@Banno
I listen to you speak of the 'gun collection/turn in' that the Australian government implemented in your country, what a popular move it was and how much safer the Australian citizen is now.
I was curious as to how your government convinced the average Aussie to turn in their firearms. How you could convince someone who had the right to purchase a product, possess it, maybe even have used it, that they are no longer in need of having it.
I was under the impression that it was a voluntary collection and the Australian citizens that owned firearms were convinced that such a theory would work. As I dug deeper into this action, I came across some ideas, some facts and some enforcement that I was not aware of, nor is it offered up when the idea of the solution to the American Gun Control Debate would be to do what Australia did.
The Australian Law Banned and Confiscated Guns
"The crucial fact they omit is that the buyback program was mandatory. Australia’s vaunted gun buyback program was in fact a sweeping program of gun confiscation. Only the articles from USA Today and the Washington Post cited above contain the crucial information that the buyback was compulsory. The article by Smith-Spark, the latest entry in the genre, assuredly does not. It’s the most important detail about the main provision of Australia’s gun laws, and pundits ignore it. That’s like writing an article about how Obamacare works without once mentioning the individual mandate."
I had no idea that the turn in was mandatory and you would be breaking the law if you did not comply. It makes me wonder who really wanted the guns off the street, the government? the average Aussie? possibly a mix of both? Am I wrong when I suggest that there were likely Aussies on both sides of the mandatory gun turn in? Has the Australian government done this to the Australian citizen with any other product or just guns?
For me, there has to be a willingness on both the governments position and the citizens, to work towards a solution and that just doesn't come across in what happened in Australia. Willingness on both parts comes across in the sound bites and the suggestion that if America were really wanting to solve the school shootings that America would do what Australia did.
What Australia did was not voluntary it was coercion and although that part is buried deep within the "Australian gun control fallacy" it appears in the art of the lead up to the confiscation.
By Christmas of 1996, the Australian citizen had to give up their personal firearm(s) to the government or be prosecuted and serve 12 months in jail for not complying. I understand the logic that if a government is going to impose a law, there is a consequence for those that break that law, it is pretty simple to understand. What I don't understand is why there is a shower scene of naked men in jail, on a poster promoting this movement that both the Australian government and the Australian citizen are supposedly in support of. Why not just a standard mug shot of the average Aussie that didn't comply? What do you think the choice of picture was meant to imply?
The quote below explains so much of how 2nd amendment is viewed by gun owners and the possible/probable scenario that would have to happen for America to do what Australia did.
"Let there be no doubt.
Gun confiscation would have to be administered by force of arms. I do not expect that those who dismissed their fellow citizens for clinging bitterly to their guns are so naïve that they imagine these people will suddenly cease their bitter clinging when some nice young man knocks on their door and says, “Hello, I’m from the government and I’m here to take your guns.” As though somehow those who daily espouse their belief that the purpose of the Second Amendment is to allow citizens to resist government oppression and tyranny will not use the Second Amendment to resist what they see as government oppression and tyranny. Or maybe they are so naïve."
I think what he is expressing is a fair reality of how things might work out but he doesn't go far enough into what would happen after word spread through the first "confiscation" community and how the government would be received from there on.
As I said a few days ago, I feel movement in my position but coercion is not the way to go about it here in the United States, under the Constitution we agree to. I feel like Australia took a mallet to something as delicate as a Starfish and we can do better, I just haven't figured out the way. But I am looking...