I for one
welcome the arrest and wish lawmaking efforts were more concentrated on eliminating the illegal trade of firearms and other weapons and less on making life gratuitously difficult to legal owners and licence holders.
German police have arrested a man they suspect of being the administrator of a dark net website. The site is said to have been used to buy a gun used in a 2016 mass murder. The unnamed 30-year-old man was arrested on 8 June in “south west Germany”, according to Sky News. The server used to host the site is said to have been …
"eliminating the illegal trade of firearms" is not much a lawmaking effort, the laws are quite tough already (at the very least in Germany). It's rather a policing effort. Police is trying to catch up with that new fangled internet thing, with varying degrees of success.
I notice that many of those juvenile murderers were bullied in school. This one needs to be addressed MUCH better than it currently is (again, speaking about Germany).
> "eliminating the illegal trade of firearms" is not much a lawmaking effort, the laws are quite tough already (at the very least in Germany). It's rather a policing effort
Yes, very good point.
> I notice that many of those juvenile murderers were bullied in school. This one needs to be addressed MUCH better than it currently is
Again a very good point.
But you're straying from the official line..... it wasn't bullying or guns which caused those mass-shootings in OEZ-München, Winnenden or Erfurt. It was those evil ego-shooter computer games (Killerspiele), according the the politicians. They might blame this morning's incident in Unterföhring on that, too, since it sounded like something out of GTA. Just wait and see.
Mentioning the fact that one of the guns sold was used for murder is making a completely false association between the murder and illegal darknet sites.
Many of the far worse mass murderers in the USA used weapons bought from Walmart or similar. We don't see Walmart being held responsible - because they are not.
A person who decides to commit murder will find a way to get hold of a weapon.
Actually nut jobs can not legally get or own a gun. There is a an automatic feral background check when a gun is purchased from a dealer. Flunk the background check and you do not get the gun. Some jurisdictions have a mandatory waiting period.
The problem over here is gun violence tends to make the news when there is a crime victim but what is less often reported is number of criminal who became unwitting targets when they found the resident was armed.
> Many of the far worse mass murderers in the USA
Did you fail to spot that the article is talking about Germany, not the US of A?
There are no Walmarts in Germany, and Lidl do not sell firearms or ammunition (though some of the stuff they sell, especially in the meat section, is probably just as lethal).
"
Did you fail to spot that the article is talking about Germany, not the US of A?
"
No, but you obviously failed to spot that the point which I was making is that the supplier of an item is not usually held responsible for what the purchaser does with the item. The country is irrelevant to that point.
We did not blame the car rental company for the recent terrorist murders in the UK.
In the short term, at least.
Just now, it's fairly obvious that a lot of Darknet markets seem to be very quiet. Buyers are terrified that if they buy Bitcoins today, they will be worth 50% less tomorrow. Meanwhile, many sellers are also absent as they scramble to turn their unexpected profits into clean cash before the bubble bursts. Or, if they have cash debts to their suppliers, they're dumping stock at bargain basement prices to remain proud kneecap owners.
Uncertainty restricts market behaviour unless you have money to burn. Today's $3000 for a coin is probably one of the most calming influences there could be on the Darknet gun, drug and other illegal items markets.