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I think we might have guns today without the second amendment. Correct me if i'm wrong, but canadians don't have a canadian version of the second amendment, yet still have guns(though from my understanding not too many handguns). I don't think the second amendment is really that strong in terms of protecting the right to own guns, especially in light of my poorly informed arguments above. None of the rights enumerated in the constitution are absolute, and if there's anything reliable about americans, it is their willingness to give up their rights in exchange for the perception of safety. |
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I'd move to Canada but my they don't like my ARs / AKs / TEC 9 / Plainfield PP30 / flamethrowers / plasma rifles / etc. |
Yeah, Crompsie, but we don't need them because we have Socialists in power and Mounties to uphold said power. How else is it that we're still independent of the USA?
You're ten times more likely to die from a hockey head injury than you are from a violent criminal. It's all good. |
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By letting the anti-freedom folks turn the argument in to what rights are afforded by the constitution, we've lost over half the battle. The 2nd Amendment doesn't grant me the right to bear arms, it limits the government from infringing on that right that pre-exists. In other words, the framers of the constitution determined that we already had the right to bear arms and the 2nd amendment was written to prevent the government from doing anything to take that away or discourage it. That is why I keep saying 'shall not be infringed' means exactly that. It means that government shall not infringe. Unfortunately, in todays little PC world of touchy feely 'gotta look out for peoples sensitivities' world, we get our rights legislated away. Quote:
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But then again, these were folks who had a very good idea of what it was like to fight for the existence of their country. I would imagine that creating a new country through armed rebellion might be a pretty dominating force when forming an opinion on whether the populace should be armed or not. They probably thought that the meaning of the 2nd was pretty obvious. But then again, again, they lived in a time of muskets (i think), and i imagine few, if any, of them had any accurate notions as to the scope and effectiveness of the weaponry that would eventually be available to fit in the palm of one's hand. They were men of their times, and the constitution reflects that. We are a reflection of our times, where it's been at least a half a century since any american had to fight in a war whose outcome might be directly and obviously linked with our continued existence as a country. It's been even longer since we've had to fight for our existence on our own soil (9/11 doesn't count). Nowadays, tyranny is expected from the government. I think the founding fathers failed to take into account that things earned are often more respected than things given. I imagine that if they were more astute observers of human behavior, or were aware of the inevitable invention of the television, they might not have even bothered. Quote:
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Canada Firearms Centre (www.cfc-cafc.gc.ca) Prohibited Firearms Firearm Owners Moving to Canada |
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(blames Canada) Eeeh, Vermont is already half Canadian. I like their laws. |
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Looks like this new law will be getting court tested pretty dang quickly....
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5306638.html Quote:
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How about biological weapons? Are the founding fathers advocates of an anthrax vial for every patriot? I mean, if the average person should be trusted to keep any weapon he could make or get someone to sell him, regardless of technological advances or trends in popular sentiment because it was that important to the security of freedom, shouldn't the average person be free to stockpile whatever biological agents s/he feels are necessary for the protection of freedom? |
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Logic would dictate that they were referring to small arms.
Not tanks, not rocket launchers, not CBRN systems. Jesus, how silly is this? Quote:
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You could legally own a fully automatic belt fed 40mm grenade launcher... cept you probably couldn't afford one even if you did find someone willing to sell you one. Do you think the situation would be much different with your doomsday devices? |
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I'm in favor of this sort of law. I believe that people have a right to use deadly force to defend their lives and property and the lives and property of others.
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That someone could possibly argue in favour of Joe Schmoe being able to procure nuclear warheads is patently absurd. |
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Can I start hunting people down and shooting them in the back for cheating on their taxes? |
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This is basically the same rationale that the NFA uses to restrict machinegun and destructive device ownership. It's not illegal to own because it's a machinegun. It's illegal to own because it has no one paid the taxes on it so it can't be legally bought or sold. Quote:
It would not be particularly difficult for a sufficiently motivated and financed individual or group of individuals to render entire cities uninhabitable and kill tens of thousands of people. Fortunately, people with sufficient motivation and finacing to do these things often have more structured goals than "WHOO! BLOW SOME SHIT UP!" so the question of private tactical nuclear device ownership would remain largely hypothetical whether there was a recognized private citizens Right to have one or not. |
Those who argue that the framers 'could not possibly have imagined the current weaponry' are missing the entire point of the meaning of the 2nd Amendment.
The founders experienced 'first hand' the heavy handedness of a standing army and KNEW that ONLY free citizens had freedom and liberty as an interest at heart. Standing armies could most certainly be held to orders that abridged that freedom and liberty and it was the framers OBVIOUS intent to ensure that free citizens, who were NOT part of standing armies, federal or state, were armed with equal weaponry to that of any standing army so that free people could fight to remain free. All arguments about owning WMD's are really idiotic arguments because the government would be cutting their own throat if they were to use WMDs against the civilian population. The notion that 'well-regulated militia' meant national guard bears zero fruit, considering no such thing existed at the time, and knowing the fears of standing armies from the founders, could the 2nd ever be construed to think that there actually had to be written a 'right' that standing armies controlled by a central government needed to be ensured a right to keep and bear arms, is absolutely unfounded and ludicrous. it borders insanity. |
The whole idea of this law seems to me indicative of something quite frightening: the failure of American cities. Is Jane Jacobs right about urban renewal and usage zoning? Why are things so different in America than they are elsewhere? (e.g. Why is America's prison population per capita rivaled only by the likes of Russia?)
And now this? Leaving it to citizens to decide whether to use lethal force? This isn't a solution, it is an eye-opening experiment. There are a few others, I'm sure. Are there more coming down the pipe? |
Revolution and and civil war follow on the heals of an animal with too big an appetite.
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Are you saying you want to change the constitution? Or are you selling some kind of libertarian quasi-anarchy?
...and South Africans and Norwegians aren't as different from Americans as you might think. |
I'd say the US Constitution is fine. The 2nd Amendment was placed second for a reason... to help protect the 1st Amendment in an "Oh Shit" event AND to ensure the equality of the citizenry and the government through the following logic:
"A man without a firearm is a subject, a man with a firearm is a citizen." This requires the utmost in responsibility and reasonableness to apply to the modern world. I fear that we have lost most of that responsibility. So, yeah... I feel that the Constitution is in good shape. Our interpretation and application, however, leave a lot to be desired. What was that bumper sticker I once saw? Gun control works! Ask Nazi Germany, Soviet Russian, and the People's Republic of China! "People's Republic" indeed. ... It would be a little nutso to ban firearm ownership from lawful citizens on the grounds that we can't be trusted to own firearms. Such things often erode into other Mama Bear gummint issues. I don't need anybody holding my hand. Real freedom means dealing with an unsafe world. As many here often quote: Very rarely can you trade freedom for safety. |
How to pass on the torch of reasonableness?
How can we keep a person without a firearm between a subject..citizen to an eventual target. Yeah.. what was that sticker?? Piece. |
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-Mao Tse-tung Personally, I don't mind being one of the Queen's subjects. |
If that logic follows... I'm subject to a primate from Texas. :D
Do you think living in another country would be advisable to trying to work the system? ... My previous career involved carrying a firearm. My future career will involve carrying a firearm. They will be a constant companion for my working life. Everybody else? Do your friggin' time and then whine. |
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Wouldn't mutually assured destruction be the ultimate deterrence against tyranny? Quote:
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But, assuming we'd gotten to that point somehow, sure. Quote:
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I don't have a problem with there being a legal process (with various requirements on safeguarding, inspections, maintenance, storage, OQE, et al.) that allows folks who qualify to keep a nuclear device safely. I consider that preferable to them being acquired secretly and illegally. |
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