"If each of us carried a gun"
Dec. 8th, 2008 08:09 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
A nice compare-and-contrast in the London Times showing what happens to murderous terrorists in a city where the citizenry is armed -- in this case, London c. 1909:
Later on he quotes Mahatma Gandhi (!) as saying the most evil thing the British did to India was to deprive them of their guns.
Worth a read.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/article5299010.ece
Rhetoric about standing firm against terrorists aside, in Britain we have no more legal deterrent to prevent an armed assault than did the people of Mumbai, and individually we would be just as helpless as victims. The Mumbai massacre could happen in London tomorrow; but probably it could not have happened to Londoners 100 years ago.
In January 1909 two such anarchists, lately come from an attempt to blow up the president of France, tried to commit a robbery in north London, armed with automatic pistols. Edwardian Londoners, however, shot back – and the anarchists were pursued through the streets by a spontaneous hue-and-cry. The police, who could not find the key to their own gun cupboard, borrowed at least four pistols from passers-by, while other citizens armed with revolvers and shotguns preferred to use their weapons themselves to bring the assailants down.
Today we are probably more shocked at the idea of so many ordinary Londoners carrying guns in the street than we are at the idea of an armed robbery. But the world of Conan Doyle’s Dr Watson, pocketing his revolver before he walked the London streets, was real. The arming of the populace guaranteed rather than disturbed the peace.
That armed England existed within living memory; but it is now so alien to our expectations that it has become a foreign country. Our image of an armed society is conditioned instead by America: or by what we imagine we know about America. It is a skewed image, because (despite the Second Amendment) until recently in much of the US it has been illegal to bear arms outside the home or workplace; and therefore only people willing to defy the law have carried weapons.
Later on he quotes Mahatma Gandhi (!) as saying the most evil thing the British did to India was to deprive them of their guns.
Worth a read.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/article5299010.ece