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Mike Hosking Gets It over Gun Laws, Shame the PM Doesn’t

Mike Hosking seems to be a regular reader of The BFD. He’s nailed it over what is happening with new gun laws.

I can assure you in different circumstances the fact New Zealand First are now holding gun reform up would be major news.

If for no other reason than there are large swathes of people who feel they have been badly treated by this government.

It would also be news for the sheer politics of this. New Zealand First have clearly worked out their support to this point has damaged  them badly in the polls, and they stand to see some of that support wander off to ACT, who have stood firm on guns and zero carbon, so look more impressive to gun owners and farmers.

Which is good, but ONLY NZ First is in a position to make sensible changes to the Arms Bill. Act can’t and leaving until the election to support them won’t help shooters at all.

The Police Association didn’t do themselves a lot of good either by calling on New Zealand First and National to swing in behind the reform.  Because as good a job as the police do, what most of us have worked out by now is that the people they deal with, the criminals, aren’t exactly  lining up for registration for handing in their semi-automatics, or for doing anything much legal at all.

Nothing the Police or the Police Association want will save a single person.

And that is what has let this whole exercise down so badly.

A person like me who has no vested interest in guns, doesn’t own one, will never own one, couldn’t really care less if they’re licensed or not can see as clear as day, that what the government were trying to do and what they have done, bares [sic] little or any resemblance to the events  of Christchurch.

Yes, we have a lot of guns, but no, we don’t use them to kill people.  The statistics show it, we looked them up. If you were trying to link weaponry to murder you couldn’t do it. The statistics are remarkably consistent over a very long period of time.

Even as gun ownership went up, the murder rate didn’t. We are not a  murderous country, and certainly not with guns. So the government reform  rounded up large numbers of farmers, hunters, and pest controllers and  involved inconveniencing them with bureaucracy.

The fact 56,000 guns got handed in tells you all you need to know in a  country of well over a million guns, they didn’t touch the sides. And although, technically, there are fewer guns around, a lot of those guns have been replaced by new guns.

The buyback was an abject failure, and probably contributed to Mike Clement’s losing out on the job for commissioner. Hosking points out some rather inconvenient facts but also highlights that there are probably more guns now after the buyback as expensive guns were handed in and the owners bought newer guns. That’s how much of a failure it was.

No one has been murdered, but politically the anger remains. Step in New Zealand First to milk it, and go for votes. As for Labour, it’s embarrassing given March 15 is this Sunday, and the aim was to have it  sorted by then.

And huzzah for NZ First. I normally would feel some sympathy for the shanking Stuart Nash is currently getting, but he made this bed, ignored experts and toadied up to the Police. He will probably be wondering just what exactly happened to his political career in a few months.

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