I dunno... It's that piece of **** movie that destroyed such a wonderful summer. I was enjoying my freedom from religion and then I fell into that horrible trap... I'm gonna do a dissection of it on youtube later on... But I'm haunted for life.
Trying to get this thread back on track. This isn't about the USA, how things are there, or how you justify your private arsenals to yourselves or anyone else. It's about the gun situation in Britain, or rather lack of same.
We've explained how it is. Nobody remembers a time when it was normal or legal to keep a firearm for self defence in the way it is in the USA. Back then, the sort of firearm that was available would have been nothing like the weapons available now, so there really is no comparison. But not only that. Nobody (in the sense of total absence of articulated public demand, even from an extremist minority) wants guns to be available in the way they are in the USA. Every time there is a gun outrage, 100% of the public outcry is on the side of demands for
more gun control, not less.
While there has been increased gun control, notably following the Hungerford (1987) and Dunblane (1996) incidents, these measures have been generally welcomed by the public, with little dissent. We've heard a lot here from Americans who want to justify their own addiction to firearms, even to the point where they've tried to persuade us that we
should be demanding the right to go around armed to the teeth. But no cigar. It just isn't an issue.
The video you were watching, Jonathan, seems to have portrayed a bunch of upper-class yobbos protesting about the fact that new legislation was proposing to
insist they use guns (to control foxes, rather than using dogs to tear them apart). It had nothing to do with any gun control legislation.
Now when the gun control legislation actually happened (1988 and 1997, perhaps?), people were just as free to mount public protests if they wanted to. They didn't. In their droves. Because pretty much nobody owned guns in the first place, so pretty much nobody objected.
So please, Jonathan. I'm getting curious. What was it about the film that "destroyed a wonderful summer"? Why are you "haunted for life" by it? Were you really so invested in the British upper classes' right to ride their horses after a pack of dogs, chasing a fox that they wanted to see ripped to pieces, that the legislation to ban that activity has done this to you? I'm quite confused here.
Rolfe.