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Originally posted by spewn
I find it unusual even being a Canuck that your police arent armed.
I think it would be a good idea to arm them.
Originally posted by jonny2410
Good. All police should be armed and anyone should have the right to a firearm. Sorry thats just my opinion.
Originally posted by ThePeaceMaker
but with the increase in knife and gun culture how long will it be before more guns get on the streets.
Originally posted by thisguyrighthere
I always wondered why with unarmed cops and this "yob" culture there haven't been any attempts to organize or partner with say a drug runner or other mid level criminal figure to just take a town over.
Originally posted by thisguyrighthere
If a boatload of drugs can make it into the country surely a boatload of weapons can and likely already has on more than one occasion.
Originally posted by thisguyrighthere
For example, what would happen there if something along the lines of what is currently happening in Jamaica erupted in the UK?
Originally posted by thisguyrighthere
I imagine there must be a very high number of SWAT type British cops to make up for the fact that so many beat cops are not armed. I wonder how that number compares to the number of US SWAT type cops with almost 100% armed beat cops.
The two SAS officers, who have left active service, claim the police they trained had not been subjected to adequate psychological and physical tests to establish whether or not they were suitable to use firearms. The police officers were often “gung ho” and unfit
One of the soldiers said: “When the tension starts to rise and the adrenaline is flowing, the ‘red mist’ seems to descend on armed police officers who become very trigger-happy. This has been shown time and again in training exercises.”
The second soldier said: “We thought that police firearms officers were far more concerned with their personal image, dressing in body armour and looking ‘gung ho’, rather than their professional capabilities. I’m not surprised at the number of mistakes over the years.
The statement also describes a police training exercise run by the SAS in which an armed terrorist group was threatening to kill a hostage. The police team were to rescue the hostage using minimum force.
“I was playing the leader of the armed group and instructed the other members of my group to surrender peacefully once the final assault was initiated. Therefore there was no need for the police to open fire.
“But as the police assault group entered the room they began firing at everything. No one had moved; we were all stood with our hands on our heads.
“The response would have resulted in the unnecessary deaths of all the make- believe terrorists and the hostage alike. So much for the rule of minimum force.”
Times Online