Til Valhall said:
In that situation of the homeless guy with a knife and the potentially murderous old lady,
Clearly, I was unclear. Mea culpa.
She had no potential, mentally or physically, to be "murderous". I know her well. She was simply the nearest source of a defensive weapon (stout cane) if one quickly became required. I was in a good position to grab it and react within two or three paces of the potential threat. I kept a discreet eye on him until he had left, and continued to watch all of the entrances until Mass was over.
I reported this to the priests afterwards, of course, but there was no need to cause a scene at the time.
Til Valhall said:
wouldn't you feel more comfortable in that church if you had a concealed gun? I'm pretty sure you would want one.
Then you presume incorrectly.
I have said, before, that if concealed carry permits were available here, I would get one, but would rarely (if ever) carry given the current threat level. I tend not to hang around likely target areas anyway - not out of fear, paranoia, or concern, but simply because such venues hold little to no interest.
Til Valhall said:
don't you think it's kind of absurd to need self-defense weapons in a church? I'm not religious at all, but I know that a church is a place where people should be able to feel comfortable and trust each other.
That depends. In areas where churches are rarely, if ever, attacked, I feel no need. The churchgoers in Sunderland Springs apparently felt no need either, else at least one would have returned fire inside. A few of the survivors will have rethought their personal defence protocols as a result, though.
Yes, people should feel safe in a church (or synagogue, or mosque, or temple - or school). Sadly, a few find out that that cannot be taken for granted.
The church in Kingston that is the scene of my earlier tale is very large, it sees many tourists during that season, and is close to a particular area with many homeless people, who freely wander in and out. In general, they seem to be completely harmless, as this fellow may have been, despite his odd behaviour. But ... Either that guy, or another one, did enter the same church between masses, while it was therefore devoid of parishioners, a couple of weeks later, grabbed a flag pole and threatened a priest with the pointy end. Police were called, and an arrest was made.
Til Valhall said:
To me, the need for interpersonal trust within a congregation should also be extrapolated beyond a church to the general population of a country.
There is no lack of trust between the parishioners in this Kingston church. Strangers are welcomed, but some can look a little sketchy. So far, there have been no major problems, and that will continue until there is one (which is hopefully, and most likely, never).
Trust among the general Canadian population is fine, as it is wherever I have been in the US. The general population is not a problem, however. It's the aberrant predatory few that exist in the same space, in varying concentrations.
Til Valhall said:
It's clear that high-trust societies, especially those with effective gun control, have less of a problem with crime.
I completely agree that high-trust societies have less of a problem with crime. "Effective gun control", which does not even exist, has nothing to do with it. Cohesive societies have common customs and values, are naturally co-operative and supportive, and need few restrictions. I am not anti-immigrant at all, and not just because I am one myself, but high levels of immigration from societies with different customs, circumstances, and histories can break apart that cohesion. That can happen even without the influx of a criminal element which always seems to sneak in with the good folk and establish gangs within immigrant communities, especially the less-integrated ones. Certain western European and Scandinavian countries are experiencing that right now.
When we came to Canada, department stores had boxes of sporterized Lee-Enfields in aisles, bolts in, not secured to anything, and trigger locks had yet to be invented. Anybody could plunk twenty bucks down and walk out with one, and as much cheap ammunition as he wanted. Even a decade later, I could throw on a set of US Vietnam-era webbing, pouches stuffed with loaded thirty-round magazines, sling my AR15 on my back, and cycle over to a friends' house, meet up with another bunch there, and drive out to a local gravel pit where we would happily put a few hundred rounds each downrange. At least one in the group each time was a local copper who also liked to shoot; the police used the same pit for their own shooting. Nobody panicked, the police in general did not care, none of us shot anybody, nobody ever worried about crime, no school shootings occurred in Canada for a few more years, and the ugly "gun control" phrase had not yet been uttered.
That was a cohesive, trusting society. We have lost much since then (although, yes, gained a bunch too).
Til Valhall said:
Also, would you rather the crazy homeless person in the church to be playing with a paring knife, or a handgun that he got in the back alley last night? Fortunately here in Canada, it's harder, although not impossible for that homeless person to get a handgun in that manner.
It's not that easy for them in the US, either, especially legally. And homeless people seldom have the free cash to by firearms.
Til Valhall said:
I'm saying that should be the concern of the state. To protect citizens and keep the guns or any weapons out of "idle hands" as much as possible.
The police are there to protect society in general, not individual citizens within it. There is a difference. People who cannot, or will not, take responsibility for their own wellbeing and safety are frequently disappointed by the lack of government "protection" that is afforded them. "There is never one around when you need one". "When seconds count, the police are only minutes away."
The usual police response to a murderous attack is to draw chalk outlines around victims' bodies, take photographs, shine ultraviolet lights around, feed everything into an amazing computer system, and hopefully figure out who did it before the final commercial break.
That is no fault of the police. Criminals pick the time and place where they can attack in safety, with the minimum chance of police interference.
Governments have consistently proven their inabilities to "keep the guns or any weapons out of 'idle hands'."
And drugs, too.
"Gun control" cannot and does not influence crime rates, including homicide, rape, robbery, and assault
anywhere. It focusses on those least likely to commit crimes and specific inanimate objects for which there is a wide array of possible substitutes while ignoring the high-threat predators. It is an expensive liberal feel-good sham that gets people killed and saves nobody.
Vermont had a 2015 homicide rate of 1.6. California's was 4.8. District of Columbia' was 24.2. Vermont is, and always has been, a constitutional-carry state - anybody not prohibited by federal law can carry either openly or concealed. The other two have stupidly restrictive laws, even more so than Canada's.
Homicide rates in Canada varied from 0.0 in PEI and Yukon to 14.84 in Nunavut, with a national average of 1.56 (almost the same as Vermont's) in 2012.
Oh, look - there's even a "Shot-in-the-Ass-O-Meter" for Chicago at https://heyjackass.com/category/2015-chicago-crime-murder-stats/, along with "Deadliest 'hoods" (because rates vary widely between different states, different counties and cities in each state, and different neighbourhoods in each city) and other statistics which go into far more detail than I've ever seen before.
"Gun control" has extremely little bearing. Deeper societal factors are far more influential. Crime patterns are very complex.