Oh deary, it's very simple;
Stinky made a good point about overall crime figures being higher in the UK. Unfortunately the table she used in her first post contained information regarding murder rates in the UK that was utterly wrong.
While robbery may be higher in the UK, murder rates are about five times lower than the USA. Now, anyone who will say that they would rather be in a country with 5x murders than 2x robberies is WELCOME to their opinion, but I don't share it.
As has also been pointed out, robberies in the UK involve fists, knives or blunt objects; mostly fists; a robbery in the USA is eight times more likely to involve the use of a gun. Again, you may prefer less frequent robberies by people packing heat, or more frequent robberies by people who are probably unarmed; I know what I would choose.
So, it's swings and roundabouts. But I think you win on the swings and lose on the roundabouts in this instance.
What we do see here, yet again, is people taking comments about differences as either personal slurs, or attacks against their country that they feel personally due to patriotic fervour. The differences between Brits and Merkins in this area has been extensively discussed; you don't have to agree with my assessment.
The fact that Americans do kill each other five times more frequently than Europeans is undeniable.
This does not mean America is a bad country or that Americans are bad people. I don't think that anyone has said this.
Please realise that Europeans see America, the people, America, the landmass, America, the government, America, the law, America, the culture, and America, the facts and figures as DIFFERENT things.
No one needs to be told that many Europeans have severe reservations about American government at this point. It's a fact, you don't have to like it, just as you don't have to like France. The people are, in my experience, not disliked by anyone who's met them. The landmass is breathtaking; you truly are fortunate to live there. The culture, well, for all we Europeans complain we spend millions every year consuming it.
The facts and figures and the law... well, they differ.
But if we make an observation that "this law is different, why, it doesn't seem to help any?", it doesn't mean we hate America. If we say, "hey, why does this happen so often compared to Europe? " it doesn't mean we hate America.