Fightflight
Member
I can only respond to this here currently, as I've become rather tired, and these discussions usually go nowhere anyway:
And as far as that hippy talk about not fighting violence with violence? If in the dead of night' date=' I hear someone breaking into my home, where I have two little girls and my wife to protect, I'm going to be thinking of them before I think about some asshole that just invaded my domain. Gandhi never went through this. So please, don't be ridiculous.[/quote']
To say that violence cannot be stopped with reasoning and peaceful tactics is really shortchanging the human race. "I have family, I'm going to protect my family using violence" is actually based on chimpanzee-like instinct to protect one's territory with scratching and biting and whatnot. Chimps are nasty creatures, and unfortunately, we evolved from them.
Of course, while we have a chimp's territorial tendencies, this does not mean we are chimps in their entirety. Ghandi certainly went through this, on a much grander scale. His home was invaded. His country was his home at that point (he had, in a way, adopted India, even though he had grown up and graduated from college in the UK). The criminal invading his home and threatening his family (Indians) were the British. On that huge, massive scale, he managed to stop an entire invasion with non-violence.
So who can say it can't be done again on a tinier scale?
It's not ridiculous. You can't stop violence with violence. It simply doesn't work that way. Besides Gandhi, here is an example of lower violence. In fact, it lowers all crime, period with zero violence.
In Norway...
And while this is jailing, and not direct crime, our prison systems are all kinds of awful, and, as Cracked.com pointed out, are all about retribution, not rehabilitation. This was Norway's crime rate in 2008:They have come up with a prison system that actually treats the vast majority of its population nicely -- to the point that it seems like inmates might as well be in summer camps rather than correctional facilities. In Bastoy Prison' date=' for example, residents (don't call them "prisoners" -- that's not sensitive) sentenced there actually seem to live the good life. Convicted pedophiles, drug dealers and even serial killers have access to a movie theater, tanning beds and even an occasional game of football with the guards. Also, their cells look like this:
During the summer, Norwegian prisoners go horseback riding and have barbecues. In winter, they freaking ski jump. And if they don't like the food the prison offers them, they're allowed to cook for themselves -- they're even issued knives.
Norway has an incredibly low recidivism rate -- within two years of being released from jail, a Norwegian offender is only a third as likely to commit another crime as criminals from, say, the United States.
This is because unlike the U.S. justice system, which relies heavily on retribution, the Norwegian system believes in rehabilitation. The whole point of their prison system is to fix the criminal and turn him into a productive member of society. And, when you look at the statistics, it's working like there is no tomorrow.
"In 2008, Norway recorded 34 murders for the year. The 2008 murder rate was 0.69 people per 100,000 head of population."
And this is Norway's gun law.
"The law for storage of firearms are strict.
For shotguns and rifles, the requirement given in the weapons act is to have the firearm, or a vital part of it, securely locked away. Generally, this means an approved gun safe, securely bolted to a non-removable part of the house. (A vital part is considered to be the bolt group—the bolt head will suffice—for rifles, the slide for pistols, or the barrel of a shotgun.)
The police are allowed to make a home inspection of the safe. An inspection must be announced more than 48 hours in advance, and the police are only allowed to see the safe and make sure it is legally installed.
Ammunition is generally only sold to persons with valid weapon license. However, if one is in possession of a legally unregistered shotgun bought before 1 April 1990, and is in the hunter registry, one can purchase shotgun ammunition. Without a special permit only 10,000 rounds of ammunition can be stored by a single person, or 15,000 rounds if 5,000 of them are 22LR or smaller calibre. Two kg of black powder may be stored in a separate building if the person has a license for a black-powder firearm.
Older rules stated that the ammunition must be locked away separately, but these rules were abandoned in the latest revision of the weapons act."