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==Statistics==
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Okay, so I was reading an argument that within the first year homicides went up 3.2%,(& homicides with firearms went up 300%), Australia-wide, assaults went up 8.6%; Australia-wide, armed robberies went up 44% (Victoria only). I'm aware that the robbery number was cherry-picked as the biggest increase, because the Australian number wasn't as distinctive/large.
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== External links modified ==
It's been almost a decade, and I've not seen any re-caps (along with comparisions of the newer pistol laws - before and after)


Hello fellow Wikipedians,
I also haven't seen any data from before (ie: were the trends going up, staying stable, or going down previous to this legislation), I haven't seen any numbers per capita (are there simply more homicides because there are more people?), or data from economic strata (are more people becoming poor?)


I have just modified 4 external links on ]. Please take a moment to review . If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit ] for additional information. I made the following changes:
I know that in the U.S. the crime trends were already headed down, and advocates tend to claim those decreases for gun control. What's the status here?
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20160113130203/http://www.anao.gov.au/uploads/documents/1997-98_Audit_Report_25.pdf to http://www.anao.gov.au/uploads/documents/1997-98_Audit_Report_25.pdf
*Corrected formatting/usage for http://theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,18950038-7583,00.html
*Corrected formatting/usage for http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/PARLMENT/members.nsf/V3ListCurrentLCMembers
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20120826235136/http://www.ausparty.org.au/issues.html to http://www.ausparty.org.au/issues.html


When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
-- ~ender 2005-02-26 08:04:MST


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I think you have it backwards. The biggest change to gun laws in the U.S. recently is that many states have allowed the right to carry a concealed weapon. This has been accompanied by a decrease in the crime rate, and it's gun-rights activists, not gun-control ones, that seem more likely to cite crime-rate figures lately. ] 05:53, 23 May 2005 (UTC)


Cheers.—] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">(])</span> 02:25, 26 October 2017 (UTC)
== "moral panic" stuff - not specific to Austraila ==


== Removal of section about 2017 study ==
Removed:


A user has removed a whole section about a study considering state and territory compliance with the national firearms agreement. When I reverted this, i was reverted: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/Special:MobileDiff/809576852. Rather than get in an edit war, I'd be happy to discuss in this page. I disagree with the user that it is irrelevant to the article. Thoughts? ] (]) 00:58, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
The attitudes towards law-abiding firearm owners and the opponents of the 1996 gun laws by the politicians of Australia, the media, the anti-gun movement and the community in aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre and the rapid introduction of the 1996 gun laws were an example of ] on a large scale with many people using law-abiding firearm owners and those who opposed the 1996 gun laws (both gun owning and non-gun owning) as ] for what happened at Port Arthur. Also, the rapid introduction of the 1996 gun laws highlights serious flaws in Australian democracy with the parliament rapidly passing these laws without proper, rational debate and scrutiny of these laws as well as threatening politicians who are members of political parties that back the bans but hold pro-gun sentiments and objected to the bans with removal from the party if they didn't support the political party's line and stance on the gun laws.
:Yeah, the section is rather long standing and relates directly to the gun laws in Australia. It should remain in the article. ] <small>]</small> 01:34, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
The study was commissioned by a Gun control group, undertaken by a gun control advocate simply to arrive at a pre-determined conclusion and for their own gun control purposes. The report, along with the parties involved are highly biased, and not only does not represent a reputable / credible source, but the firearms industry, firearm owners as well as legislators disregard such material. The item relates to the National Firearms Agreement (NFA) with is crucially NOT gun law but a 15 page agreement reached upon, which state laws were to be 'generally' based and importantly there was no obligation to implement all, or indeed any of the provisions, this sentiment has been restated recently by the Minister of Justice in relation to the recently revised NFA. Hence where there is no obligation; 'compliance' to this brief agreement is not relevant to the actual legislation, certainly not a page describing gun laws. There are many reputable academic reports published in relation to the firearm laws and the post 1996 environment, that are more insightful, more credible, and certainly more relevant, but not entirely necessary for such a page discussing gun laws. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 02:26, 10 November 2017 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:The study was reported by multiple third party sources, including the ABC, SMH and The Guardian. Here at Misplaced Pages, we says what sources say, not what our opinion is. You might think the report is "highly biased", but the reliable sources don't. ] <small>]</small> 05:13, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
::I'm making further discussion regarding the additions to these sections. The edits are unsourced, and appear to be original research by the author. ] <small>]</small> 12:06, 22 November 2017 (UTC)


== Primary sourced statements ==
:To claim this is specific to Australian democracy is just nonsense; politicians *always* respond to public outcries on a specific issue, and the response is often ill-considered legislation that advances other agendas that couldn't get passed in more normal times. Hence the ] in the United States, to pick one very well known example. Or witness the belting the left of the Democratic Party was given by the hawkish centrist wing on their opposition to the Iraq War in 2003, despite being proven completely right by history. --] 06:49, 23 August 2005 (UTC)


There's a couple of statements that are entirely sourced by primary sources and show no evidence of notability, as per the ] policy. As such I've reverted {{diff2|814346933|the addition}}. I see {{u|CamV8}} also {{diff2|809135091|removed}} it too previously. ] <small>]</small> 08:32, 9 December 2017 (UTC)
::Also removed: "The incident left a strong impression among those who opposed the 1996 gun laws that John Howard dislikes all forms of legal gun ownership among law-abiding Australian citizens as well as him using the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre for his own personal political gain (since he was elected Prime Minister of Australia in March 1996 which raises questions on his motivations) by using law-abiding firearm owners as ] and potraying them as threats to the community by wearing the bullet-proof vest to the rally."


An interesting application by Stickee and CamV8 of the policy to remove an edit in this article which was under the sub heading "Statements by organisations". The edit removed contained extracts from the National Farmers’ Federation Submission to the Review of the National Firearms Agreements. That submission was published on the NFF's own website at <ref>http://www.nff.org.au/get/submissions/5086.pdf</ref> The Misplaced Pages policy includes "A primary source may only be used on Misplaced Pages to make straightforward, descriptive statements of facts that can be verified by any educated person with access to the primary source but without further, specialized knowledge." In this case anyone may go to the NFF website and verify that the NFF did in fact make these statements because that organisation has itself published the submission.] (]) 05:38, 10 December 2017 (UTC)
Howard was elected before the Port Arthur massacre. Aside from that, the section was very poorly constructed, and quite obviously constructed from a pro-gun perspective; nobody can pretend to know what John Howard considers a threat to the community. That is an inference that shouldn't be made here. Also, the personal political gain Howard got out of the aftermath is irrelevant to the gun control debate.
{{reflist-talk}}
:The problem with using solely primary sources is there's no way to establish ] about the information presented by the primary source(s). At this stage, there's no evidence that statement is notable at all. Other content in the article is republished in notable secondary sources. ] <small>]</small> 01:15, 12 December 2017 (UTC)


] applies to articles not the content in articles. ] ]. The history of this article with respect to the NFF statement shows that on 31 March 2017 Stickee said "Statements by organisations: this is pretty much a COPYVIO. It'll need to be reworded into our own words". In other words Stickee then accepted that the statement was suitable for inclusion in the article. I answered this by saying on 2 April 2017, "With respect, not COPYVIO but fair use of a submission to government" and the NFF statement extracts were then continued without any further objection from Stickee until now. It appears that Stickee has misapplied the notability policy. ] (]) 07:32, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
== Olympics ==
:As stated by ] (linked in your quote), it's republishing in reliable sources (aka notability) that's makes an item worthy for inclusion in an article. ] <small>]</small> 10:28, 17 December 2017 (UTC)


The first criteria to note is that Misplaced Pages policies are ''in pari materia'', that is, they are intended to be read and applied in conjunction. In attempting to paraphrase the WP:DUE policy, Stickee says; “its republishing in reliable sources (aka notability) that's makes an item worthy for inclusion in an article”. That may be the case in the positive sense but to rely on notability to exclude an item when the principle policy on notability states that “Notability guidelines do not apply to content within an article” is perverse. In this last comment Stickee is again endeavoring to prevent the statements of the NFF from being included in the appropriate section of the article although as I showed above they are within the permitted use of a primary source. Stickee now claims the due weight policy should exclude the NFF statements but as I mentioned above the fact remains that from 2 April until 9 December 2017 Stickee accepted that the item was worthy of inclusion.] (]) 02:01, 26 December 2017 (UTC)
The last sentence is not a sentence. Perhaps someone who can divine its intent can complete it. --] 19:02, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
:"Stickee accepted that the item was worthy of inclusion." No, I never did. ] <small>]</small> 07:20, 28 December 2017 (UTC)


On 31 March 2017 you objected to the inclusion of the item and on 2 April 2017 I answered your objection. From that date on until now you acquiesced in the items inclusion. Granted this is not the same as you making an outright statement that you accepted the item but you were a continuing editor of this article and you did not raise any further objections although you were otherwise constant in your vigilance of the article. I can only therefore assume that it did not occur to you to raise the worthiness of the item for inclusion, ergo you accepted it as worthy.] (]) 08:57, 28 December 2017 (UTC)
== More pro-gun bias ==
:I appreciate your effort to read my mind. However, not noticing something does not mean I agree with it or "accept it as worthy". ] <small>]</small> 14:03, 30 December 2017 (UTC)


Thank you for your appreciation of my mind reading efforts. If you missed the inclusion, you are of course correct when you state, “not noticing something does not mean I agree with it or "accept it as worthy"”. But on 31 March 2017 you did notice it and said, “this is pretty much a COPYVIO. It'll need to be reworded into our own words”. That is, you then positively agreed it was worthy of inclusion but in a reworded form and that was only to avoid what you thought was COPYVIO. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 07:23, 31 December 2017 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
This: "This has in fact become a hot issue in recent times as some people are becoming more sympathetic to private gun owners and the burdensome restrictions placed on them, forcing the political climate to focus more on the criminals using the weapons and less on the weapons themselves."
:I never said it was worthy of inclusion. But that's a pointless thing to argue anyway. Focus on policy-based reasoning for inclusion. ] <small>]</small> 05:05, 4 January 2018 (UTC)


== Improvement of Article / Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Politics/Gun politics ==
Is not 'fact', but someone's opinion regarding gun control (as much of this article seems to be). Using adjectives such as 'burdensome', and assuming to know that more Australians are sympathetic to pro-gun groups than opposed to said groups has no place in an encyclopaedic website.


This article should be improved, see ]. Some proposals are already here on this disc some may come additionally. --] (]) 20:12, 11 April 2018 (UTC)
Furthermore, categorical statements like "forcing the political climate to focus more on the criminals using the weapons and less on the weapons themselves." also have no place in an encyclopaedic website, as this is more conjecture and opinion on the political climate of gun control in Australia.


== Anti-gun bias == === Sources for Improvements ===


==== Literature ====
While the edits of ] have removed a lot of out-of-place and POV stuff, I think the article has now gone the other way. For example, "the Australian community" did not push for those specific gun laws, a segment of the community did while another segment (not just the "pro-gun lobby") opposed it. If I remember correctly it was very controversial and, for example, is attributed with destroying National Party support and bolstering One Nation in Queensland. Which brings me to my second point, which is instead of being a tit-for-tat tightrope attempt at NPOV portrayal of the history of gun control, the article should actually provide proper background information on gun politics in general in Australia and the various players in that political game. Until someone can address this and in particular address the anti-gun POV now present in the article I think we need a POV warning, so I'm sticking one there now. --] 12:59, 18 September 2005 (UTC)
* Beattie, Stewart K.;
* Chapman, Simon; ''Over Our Dead Bodies: Port Arthur and Australia's Fight for Gun Control'', ISBN 978-1-74332-031-0 (275 Pages),()
* Deckert, Antje; Sarre, Rick; ''The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice'', Springer, 2017, ISBN 978-3-319-55747-2 () (P. 788 ff => history of gun laws development)
* Noble, Keith Allan;. At p. 29 "''A TANGLED WEB OF POLICE CORRUPTION ''" and more Info. () ISBN 978-3-47884512-0


==== other Sources ====
== Attribute opinions please ==
* AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT: ''Commonwealth Position on Firearms, Submission 8325'', Canberra 1991 Oktober, 9 /
* THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA, House Hansard, Thursday, 9 May 1996 Page: 766 f. <small>("... Denison (Mr Kerr) proposing ... The need to give full support to the Commonwealth's initiatives to secure stricter gun control ...")</small>
* Barbour, Bruce (NSW-Ombudsman) 2006; ''Review of the Firearms Amendment (Public Safety) Act 2002'',
* NSW Police, Annual Report 2012-13, Page 99 "''On 6 July 2012 the Firearms Act 1996 was amended to authorise police officers to seize licences and permits that are suspended, revoked or otherwise cease to be in force. Before the amendments, police only had the power to seize a person’s firearms. ''" source:
* THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA, HVP No 43 - 27 March 2017, Federation Chamber <small>(" Mr Goodenough ... this House: notes that while Australia has some of the strongest firearm controls in the world, illicit firearms continue to remain a threat to community safety ...")</small>


The link number 56 to a pdf is no longer available. https://aic.gov.au/media_library/publications/mr/mr02/mr02.pdf <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 06:28, 20 May 2018 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
Dear anonymous gun rights advocate:


<small>* signing area for additions to calm the bot :-p --] (]) 11:55, 14 April 2018 (UTC)</small>
Please read the ] policy. The view that the reaction to the Port Arthur massacre was a moral panic is an opinion, not a fact, one that is obviously held by some people but not all. Please attribute these views appropriately, preferably with evidence to back it up. --] 01:13, 20 September 2005 (UTC)


== Christchurch shooting and removal of McPhedran et al study ==
==Reply==


{{ping|CamV8}}, even though it is no longer true that NZ has had no mass shootings, we should not remove the McPhedran paper as it is still valid as of the time of publication. I've added a note that the claim of no mass shootings is no longer correct as of 2019 but that may not actually invalidate the conclusions of the paper. We would need to find a RS that says the paper is no longer valid before removal. ] (]) 03:38, 3 May 2019 (UTC)
What happened after the Port Arthur massacre was in fact an example of moral panic and scapegoating on a large scale. My advice to you is to read all the Australian newspapers that were printed from when the news about the Port Arthur massacre was reported to the gun debate that occured afterwards.


Thanks {{ping|Springee}} for the clarification, yes I agree that at the time of publication this research was valid. However ] is also important. The intent of this research section is to help inform the reader via ] while maintaining a ] of the analysis of data. I removed ] this statement, as it may give the reader a misinformed view regarding the comparison of gun laws between the 2 countries. Your suggestion that we need to wait until a new RS that discounts this research is written is not something I would expect to see any time soon. Other relevant ] such as NZ action on changing gun laws is a clear example of refuting the McPhedran paper. If the conclusions in McPhedran's paper stood the test of time the NZ gun law changes would not be happening. This discussion would be better suited to the ] as comparison between countries is presented in that article. This article is about the Australian Gun Laws. Regards ] (]) 08:06, 3 May 2019 (UTC)
After reading the newspapaers, have a read of the Moral Panic page here on Misplaced Pages as well as look at the Misplaced Pages page on the Columbine High School massacre and you will see that the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre (as well as the aftermaths of other mass-shootings) was an exercise in moral panic and scapegoating on a large scale.


:CamV8, I don't agree with the view that this isn't specifically relevant to Australian gun laws since the paper was comparing the two countries in context of the laws Australia implemented vs those in NZ. I also don't agree with refuting as justification for removal. In cases like this its common to have research papers on both sides. However, I think your 10 year test argument is harder for me to discount. Again I lean towards keep it as it doesn't harm the reader to have access but also keep the context of NZ has since had a shooting. Since I haven't read the paper I can't say how that single event changes the data in the paper. This is also an important point. For a while Norway lead the first world in terms of mass shooting casualties per capita, significantly exceeding the US, due to just one even. If I recall the study used a 10 year window. Once the Norway shooting was "too old" Norway once again dropped way down on the list. Anyway, I think you have made a good argument in terms of the 10 year test but I would rather qualify the scope of the study vs just remove it. Should we ping some other active editors on this page for a 3rd opinion? Regards to you as well, ] (]) 12:44, 3 May 2019 (UTC)
:My advice to you is that just because ''you'' think it was a moral panic doesn't mean that opinion is universal, or even a majority one. Many prominent Australians consider the introduction of those gun laws as a rational response to events. I am Australian and my family *are* farmers and occasional hunters, so I *do* happen to remember quite a lot about that particular debate. I ''personally'' think that there's a fair element of truth to your moral panic hypothesis, but that is irrelevant. It shouldn't be hard to find somebody in an editorial in a shooter's magazine (or even in the mainstream papers) who called the reaction a moral panic. Quote them instead of asserting your opinion as fact. As you haven't done so, I'm going to have to revert you again.--] 03:22, 20 September 2005 (UTC)


::Springee, lets stick to the question of whether the McPhedran paper is worthy (in the context of this article) of representing the position its conclusion states. I find this discussion a little perplexing as you have stated you haven't read the paper. Other incidents in other countries such as Norway have no context in this discussion on this article. As suggested earlier, if you would like the discuss the comparison of Australian gun laws with other countries then this discussion would be better suited to the ] as comparison between countries is presented in that article. While I understand your point, I think this paper is no longer relevant to this article. Cheers ] (]) 14:40, 3 May 2019 (UTC)
Robert Merkel,


:::I haven't tried to find the paper and there isn't a direct link. However, the paper is titled "Mass shootings in Australia and New Zealand: A descriptive study of incidence" so it seems relevant to this article. I would presume based on the Misplaced Pages text that the article was assessing the effectiveness of Australia's legal changes by comparing them to NZ's laws. I will try to get a copy of the paper to get more context for the conclusion stated in the Wiki article. Have you had a chance to read it? ] (]) 15:00, 3 May 2019 (UTC)
There are many Australians out there who see that the actions of the politicians, the media, and the anti-gun movement in the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre was an act of moral panic, mass-hysteria, and scapegoating and many of these people are not gun owners. Also, the whole moral panic hypothesis is NOT irrelvent because what happened after Port Arthur and Monash University was an example of it and nearly a million law-abiding Australian citizens were treated like crap.


==Research section in chronological order==
Besides, what I haved added on the "Gun Politics of Australia" page posting IS fact - it is the stuff that people like yourself tend to overlook or ignore because it dosen't doesn't fit your anti-gun views. There is a need to show another side of the debate as well as the need to show facts and information on the political and social environment in the immediate aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre and the Monash University shootings that have been ignored by people like yourself because there was a large segment of the Australian community that was vilified and ostracised by the politicians, the media, the anti-gun movement and sections of the Australian communinity back in 1996 and 2002 all because they objected to a law that was bad and had no impact on making Australia safer or no impact in reducing the chances of another mass-shooting.
Presenting the research section in chronological order helps the reader understand the progression of research prepared by the academic community. Rolling this up by author presents this research as a series of ] papers with ] conclusions making a ] situation which leads the reader away from ]. {{ping|Stickee}} I disagree with your edits rolled up by author on this basis and will reordered these papers by date. ] (]) 10:08, 14 May 2019 (UTC)


Also, as mentioned above many of the research papers cited in this section are ] papers with ] author conclusions with no ] cites. Obviously we should be citing ] ]. With many examples of this problem in this section it is not ideal and needs a cleanup. I will continue to challenge content that is not adequately cited in an effort to improve this article. I welcome some help. ] (]) 10:08, 14 May 2019 (UTC)
:Would you listen to me for a second? I never said that the moral panic hypothesis is irrelevant or that it doesn't belong on the page. I said we can't state it ''as fact'', because it's clearly not. I think it would indeed ''improve'' the article if it was included ''in the right way''. What I'm suggesting to you is that to include it, you need to establish that some significant group of people believe this to be the case and get the Misplaced Pages to report who they are and why they think that. It shouldn't be hard; heck, blogger Tim Lambert, a guy who devotes a significant fraction of his life to debunking the dubious research of ], thinks the buyback was a waste of money. Do you have access to a research library so you can dig up relevant articles in various media outlets?--] 04:57, 20 September 2005 (UTC)


:{{Re|CamV8}}, you should ping the editor who made those changes so they can see the discussion here. ] (]) 10:48, 14 May 2019 (UTC)
== Major edit ==
:: Thanks, done. plus new section may help discussion.] (]) 11:25, 14 May 2019 (UTC)
:Definitely disagree. ] states that conclusions need to given weight in accordance with their prominence. Giving triple the paragraphs in an article because they published three times in not in accordance with policy. You can't override policy because it "helpds the reader understand" better. ] <small>]</small> 00:56, 15 May 2019 (UTC)


:::gday @Stickee, I see your point, I was looking for a way of editing the research section that didn't read like a list of ] statements on both sides. However as you have pointed out this leads to difficulties balancing ]. For example how many McPhedran articles should be cited, she has published many more articles. Can I expect a complete list in this section? Are these articles considered rs or should we be citing other secondary rs sources?
I have submitted a major edit of this article. Most the the old material is retained in the History and Firearms and crime in Australia sections. I have added a bit more historical background, and a whole major section on the major players in gun politics in Australia. I have put some proper references in, though more are needed. I have tried to change all POV material to be attributed opinions rather than stating it as fact. Most of the pro-firearm stuff I have placed under the "Firearms advocacy groups" subsection, where it belongs. Similarly POV anti-firearm stuff should go in the "Gun control groups" subsection with clear attribution.


:::Another example is the statement from McPhedran regarding ''significant expenditure on the gun the buyback may not have had any impact on youth suicide.'' This is a compelling statement however there was no research done in the cited article by McPhedran on whether government expenditure priorities were impacted by the 'buyback'. I fail to see how this statement can be supported. I interpret this statement as ] by the author and as such not meeting wiki policies.] (]) 10:53, 15 May 2019 (UTC)
I believe the article is now NPOV though the "Gun control groups" section could do with padding out ... I can't bring myself to find out what crap they're spouting to put it in there myself ;). So I think the NPOV warning could be taken out, though seeing I'm the one who put it up there it may be a bit presumptuous of me to take it out on the strength of my own major edit.


== Resolving an apparent inconsistency in the text. ==
To the person who keeps adding pro-firearm POV stuff, ''please desist'', you only make pro-gun look petty and invite a revert war. I am strongly opposed to most of Australia's gun control myself so don't take this the wrong way. By all means make our case but anything that is unproven or unprovable is opinion and needs to be presented as such.


Jeanine Baker and Samara McPhedran, researchers with the International Coalition for Women in Shooting and Hunting (WiSH) made several studies on the NFA. Their 2006 study found an effect on suicide but not on homicide though in later studies they questioned this. Hence my edit, which I hope clarifies the text. ] (]) 23:35, 3 February 2020 (UTC)
--] 05:03, 20 September 2005 (UTC)


== National Shooting Council mention removed as non-notable ==
:This is reasonably fair, though you're right, it does need somebody to look into the gun control campaigners in a bit more detail. I'm happy to remove the neutrality flag from the main article (I'll do so tomorrow if nobody objects). Good work.--] 22:08, 20 September 2005 (UTC)


The paragraph discussing the National Shooting Council was advertising copy supported by a single primary source. It would have required rewriting in entirety to fit encyclopaedic tone, but as a non notable organisation (the online presence is limited to their facebook page, website, and adverts), I considered the most expedient solution deletion of the offending paragraph. ] (]) 08:30, 4 August 2021 (UTC)


== Lede needs work ==


The lede of the article is a little short and doesnt introduce the article as well as it perhaps could. This could use some expanding, particularly the 4th sentence but in general perhaps it could use a small rewrite/expansion? ] (]) 03:10, 23 April 2022 (UTC)


:Also, the second sentence mentions several high-profile killing sprees. What high-profile killing sprees are these? I don’t recall them. Did they really happen, perhaps they did not gain much media attention at the time, or are we assuming there must have been some? ] (]) 18:45, 27 August 2023 (UTC)
I object, someone is still being very selective with their facts.
::Posted very much in error. Please delete. ] (]) 18:55, 27 August 2023 (UTC)


== shouldn't the hyperlink when referring to .45 caliber after mentioning single action shooting competition link to 45 long colt? ==
: Please explain. Or better still, do something about it (assuming you understand the difference between fact and attributed opinion, if you're the same person who was making the earlier rather POV edits without opinion attribution). -- ] 04:25, 22 September 2005 (UTC)


I think it would make more sense that way, as 45 ACP is generally used in auto-loaders and the only revolver I can recall off the top of my head chambered in it (m1917) was double action. ] (]) 21:09, 27 November 2023 (UTC)
No, I didn't make any earlier edits. Here are my problems.
First line: "Australia has a long history of legitimate firearms use" sets the tone for the article. Poor gun owners are being victimised by their gun hating government.

The whole section "Firearms and crime in Australia" is biased. The statistics can be easily manipulated. see http://www.snopes.com/crime/statistics/ausguns.asp
The section "Gun control groups" sends the message that their are a few unbalanced individuals representing the pro-gun lobby.
And while half the references are government sources, the other half are from shooting associations. ] 11:00, 30 September 2005 (UTC) Tom 30/9/05

:I agree that the portrayal of the gun control groups is not particularly flattering, but I suspect that there's at least a little accuracy to it. At the moment, most Australians seem to be quite happy with the gun laws the way they are, and there's little agitation for them to be further tightened; there's almost certainly more dissatisfied shooters who want the laws loosened a bit than people who are actively seeking more restrictions. However, back in 1997, there was certainly a very strong community desire for tighter laws, going much more widely than a few people with a bee in their bonnet.

:That said, the article would probably be improved if somebody looked further into gun control groups in Australia, and also if somebody with some involvement with them had a look.

:At the moment, your suggestions are a little bit difficult to respond to, though. Could you make some more specific suggestions for changes to the article? --] 14:30, 30 September 2005 (UTC)

::I will continue to look into gun use in Australia, and will make specific suggestions when I feel confident that they are perfectly representative of the situation. ] 02:03, 2 October 2005 (UTC) Tom

:::'''Tom''', how are you going? It's been almost 3 weeks now, do you still plan on making some changes and/or do you still object to the article in its present form? Otherwise, we should remove the NPOV tag. --] 01:30, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

: Regarding the sentence "Australia has a long history of legitimate firearms use": this is 100% true and provides important context for the discussion.

: The statistics bit is retained from earlier versions and I agree could be expanded, but the fact remains that AIC statistics strongly suggest the futility of gun control as a means of reducing firearms crime. Considering the difficulties with selective statistics, perhaps the section should be removed and if relevant, points moved to the sections on the gun control lobby and the anti-gun control lobby. By the way, the web page you quote refers to an attempt to claim that crime rates went UP after the new restrictions, which is untrue. This claim is certainly not made in the present article.

: The "Gun control groups" section sends the message that their are a few individuals representing the pro-gun lobby, because this is a factually accurate portrayal of the situation. You may check the reference to the radio interview where Samantha Lee acknowledges that she is the sole member of the NCGC. Unless you have any evidence to the contrary, this fact remains unchallenged and should remain. The claim that she is "unbalanced" is not made, where did you get that from? Criticism of her work is present in the article but only as the attributed opinion of Jeanette Baker. The article itself makes no value judgements, which is as it should be.

: The references from shooting association sources are used because they are the only people, apart from Samantha Lee, who are attempting to do research into gun control in Australia. Those articles have figures from the AIC and ABS as their primary sources but do a lot of collation and further analysis that would be cumbersome to reproduce in an encyclopedia article. Full references are given so the reader is free to judge the validity of those sources and trace the trail back to the AIC and ABS should see fit. --] 03:56, 4 October 2005 (UTC)

== Stylistic point ==

Using the phrase "licensed, law-abiding" like a mantra is clearly an attempt to inject POV into the article; I have removed some of the repetetious uses.

Secondly, my anonymous friend, what's wrong with describing people who own guns as "shooters". What else are people going to do with their guns (except a few who might collect historic weapons which are never fired)?

Oh, and have you considered getting an account, under a pseudonym? It doesn't make your real identity any easier to find, and it's easier to discuss things when we have *something* to call you. --] 23:54, 22 September 2005 (UTC)

: I second all of the above. --] 04:51, 26 September 2005 (UTC)

==Erroneous use of the term 'pro-gun'.==

Just an FYI, this is not America. There is no such thing as a pro-gun lobby, even if this poor nomenclature is illustrated by the media. Pro-gun lobbyists are NOT neccesarily firearms owners, primary producers or sporting shooters in the sense of the word. Anyone who believes that firearms are an integral tool in the ability to facilitate freedom (ie: the constitution of the US) are pro-gun.

In Australia, the 'pro-gun' aspect are actually sporting shooters or primary producers exclusively and I'm sure, as a primary producer and sporting shooter that I can safely say we'd all prefer to be refered to in our correct contexts. Some of us HAVE to use firearms, plain and simple, to survive and run our properties.

Likewise, I am sure that sporting shooters who win us medals at international events aren't 'pro gun' in the American gun nut sense of the word, yet this word has a very overbearing and obviously NPOV implication. It is thereby my suggestion that we refrain from such name calling, lest the term 'pinko lefty tree hugging pot smoking hippies' be utilised to those who are anti-gun to even out the POV. :P And yes, that last bit was tongue in cheek, before I get flamed hard, but just a smart arse way of illustrating that stereotypes are 'teh suck' so to speak. ;) ] 08:58, 10 October 2005 (UTC)

: Agreed. It is a bit like calling a chef "pro-knife". ] 01:34, 11 October 2005 (UTC)

== More opinion presented as fact ==

I have removed the following text:

:''Further criticism stems from the fact that 100% of firearms in Australia are imported from foreign markets, with the compensated confiscation involving the destruction of over a hundred million dollars worth of firearms it was therefore comparable to incinerating an equal amount of cash from the economy, whilst inflating foreign economies and even further causing a financial vacuum in consumerism by the need to purchase replacement firearms matching the new legislation.''

:''Hobbyists and sportsmen alike lambasted the new legislation and compensated confiscation of firearms as the government offered a cash incentive to firearms users to hand in their firearms licence and give up the sport, severely negatively impacting on shooting as a sports as well as silencing the protests over the already overbearing firearms legislation by removing the social numerics of shooters.''

This all looks like opinion to me. If it is an opinion that is widely held and/or has been made known in the public arena, I'd say it should go in the "Firearms advocacy groups" section, presented clearly as being someone's opinion and preferably with references. It probably needs to be shortened a bit, too, perhaps to one short sentence for each of the two paragraphs above. (I know they are already one setence per paragraph but they're very long ones!) While we're at it, the estimates the SSAA did on how (in)effective the longarms buyback was should be mentioned. -- ] 01:46, 11 October 2005 (UTC)

== Compliments to editors to date! ==

I have only recently started viewing this page, but I find it a fairly solid contribution. The efforts of editors to correct overzealous non-npov work are well targeted and improve the work. My sense of it at present is that it is unusually npov for this topic; I have written some and find it extremely challenging to avoid loaded language. See for example my article http://www.c-l-a-s-s.net/ScienceServes.htm .

I will withhold a couple of edits until I get a better sense of the house guidelines. At this time I would add some points:
1) Historically we have 'always' had strict controls on handguns: in fact they were introduced around 1920 without debate, out of fear of bolshevism.

2) State differences in the law were very important. Only the laws of 1996 brought a sense of national interest and federal involvement. Variations were such that in WA many guns were effectively banned that in Queensland and Tasmania were available without restriction. Unitl 1991, in Tasmania it was possible to own fully-automatic weapons, yet despite many unlicenced guns being acquired in all states from Queensland and Tasmania there is still no instance of a fully automatic weapon being used in a murder.

Harmonisation between the states has significantly reduced the sourcing of uncontrolled firearms. --] 01:42 October 2005 (UTC)


:Welcome. I note that you are using the term "npov" - I presume you are familiar with ], the policy it refers to. One of the most relevant points here is the section of "writing for the enemy". Even though the majority of editors here seem to be opposed to gun control, that is no excuse for not making our best efforts to present the views of people who endorse gun control as fairly as possible.

:As to your specific points, your comment on handgun control relating to Bolshevism back in the 1920's is fascinating. Do you have a source?

:You also make a good point on the importance of uniformity, but where do you get your evidence for the claim that no automatic weapon was used for a murder? --]


: Thanks ChrisPer, it sounds like you have some great stuff to add and I'm glad you see the value of NPOV. ] too much about the ], ] and ] are the most important, other things can be tidied up for you by others -- as Robert points out, though, it would be good if you could provide your sources (we can help with setting them out in the right syntax etc). So, ]! P.S. If you put four tildes at the end of your messages (<nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>) it puts your name at the end, linked to your user page, which makes things easier. --] 02:06, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

: Thanks Robert and Russell, I will document my sources when I edit. ] 09:47, 21 October 2005 (UTC)

== Images? ==

I always think a few images are good to spice up an entry, for those with TV-conditioned attention spans ;). I've found a couple of good copyright-expired candidates here: ... these illustrate the "settlement-1980s" section. However, if we only put these (or one of these) in, it could be considered POV. One could possibly also use the mugshot in the ] entry but then it would look a bit odd without pictures for every other section .. so I'm not sure what to do. Suggestions? --] 00:36, 22 October 2005 (UTC)

:If we could locate an image of the government advertising campaign from the national gun buyback scheme, that would be a good one to add. --] 11:46, 22 October 2005 (UTC)

== Statistics ==

A wise man once said to me. "You've heard the weight of opinion, now let me give you the weight of evidence."

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics the murder rate has not changed since the new laws. You are just as likely to be killed today as you were at any time in the last 10-20 years (excepting 1996).

The suicide rate was already going down for the 15 years leading up to 1996, so the ongoing downwards trend cannot be attributed to firearm laws.

78% of firearm deaths in Australia are suicides, mostly young males, with many confounding factors, such as depression, unemployment, alcohol/drug use, etc.

Only 5% of suicides involved firearms.

The violent crime rate has risen since the new laws.

Our biggest killers are still heart disease, cancer and road deaths.

I have treated numerous drug overdoses, and several attempted non-firearm suicides. The only gunshots I have treated were those involving drugs and alcohol.

I can think of dozens of better ways for the $500 million to have been spent. How many lives could have been saved by fixing roads, for a start? --] 02:15, 24 October 2005 (UTC)

:I agree with much of your argument, but Misplaced Pages is not the place to make such an argument yourself. It's a place to quote ''other people'' or groups that have made the same argument. Is it that hard to find published references making precisely this point? --] 07:40, 25 October 2005 (UTC)

(Isn't that exactly what I did, Robert? I quoted figures from the ABS. Incidentally, according to the Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, absence of a firearm does not affect how likely a person is to attempt suicide.) ] 05:33, 27 October 2005 (UTC)

== Remove NPOV tag? ==

It's been over a month since someone objected to my proposal to remove the NPOV tag. Since they are anonymous I don't know whether they've made any changes. Since that person hasn't responded to my query on what they wish to change and whether they're going to change it, and seeing there have been no major changes made in the last couple of weeks, I propose once more that the NPOV tag be removed. I will do so one week from today unless somebody objects. --] 05:17, 9 November 2005 (UTC)
: Done. --] 01:59, 17 November 2005 (UTC)

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Removal of section about 2017 study

A user has removed a whole section about a study considering state and territory compliance with the national firearms agreement. When I reverted this, i was reverted: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/Special:MobileDiff/809576852. Rather than get in an edit war, I'd be happy to discuss in this page. I disagree with the user that it is irrelevant to the article. Thoughts? Goldcactus (talk) 00:58, 10 November 2017 (UTC)

Yeah, the section is rather long standing and relates directly to the gun laws in Australia. It should remain in the article. Stickee (talk) 01:34, 10 November 2017 (UTC)

The study was commissioned by a Gun control group, undertaken by a gun control advocate simply to arrive at a pre-determined conclusion and for their own gun control purposes. The report, along with the parties involved are highly biased, and not only does not represent a reputable / credible source, but the firearms industry, firearm owners as well as legislators disregard such material. The item relates to the National Firearms Agreement (NFA) with is crucially NOT gun law but a 15 page agreement reached upon, which state laws were to be 'generally' based and importantly there was no obligation to implement all, or indeed any of the provisions, this sentiment has been restated recently by the Minister of Justice in relation to the recently revised NFA. Hence where there is no obligation; 'compliance' to this brief agreement is not relevant to the actual legislation, certainly not a page describing gun laws. There are many reputable academic reports published in relation to the firearm laws and the post 1996 environment, that are more insightful, more credible, and certainly more relevant, but not entirely necessary for such a page discussing gun laws. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Eatyoursoylentgreen (talkcontribs) 02:26, 10 November 2017 (UTC)

The study was reported by multiple third party sources, including the ABC, SMH and The Guardian. Here at Misplaced Pages, we says what sources say, not what our opinion is. You might think the report is "highly biased", but the reliable sources don't. Stickee (talk) 05:13, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
I'm making further discussion regarding the additions to these sections. The edits are unsourced, and appear to be original research by the author. Stickee (talk) 12:06, 22 November 2017 (UTC)

Primary sourced statements

There's a couple of statements that are entirely sourced by primary sources and show no evidence of notability, as per the WP:PRIMARY policy. As such I've reverted the addition. I see CamV8 also removed it too previously. Stickee (talk) 08:32, 9 December 2017 (UTC)

An interesting application by Stickee and CamV8 of the policy to remove an edit in this article which was under the sub heading "Statements by organisations". The edit removed contained extracts from the National Farmers’ Federation Submission to the Review of the National Firearms Agreements. That submission was published on the NFF's own website at The Misplaced Pages policy includes "A primary source may only be used on Misplaced Pages to make straightforward, descriptive statements of facts that can be verified by any educated person with access to the primary source but without further, specialized knowledge." In this case anyone may go to the NFF website and verify that the NFF did in fact make these statements because that organisation has itself published the submission.Antihypocritic (talk) 05:38, 10 December 2017 (UTC)

References

  1. http://www.nff.org.au/get/submissions/5086.pdf
The problem with using solely primary sources is there's no way to establish notability about the information presented by the primary source(s). At this stage, there's no evidence that statement is notable at all. Other content in the article is republished in notable secondary sources. Stickee (talk) 01:15, 12 December 2017 (UTC)

Notability applies to articles not the content in articles. The notability guideline does not determine the content of articles, but only whether the topic should have its own article. Notability guidelines do not apply to content within an article. The history of this article with respect to the NFF statement shows that on 31 March 2017 Stickee said "Statements by organisations: this is pretty much a COPYVIO. It'll need to be reworded into our own words". In other words Stickee then accepted that the statement was suitable for inclusion in the article. I answered this by saying on 2 April 2017, "With respect, not COPYVIO but fair use of a submission to government" and the NFF statement extracts were then continued without any further objection from Stickee until now. It appears that Stickee has misapplied the notability policy. Antihypocritic (talk) 07:32, 12 December 2017 (UTC)

As stated by WP:DUE (linked in your quote), it's republishing in reliable sources (aka notability) that's makes an item worthy for inclusion in an article. Stickee (talk) 10:28, 17 December 2017 (UTC)

The first criteria to note is that Misplaced Pages policies are in pari materia, that is, they are intended to be read and applied in conjunction. In attempting to paraphrase the WP:DUE policy, Stickee says; “its republishing in reliable sources (aka notability) that's makes an item worthy for inclusion in an article”. That may be the case in the positive sense but to rely on notability to exclude an item when the principle policy on notability states that “Notability guidelines do not apply to content within an article” is perverse. In this last comment Stickee is again endeavoring to prevent the statements of the NFF from being included in the appropriate section of the article although as I showed above they are within the permitted use of a primary source. Stickee now claims the due weight policy should exclude the NFF statements but as I mentioned above the fact remains that from 2 April until 9 December 2017 Stickee accepted that the item was worthy of inclusion.Antihypocritic (talk) 02:01, 26 December 2017 (UTC)

"Stickee accepted that the item was worthy of inclusion." No, I never did. Stickee (talk) 07:20, 28 December 2017 (UTC)

On 31 March 2017 you objected to the inclusion of the item and on 2 April 2017 I answered your objection. From that date on until now you acquiesced in the items inclusion. Granted this is not the same as you making an outright statement that you accepted the item but you were a continuing editor of this article and you did not raise any further objections although you were otherwise constant in your vigilance of the article. I can only therefore assume that it did not occur to you to raise the worthiness of the item for inclusion, ergo you accepted it as worthy.Antihypocritic (talk) 08:57, 28 December 2017 (UTC)

I appreciate your effort to read my mind. However, not noticing something does not mean I agree with it or "accept it as worthy". Stickee (talk) 14:03, 30 December 2017 (UTC)

Thank you for your appreciation of my mind reading efforts. If you missed the inclusion, you are of course correct when you state, “not noticing something does not mean I agree with it or "accept it as worthy"”. But on 31 March 2017 you did notice it and said, “this is pretty much a COPYVIO. It'll need to be reworded into our own words”. That is, you then positively agreed it was worthy of inclusion but in a reworded form and that was only to avoid what you thought was COPYVIO. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Antihypocritic (talkcontribs) 07:23, 31 December 2017 (UTC)

I never said it was worthy of inclusion. But that's a pointless thing to argue anyway. Focus on policy-based reasoning for inclusion. Stickee (talk) 05:05, 4 January 2018 (UTC)

Improvement of Article / Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Politics/Gun politics

This article should be improved, see Misplaced Pages:WikiProject_Politics/Gun_politics#Gun_laws_in_Australia. Some proposals are already here on this disc some may come additionally. --Tom (talk) 20:12, 11 April 2018 (UTC)

Sources for Improvements

Literature

other Sources

  • AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT: Commonwealth Position on Firearms, Submission 8325, Canberra 1991 Oktober, 9 / , No. 15879 Cabinet Minute
  • THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA, House Hansard, Thursday, 9 May 1996 Page: 766 f. Gun Control ("... Denison (Mr Kerr) proposing ... The need to give full support to the Commonwealth's initiatives to secure stricter gun control ...")
  • Barbour, Bruce (NSW-Ombudsman) 2006; Review of the Firearms Amendment (Public Safety) Act 2002, Firearm and Explosive Detection Dogs
  • NSW Police, Annual Report 2012-13, Page 99 "On 6 July 2012 the Firearms Act 1996 was amended to authorise police officers to seize licences and permits that are suspended, revoked or otherwise cease to be in force. Before the amendments, police only had the power to seize a person’s firearms. " source: online-PDF
  • THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA, HVP No 43 - 27 March 2017, Federation Chamber ILLEGAL FIREARMS TRAFFICKING (" Mr Goodenough ... this House: notes that while Australia has some of the strongest firearm controls in the world, illicit firearms continue to remain a threat to community safety ...")

The link number 56 to a pdf is no longer available. https://aic.gov.au/media_library/publications/mr/mr02/mr02.pdf — Preceding unsigned comment added by 203.30.3.0 (talk) 06:28, 20 May 2018 (UTC)

* signing area for additions to calm the bot :-p --Tom (talk) 11:55, 14 April 2018 (UTC)

Christchurch shooting and removal of McPhedran et al study

@CamV8:, even though it is no longer true that NZ has had no mass shootings, we should not remove the McPhedran paper as it is still valid as of the time of publication. I've added a note that the claim of no mass shootings is no longer correct as of 2019 but that may not actually invalidate the conclusions of the paper. We would need to find a RS that says the paper is no longer valid before removal. Springee (talk) 03:38, 3 May 2019 (UTC)

Thanks @Springee: for the clarification, yes I agree that at the time of publication this research was valid. However WP:10 year test is also important. The intent of this research section is to help inform the reader via wp:rs while maintaining a wp:npov of the analysis of data. I removed wp:bold this statement, as it may give the reader a misinformed view regarding the comparison of gun laws between the 2 countries. Your suggestion that we need to wait until a new RS that discounts this research is written is not something I would expect to see any time soon. Other relevant wp:rs such as NZ action on changing gun laws is a clear example of refuting the McPhedran paper. If the conclusions in McPhedran's paper stood the test of time the NZ gun law changes would not be happening. This discussion would be better suited to the Talk:Overview of gun laws by nation as comparison between countries is presented in that article. This article is about the Australian Gun Laws. Regards CamV8 (talk) 08:06, 3 May 2019 (UTC)

CamV8, I don't agree with the view that this isn't specifically relevant to Australian gun laws since the paper was comparing the two countries in context of the laws Australia implemented vs those in NZ. I also don't agree with refuting as justification for removal. In cases like this its common to have research papers on both sides. However, I think your 10 year test argument is harder for me to discount. Again I lean towards keep it as it doesn't harm the reader to have access but also keep the context of NZ has since had a shooting. Since I haven't read the paper I can't say how that single event changes the data in the paper. This is also an important point. For a while Norway lead the first world in terms of mass shooting casualties per capita, significantly exceeding the US, due to just one even. If I recall the study used a 10 year window. Once the Norway shooting was "too old" Norway once again dropped way down on the list. Anyway, I think you have made a good argument in terms of the 10 year test but I would rather qualify the scope of the study vs just remove it. Should we ping some other active editors on this page for a 3rd opinion? Regards to you as well, Springee (talk) 12:44, 3 May 2019 (UTC)
Springee, lets stick to the question of whether the McPhedran paper is worthy (in the context of this article) of representing the position its conclusion states. I find this discussion a little perplexing as you have stated you haven't read the paper. Other incidents in other countries such as Norway have no context in this discussion on this article. As suggested earlier, if you would like the discuss the comparison of Australian gun laws with other countries then this discussion would be better suited to the Talk:Overview of gun laws by nation as comparison between countries is presented in that article. While I understand your point, I think this paper is no longer relevant to this article. Cheers CamV8 (talk) 14:40, 3 May 2019 (UTC)
I haven't tried to find the paper and there isn't a direct link. However, the paper is titled "Mass shootings in Australia and New Zealand: A descriptive study of incidence" so it seems relevant to this article. I would presume based on the Misplaced Pages text that the article was assessing the effectiveness of Australia's legal changes by comparing them to NZ's laws. I will try to get a copy of the paper to get more context for the conclusion stated in the Wiki article. Have you had a chance to read it? Springee (talk) 15:00, 3 May 2019 (UTC)

Research section in chronological order

Presenting the research section in chronological order helps the reader understand the progression of research prepared by the academic community. Rolling this up by author presents this research as a series of wp:primary papers with wp:or conclusions making a wp:synth situation which leads the reader away from wp:npov. @Stickee: I disagree with your edits rolled up by author on this basis and will reordered these papers by date. CamV8 (talk) 10:08, 14 May 2019 (UTC)

Also, as mentioned above many of the research papers cited in this section are wp:Primary papers with wp:or author conclusions with no wp:secondary cites. Obviously we should be citing wp:secondary wp:rs. With many examples of this problem in this section it is not ideal and needs a cleanup. I will continue to challenge content that is not adequately cited in an effort to improve this article. I welcome some help. CamV8 (talk) 10:08, 14 May 2019 (UTC)

@CamV8:, you should ping the editor who made those changes so they can see the discussion here. Springee (talk) 10:48, 14 May 2019 (UTC)
Thanks, done. plus new section may help discussion.CamV8 (talk) 11:25, 14 May 2019 (UTC)
Definitely disagree. WP:WEIGHT states that conclusions need to given weight in accordance with their prominence. Giving triple the paragraphs in an article because they published three times in not in accordance with policy. You can't override policy because it "helpds the reader understand" better. Stickee (talk) 00:56, 15 May 2019 (UTC)
gday @Stickee, I see your point, I was looking for a way of editing the research section that didn't read like a list of wp:pov statements on both sides. However as you have pointed out this leads to difficulties balancing wp:weight. For example how many McPhedran articles should be cited, she has published many more articles. Can I expect a complete list in this section? Are these articles considered rs or should we be citing other secondary rs sources?
Another example is the statement from McPhedran regarding significant expenditure on the gun the buyback may not have had any impact on youth suicide. This is a compelling statement however there was no research done in the cited article by McPhedran on whether government expenditure priorities were impacted by the 'buyback'. I fail to see how this statement can be supported. I interpret this statement as WP:OR by the author and as such not meeting wiki policies.CamV8 (talk) 10:53, 15 May 2019 (UTC)

Resolving an apparent inconsistency in the text.

Jeanine Baker and Samara McPhedran, researchers with the International Coalition for Women in Shooting and Hunting (WiSH) made several studies on the NFA. Their 2006 study found an effect on suicide but not on homicide though in later studies they questioned this. Hence my edit, which I hope clarifies the text. Michael Glass (talk) 23:35, 3 February 2020 (UTC)

National Shooting Council mention removed as non-notable

The paragraph discussing the National Shooting Council was advertising copy supported by a single primary source. It would have required rewriting in entirety to fit encyclopaedic tone, but as a non notable organisation (the online presence is limited to their facebook page, website, and adverts), I considered the most expedient solution deletion of the offending paragraph. PrimalBlueWolf (talk) 08:30, 4 August 2021 (UTC)

Lede needs work

The lede of the article is a little short and doesnt introduce the article as well as it perhaps could. This could use some expanding, particularly the 4th sentence but in general perhaps it could use a small rewrite/expansion? PrimalBlueWolf (talk) 03:10, 23 April 2022 (UTC)

Also, the second sentence mentions several high-profile killing sprees. What high-profile killing sprees are these? I don’t recall them. Did they really happen, perhaps they did not gain much media attention at the time, or are we assuming there must have been some? 120.153.17.94 (talk) 18:45, 27 August 2023 (UTC)
Posted very much in error. Please delete. 2001:8003:7C10:DB01:AC17:77E6:AB48:7B6 (talk) 18:55, 27 August 2023 (UTC)

shouldn't the hyperlink when referring to .45 caliber after mentioning single action shooting competition link to 45 long colt?

I think it would make more sense that way, as 45 ACP is generally used in auto-loaders and the only revolver I can recall off the top of my head chambered in it (m1917) was double action. GastroGaming (talk) 21:09, 27 November 2023 (UTC)

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