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01-01-2001 12:00 AM
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Stu Chisholm



- Joined on 11-22-2008
- Southeast Michigan
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Grandstanding for political gain
I'm a bit of a news junkie, so imagine my surprise when I found out that I missed all the stories on rampant stabbings going on! I mean, there MUST have been a rash of crimes involving these vicious weapons to make someone introduce such a bill, wasn't there? No???
Well that means just one thing: shameless grandstanding for political gain! Pass a law against some imagined boogeyman (lock blade knives of the variety that I've carried since I was about 12 years old and haven't stabbed anyone yet) and then crow later on about how "tough on crime" they are.
Sorry, but anyone with a brain cell sees right through that. This is BAD legislation against a non-existant problem. Stabbing people is already illegal, whether you do it with a knife, sword or screw driver. We need to make this one go away fast, and put the legislator who introduced it on notice that we'll do the same to them if they keep up this shenanigans.
How about working on REAL problems, like the budget shortfall and the corrupt Detroit school system? Stop wasting our time and tax dollars!
"If guns cause crime, all mine are defective." - Ted Nugent
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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outlaw stupid political figures
enough is enough its time to see people take a stand and tell lansing what we will and will not allow them to do to us and our freedoms. This is turning out to be the next california.
Steve
Novi MI
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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I wouldn't put too much stock in this bill ever passing.
I had a meeting with my Rep. last year in which I took my Leatherman out of my holder, slapped it on his desk (unopened), and asked him if he felt in any way threatened by this "weapon".
Needless to say, he was a little taken aback by this, and wondered why I had even him asked that questionm in the first place.
Once I had mentioned the bill submitted by Rep. Smith and my rationale for opposing it, he stopped me before I could finish and told me not to worry about it.
Once he heard the name of the sponsor, he informed me that Rep. Smith does not have very much respect among his collegues (could have something to do with his attendance problem), and subsequently does not have very much support for this bill.
Don't construe this post to imply doing nothing regarding this.
By all means, let your representatives know your position on this.
Just don't put too much stock in it ever getting out of committee or even being approved by the house.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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How useless can a bill be
Dear Rep: Smith
A locking blade is a safety feature on any knife. If you have ever used one and had the blade close on your finger you would know this. P person wanting to use a knife for a weapon could just tape the blade open any way. Find some else to do with you time in stead of perposing silly bills.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Another bill: Ban certain heavy round spherical sporting devices...
... including "bowling balls", "croquet balls", as these objects are too dangerous to entrust to the dolts who elected me - imagine if one of these objects were dropped on the foot! If we could save just one child, it would all be worth it!!!!!
- Virgil S.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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We can probably expect something like this from our brilliant legislators. Maybe we can have Cutlery Cops.
Two contrasting stories half a world apart caught my attention last week. One was about a proposed kitchen knife ban in Great Britain. The other was about a 70-year-old Detroit gun owner.
In London, a group of doctors has proposed a ban on long kitchen knives in an effort to cut down on stabbing deaths. Yes, we once joked that after handguns were banned people would go on killing each other with knives. Government would need to prohibit everything from golf clubs to medium-sized rocks.
This, however, is not a joke.
The researchers from West Middlesex University Hospital wrote in the British Medical Journal that long, pointed kitchen knives may be used in up to half of all stabbings. Although Britain banned most private guns in the wake of a Scottish school shooting in Dunblane in 1996, its murder rate in 2002 was the highest since record-keeping began 100 years ago. Britain's violent crime rose nearly 18 percent from 2003 to 2004.
According to the BBC, the medical researchers said that short pointed knives are all that most cooks need. Researchers cited "10 top chefs around the UK" who agreed longer knives have little practical value in the kitchen, and said such knives can pierce a person's organs like "cutting into a ripe melon."
Not all chefs agreed. Malcolm Duck, chairman of the Edinburgh Restaurateurs Association, noted that anything in a house "in the hands of an idiot" can be used as a weapon. Regulating kitchen knives, he told The (Edinburgh) Scotsman, would be equivalent to telling a surgeon to operate with a bread knife instead of a scalpel.
The researchers also call for long kitchen knives to be made with rounded, blunt tips. I suppose there may be a niche market for those (are any progressive knife manufacturers listening?).
However, two much bigger issues exist. First, why aren't the British more concerned about protecting themselves from the sort of people who carve up others with knives? Second, who would want government to pass laws regulating how to outfit a kitchen in the first place?
I doubt one 70-year-old Detroit homeowner would support such laws. Last week he shot and killed an intruder in his house on Fullerton Street. Neighbors were supportive, including an 86-year-old man who said he owns a .38-caliber pistol and a shotgun (and, I'm guessing, may also have a few long kitchen knives).
Similar cases are reported regularly. One last year involved a 32-year-old Farmington woman with a concealed carry gun permit who used a small-caliber pistol in her purse to thwart an armed robber. The robber, with a 9mm pistol in his waistband, turned and fled after the woman waited until he was 10 feet away and then drew her weapon.
Most of us remember that, when Michigan's concealed carry gun law was enacted four years ago next month, we were told to expect shootouts at every stoplight and bodies piled like cordwood on Woodward Avenue. Instead, Michigan's violent crime rate has continued to drop (the state ranked 46th nationwide in 1990, and had improved to 37th in 2004). Even more important, persons with concealed carry permits have been dramatically less likely than the average adult to be involved in the misuse of a firearm.
I don't mean to suggest that gun or knife laws are the only factor behind crime rates, but any law that affords the public more liberty while arguably making it safer deserves special praise.
Back in Britain, there's no reason to expect blunting kitchen knives will slice the murder rate any more than banning guns did. So which new laws might we expect big-government types there to seek next? Bans on unlicensed cricket bats? Ceremonial Scottish dirks? Privately-owned gas-powered chainsaws?
I'll admit, it sounds pretty silly. Then again, not too long ago so did the idea of a kitchen knife ban. Just remember that when sharp pointy sticks are outlawed, only outlaws will have sharp pointy sticks.
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crazycajun



- Joined on 11-22-2008
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cuz it would stop them from "doing something" about "crime"...
right, wrong, or indifferent... the more laws that are passed, the more they can say...
"Look... i'm DOING SOMETHING..."
michigan constitution, article 1. Sec. 6.
Every person has a right to keep and bear arms for the defense of himself and the state.
keep your powder dry.
"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote." Bovard 1994
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