бггНет, не пойдет конечно...
Ты утверждаешь что есть прямая, однозначная связь меджу разрешением на оружие и кол-вом преступлений.
Ну и будь добр подтвердить это научными трудами. А то не слишком жирно будет если еще за тебя искать на это пруфы?
И ничо. Живут епошки... Вот только каким образом достигаются эти самые "prevailing attitudes" не сказано, жалкоJapan
During the Tokugawa period in Japan, starting in the 17th century, the government imposed very restrictive controls on the small number of gunsmiths in the nation, thereby ensuring the almost total prohibition of firearms.[38]
Japan, in the postwar period, has had gun regulation which is strict in principle, but the application and enforcement has been inefficient. Gun licensing is required, but is generally treated as only a formality. There are background check requirements, but these requirements are typically not enforced unless a specific complaint has been filed, and then background checks are made after the fact. As is common in Japan, "regulations are treated more as road maps than as rules subject to active enforcement. Japan is still a very safe country when it comes to guns, a reality that has less to do with laws than with prevailing attitudes".[39][40]
The weapons law begins by stating "No-one shall possess a fire-arm or fire-arms or a sword or swords", and very few exceptions are allowed.[39] The only types of firearms which a Japanese citizen may acquire is a rifle or shotgun. Sportsmen are permitted to possess rifles or shotguns for hunting and for skeet and trap shooting, but only after submitting to a lengthy licensing procedure.[41] Without a licence, a Japanese citizen may not even hold a gun in his or her hands.
The former ruling Liberal Democratic Party, in response to violent crimes by minors and gangsters, has called for rewriting the constitution to include new more stringent firearms control measures.[42] In January 2008 Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda in a policy speech called for tighter regulations on firearms.[43]