Sydney under siege from heavily armed robbers terrorising shopkeepers, pub staff and residents

It doesn’t matter if you’re robbed by a man with a hammer, knife, meat cleaver, machete, ax, sawed-off shotgun or hand gun if you are un-armed. You are a victim.

Via The Truth About Guns:

Welcome to Australian gun politics, courtesy the hive mind at wikipedia: “Self-defense is not accepted as a reason for issuing a [gun] licence, even though it may be legal under certain circumstances to use a legally held firearm for self-defense.” The chances of having a legal gun around the place with which to defend yourself? “Currently, about 5.2% of Australian adults (765,000 people) own and use firearms for purposes such as hunting, controlling feral animals, collecting, and target shooting.” So not very high then. Infinitesimal in urban areas. Where the crime is. Duh. Clock this from the scribes at dailytelegraph.com.au: “SYDNEY is under siege from gangs of heavily armed robbers terrorising shopkeepers, pub staff and residents . . .

Meat cleavers, machetes, sawn-off shotguns and axes are among the weapons used in recent weeks as thugs smashed their way into so-called “soft targets” – mostly service stations, bottle shops and licensed premises – demanding cash, wallets, jewellery and mobile phones.

Details of more than 50 of the most violent incidents have been released by police this month.

However they are just the tip of the iceberg, with as many as a dozen more reported every 24 hours according to logs of the police encrypted radio network . . .

The surge in the number of hold-ups is a major concern for police because it bucks a downward trend that has seen the lowest rates for armed robbery in years.

Also alarming is the increase in gangs and lone bandits hitting multiple targets in a single night.

The above is the result of the Liberal dream of fewer guns in the hands of law abiding citizens, thanks to Australia’s aggressive firearm buy back program started in 1996.

An extensive study was performed by the British Journal of Criminology in 2006 and measured the effectiveness of the program after a decade had passed.

Via the Sydney Morning Herald:

HALF a billion dollars spent buying back hundreds of thousands of guns after the Port Arthur massacre had no effect on the homicide rate, says a study published in an influential British journal.

The report by two Australian academics, published in the British Journal of Criminology, said statistics gathered in the decade since Port Arthur showed gun deaths had been declining well before 1996 and the buyback of more than 600,000 mainly semi-automatic rifles and pump-action shotguns had made no difference in the rate of decline.

The buy back program had no effect.

“Homicide patterns (firearm and non-firearm) were not influenced by the NFA, the conclusion being that the gun buyback and restrictive legislative changes had no influence on firearm homicide in Australia,” the study says.

In his first year in office, the Prime Minister, John Howard, forced through some of the world’s toughest gun laws, including the national buyback scheme, after Martin Bryant used semi-automatic rifles to shoot dead 35 people at Port Arthur.

Although furious licensed gun-owners said the laws would have no impact because criminals would not hand in their guns, Mr Howard and others predicted the removal of so many guns from the community, and new laws making it harder to buy and keep guns, would lead to a reduction in all types of gun-related deaths.

One of the authors of the study, Jeanine Baker, said she knew in 1996 it would be impossible for years to know whether the Prime Minister or the shooters were right.

“I have been collecting data since 1996 … The decision was we would wait for a decade and then evaluate,” she said.

The findings were clear, she said: “The policy has made no difference. There was a trend of declining deaths that has continued.”

Flash forward to 2011 and continue with the TTAG story .

Via The Telegraph.au:

Four men armed with knives, machetes and pool cues are wanted over the robbery of a hotel at Taree West on Wednesday in which a 54-year-old employee was assaulted and locked with two patrons in a store room as assailants ransacked cash registers.

In two separate incidents last week, knife-wielding men robbed a convenience store at Griffith and a Bulahdelah service station, while at Berkeley in the Illawarra two men threatened a shopping centre security guard with meat cleavers before escaping with money and cigarettes.

Again, if you are un-armed, it doesn’t matter if the man robbing you has a pool cue or a machete. You are at a distinct disadvantage and a victim.

Of course, the Sydney police have what they think is helpful advice.

It comes as police urged shop keepers, hotel staff and the public caught in the middle of a hold-up to do whatever the assailants asked – not to be a hero and not to make sudden movements.

Don’t make any sudden movements. Got it.

Acoustic version of Sweet Child O’ Mine performed by Slash and Myles Kennedy

This is a fantastic version of Sweet Child O’ Mine performed by Slash and Myles Kennedy from Alter Bridge.

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Happy New Year and the countdown to November 6th begins now.

Leading From Behind: Obama and the 2012 ‘Banished Word List’

I’m not sure if academics at Lake Superior State University are trying to help their fellow academic who occupies the White House by giving a subtle hints that his message is not resonating.

Here is the list. And, as a bonus, I’ve found a few video example with the Lecturer in Chief giving usage examples to help everyone remember how not to use the banished words.

Amazing

Baby Bump

Shared Sacrifice:

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Occupy:

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Blowback (Obama doesn’t use the word ‘blowback’ in the clip. However, if the media wasn’t in the tank for him, he would experience much more ‘blowback’ over this scandal):

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Man Cave

New Normal:

“What is a danger is that we stay stuck in a new normal where unemployment rates stay high. People who have jobs see their incomes go up. Businesses make big profits, but they’ve learned to do more with less. And so they don’t hire. And, as a consequence, we keep on seeing growth that is just too slow to bring back the eight million jobs that were lost. That is a danger. So, that’s something that I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about.”

Pet Parent (this term should have never been created in the first place)

Win The Future:

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Trickeration

Ginormous

Thank you in advance

Van Halen news update plus a classic VH Video

With all the depressing news in the world today, here is something that really cheers me up (since I’m a big time VH fan). Info shamelessly lifted from VHND:

JANUARY 3rd: 
*CONCERT DATES & CITIES ANNOUNCED for first wave of tour

JANUARY 10th: 
*FIRST SINGLE PREMIERE
*FIRST MUSIC VIDEO PREMIERE
*CONCERT TICKETS GO ON SALE

FEBRUARY 7th: 
NEW ALBUM RELEASE DATE

I think I’ll have to head out and catch show when Van Halen gets to Motown (or, more likely, Auburn Hills).

And to get fired up for the upcoming tour, here is a vintage VH video (the video quality isn’t the best, but the performance is great) of the band covering Elvis in Brazil back in ’83.

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Too cool.

To replace coal in 2020 Britain would burn 60m tons of wood (biomass) 5X the timber they could produce

Radical environmentalists are still spinning their wheels trying to solve global warming (a problem that is nonexistent) with so-called solutions that produce less power and destroy the environment in the process.  Ironic, since they are environmentalists and their goal is to protect the environment.

All the bad green ideas begin in Europe and work their here and the next push (after solar and wind power) to come from Europe is Biomass.

Via the ASI blog:

It is really quite marvellous how all of these various things we’re supposed to be doing to save the planet are exactly the things we used to do which damaged the planet so badly. As Matt Ridley points out when talking about what we’re supposed to do to keep warm when we can’t burn coal or oil:

To replace coal, the government projects that by 2020 Britain will be generating electricity from burning up to 60m tonnes of biomass, mainly wood, about five times the timber harvest that Britain could conceivably produce.

Now “five times the harvest we could possibly produce” means that we would be over using that resouce. Denuding these islands of trees in fact. Which is what we actually did do all those centuries ago and what impelled us to go and conquer a quarter of the world in order to gain resources (no, really, we did things like go to war against Denmark so that we could have access to the Baltic timber to replace what we’d burnt) and also to start digging up coal in the first place.

Because there was no wood left, see?

Boneheads.

Newt Video: Christmas Day 1776

I’m still in the ‘anybody be Romney’ camp as far as 2012 goes. Furthermore, I’m not sold on Newt however, I really like this video.

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Interesting Graphs: Unemployment in The Obama Era

First up is the now famous projected unemployment rate with and without stimulus legislation / spending graph with actual results plotted.

While this is damming to the liberal spending agenda on its own, it doesn’t tell the entire underemployment story.

Via American Enterprise Blog:

The real unemployment rate. The official (U-3) unemployment rate is 8.6 percent. But the labor force has been shrinking as discouraged workers have been disappeared by government statisticians rather than counted as unemployed. But what if they weren’t? What if the Labor Department added those folks back into the numbers? 

You get this:

So much for Liberal economic policies.

h/t Instapundit.

Funny Video: “Holiday Wishes… We know exactly what holiday you are referring to”

I’m not a big fan of The Office, but I happened to catch their ‘Christmas Party’ episode.

I was cheering by the end of Stanley’s rant:

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“Holiday Wishes… We know exactly what holiday you are referring to.”

Love it!