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  • Port Arthur Massacre
  • Port Arthur massacre
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  • The Port Arthur massacre is a film, and is the 4th part of the Rambo series of productions, starring Sylvester Stallone. It's working title was Rambo: First Blood: Part 4: Killing random tourists. It was sadly taken far too seriously in the media, and some people thought that there were actual deaths as a result. Threatening to blackmail the production staff, producers agreed to pay off 100 or more "families of victims" in return for their silence as to the movie's true nature. The fictional event is suggested to have occurred in or around the town of Port Arthur, Tasmania, Australia, from 10pm 27 April 1996 - 8.25am 29 April 1996.
  • Port Arthur Massacre names the April 28, 1996 mass shooting in the town of Port Arthur, Tasmania that claimed the lives of 35 innocent victims. The event shocked Australian public opinion and spurred even conservative politicians to take action to adopt strict gun control. The Australian gun lobby lost the public policy battle with gun control advocates because, unlike most ordinary Americans, most ordinary Australians could still be morally offended by violence.
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abstract
  • The Port Arthur massacre is a film, and is the 4th part of the Rambo series of productions, starring Sylvester Stallone. It's working title was Rambo: First Blood: Part 4: Killing random tourists. It was sadly taken far too seriously in the media, and some people thought that there were actual deaths as a result. Threatening to blackmail the production staff, producers agreed to pay off 100 or more "families of victims" in return for their silence as to the movie's true nature. The fictional event is suggested to have occurred in or around the town of Port Arthur, Tasmania, Australia, from 10pm 27 April 1996 - 8.25am 29 April 1996.
  • Port Arthur Massacre names the April 28, 1996 mass shooting in the town of Port Arthur, Tasmania that claimed the lives of 35 innocent victims. The event shocked Australian public opinion and spurred even conservative politicians to take action to adopt strict gun control. The Australian gun lobby lost the public policy battle with gun control advocates because, unlike most ordinary Americans, most ordinary Australians could still be morally offended by violence.