Now, amongst people i know, that prime minister is not remembered fondly - he is pretty unpopular - but the gun buyback was one of his few political acts that is widely viewed as a brave response to what was happening. We havent had a massacre since that day.
I don't know anyone that likes John Howard, but i dont know anyone that disagrees with that policy either.
Disarming the australian public did not lead to "tyranny", disaster or catastrophe.
From what i can see, australia is less of a police state 19 years later than america is now.
Guns arent the answer to stopping tyranny - involvement in the political process is.
On the other hand, nobody seems to know what the anwer to stopping senseless massacres in the USA is.
If i suggested social welfare, and more balanced access to healthcare (particularly mental health care), education and that sort of thing might help, i'd probably get called a "commie" again.
It seems like the only people used as scapegoats in these tragic situations are mentally ill people. "Oh, well, he was crazy. We can't take guns off 'good upstanding citizens'" seems to be the refrain.
Since when did mental illness make you a bad person?