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November 11, 2013, 06:08 PM | #126 | ||
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He hacked off the entire gun culture, and that's who called for his head on a pike.
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November 11, 2013, 09:22 PM | #127 | |||
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AAR, his entire argument was that regulation was a valid act of the Government, but in the case of the 2A, it was that way from the beginning, because of the preambles use of "well regulated." That is demonstrably false. As I said, Dick Metcalf started with a false premise right out of the gate. It didn't get any better by adding more paragraphs. Quote:
As for a rebuttal? I think Grant Cunningham did that. Quote:
Last edited by Al Norris; November 11, 2013 at 09:39 PM. Reason: Freudian slip |
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November 11, 2013, 09:49 PM | #128 | |
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Of course, there are false flags. AHSA and the American Rifle & Pistol Association spring to mind. There are folks who turn against us or who lie about being our supporters in the first place. My gaze falls on Manchin and Toomey, as well as folks like Mark Kelly. Those people actively try to hurt us. Metcalf's crime was being boneheaded and a little out of touch. He deserved some sort of censure, sure. But a traitor? That's a big, nasty, sometimes fatal word we reserve for truly horrendous and dishonest human beings.
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November 11, 2013, 10:39 PM | #129 |
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Let us not forget that Benedict Arnold was a staunch patriot before he became a loyalist. Perhaps Metcalf just wasn't careful in his phrasing ... perhaps Metcalf's perspective is more skewed than he or we can appreciate due to the fact that he lives in Illinois ... or perhaps he really believes that the most draconian training requirement in the country isn't an infringement. If the latter, I'd be of the opinion that he has either "flipped" to the opposition, or he has become senile.
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November 12, 2013, 12:10 AM | #130 | |
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There were some real bozos in that class (at least they talked like they were) plus I have read posts on this forum that makes me wonder whether that individual should even be allowed to own a gun. I remember one wag in the CCW class constantly asking the instructor when he could "smoke" someone. Finally, the instructor started telling him about prison and what life was like there but it didn't seem to matter to this one. I remember thinking, "and this fool is going to carry?!" However, I personally have reconciled it with the idea that even stone cold idiots have rights and that their rights are just as important as mine. True, it is difficult for me to stomach. Nevertheless, the right of someone to keep and bear is more important than my elitist superior feelings that maybe they should not. Now with cars? That's another story.
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November 12, 2013, 05:04 PM | #131 | |
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tom servo
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I would think that SOMEONE would have looked at his submission before print time and said, with all the tone and seriousness of a good high school English teacher, "Please re-write this for clarity."
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November 12, 2013, 05:15 PM | #132 |
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It comes to me that this is similar to voting - we have the right to vote, given you are a citizen and of age.
However, you can be an ignoramus. We see politicians who are scientific ignoramuses running all the time. Must we require the voter to take science class to be able to evaluate the ignoramus politician? Hey - that's a good idea. The disastrous nature of electing an ignoramus (no commentary on your favorite ignoramus) may be more devastating to society as a wild shot from an untrained CCW type.
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November 12, 2013, 10:26 PM | #133 | |
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ALL print publications (magazines and newspapers) are losing readership to the Internet and television, and with loss of readership comes loss of advertising, which means loss of revenue. So they are doing everything they can to reduce production costs. Part of the reduction is to eliminate real editors and proof readers. Basically, all an editor does these days is assign stories to writers, and then harass them to get the story in by the deadline. The only "editing" that gets done is generally copy editing, to fit the story to the space available. They rely on word processing spell checkers to do what proof readers used to do -- sometimes with disastrous/hilarious results. Punctuation? Forget it. I've had pieces published that I know I checked, double-checked, and triple-checked. Even then, I know nobody else ever looked at it because I read the final copy when it hits the streets and I'm horrified to see stupid, basic goofs (typographical errors, mostly -- I'm a horrible, 2-finger typist) that made it past the [non-existent] editing process. |
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November 13, 2013, 08:40 AM | #134 |
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The handwringing about a mob-like reaction illustrating a form of "political correctness" seems overwrought.
Metcalf got to have his say, and others got to have their say as well. That is the way it is supposed to work. The notion of "political correctness" does not merely pertain to the politically offensive. "Political correctness" is not something that is correct but that offends someone's sensibility; that would just be correctness. The "political" in "political correctness" stands in contrast to "historical" and "actual". Accordingly, a notion may be "politically correct" in light of a political ideology (historically Marxism), but not historically or actually correct. Accordingly, readers [correctly] reacting to errors in Metcalf's analysis cannot be an example of "political" correctness. I do gather from some of the posts above that the popular reaction to Metcalf's piece was not entirely polite or on point. To some degree, that is a cultural issue, one not limited to the gun culture.
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http://www.npboards.com/index.php Last edited by zukiphile; November 13, 2013 at 11:37 AM. Reason: added [correctly] |
November 13, 2013, 03:01 PM | #135 |
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Zuk,
I called it PC because the reaction of many folks (if not most) was that no gun person should ever defend any sort of gun control under any circumstances. For those people there was no possible argument or approach that wouldn't have been treason to the cause. Just as in a typical PC scenario it would be forbidden to discuss racial differences in a negative light, gun culture makes gun control a forbidden topic. And I would liken that attitude to people who make moral objections to sex education even though teen pregnancy and STDs are on the rise. Metcalf got fired for breaking a taboo. How he broke it is relatively unimportant in comparison. |
November 13, 2013, 03:21 PM | #136 |
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I understand why everyone has reacted the way they have and asked for his head on a platter.
But I think an alternative way to look at an anti gun message in a pro gun magazine is that it can be a good thing. First, look at all the discussion this has started. Hopefully it goes past TFL. If all some of the pro gun people pick up and read is a magazine that caters to their interests they might never know just what the arguments from the other side are or how prevalent they are. It might have prompted some of the "I can not make a difference" people to say "if this can happen in my gun magazine maybe it is time for me to get involved". Now a guest writer, that can take the heat, might be a better way to do it. But I do not think exposure to the other side is necessarily a bad thing. Unless you start buying into all of it and decide to melt down your guns. If that is the case you probably were not very committed to the pro gun side in the first place.
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Seams like once we the people give what, at the time, seams like a reasonable inch and "they" take the unreasonable mile we can only get that mile back one inch at a time. No spelun and grammar is not my specialty. So please don't hurt my sensitive little feelings by teasing me about it. |
November 13, 2013, 03:49 PM | #137 | |
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Is some of the reaction to Metcalf hyperbolic, personal and wide of the mark? I do not mind taking your word for it on that point. I believe there are many similarities between the group of automobile enthusiasts and firearm enthusiasts. Automobile enthusiasts on the whole regard Ralph Nader with no more warmth than most people here might regard Michael Moore. People are enthusiasts over these things and that enthusiasm is often shown with strong emotional reactions, both positive and negative. That firearm enthusiasts would react to Metcalf's argument emotionally and ardently is easily explained in terms of that enthusiasm. Casting it in a more sinister light, as an attempt to stifle conversation or eliminate dissent, is a bit dramatic. Chaz, do we really think it is plausible that many G&A readers had not heard Metcalf's analysis previously?
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November 13, 2013, 04:18 PM | #138 |
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I was not "casting it in a sinister light". The popular reaction was emotional and understandable.
The only sinister part is that the reaction is based on two falsehoods that have been stated as true for so long that they prevent any reason: 1. That any limits on who or where a gun can be possessed is unconstitutional. (Even though every gun person does have at least one exception to this they do favor.) 2. That refusing to allow any (conscious) compromise is a viable strategy in securing our rights. Those two pervasive memes are pretty much the same as wishing the problem away. It is as if we have embraced denial as a methodology. Repeating a falsehood until you believe it is a losing strategy. It's the reason that empires fall. No rights movement in history has succeeded without broadening its popular appeal and making compromises to work within the existing system. |
November 13, 2013, 04:24 PM | #139 | |
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Furthermore, yelling about something on Facebook is not "getting involved." We do ourselves a disservice by allowing that illusion to continue.
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November 13, 2013, 04:42 PM | #140 | ||
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I will freely admit that constitutional doctrine on virtually any point is more complex than the general understanding of the pertinent doctrine. However, I do not believe that a reaction to Metcalfe's article is based on the assertions as you have stated them. While some limitation and regulation of the right described in the Second Amendment may pass correct constitutional scrutiny, how the limitation or regulation arises and to whom it applies are important parts of that analysis. As to your second enumerated point, it is not obvious to me that the flip side of your assertion is true; that compromise of our rights is a viable strategy for securing our rights. On the contrary, as a strategic matter compromise seems a losing proposition; it guarantees that the rights at issue will be compromised, which is exactly what one would not like to have happen. Holding a position ardently is pretty easily distinguishable from adopting denial is a methodology and repetition of a falsehood. If one ardently believes that a bare minimum of federal regulation pertaining to firearms is more genuinely consistent with "shall not be infringed", it does not strike me as an unreasonable denial to withhold consent for any further regulation.
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November 13, 2013, 05:09 PM | #141 |
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Zuk,
You are confusing winning a philoshical debate with the real world problem of securing a right. The success of MLK or Ghandi in greatly expanding and securing rights was not because they kept insisting an idea was true. They negotiated those rights, created popular appeal for their message and quieted the most militant voices. Insisting that an idea on an important piece of paper allows you to ignore reality is why all Communist countries eventually fail. If the economic or legal ideal you adhere to is out of step with reality it won't last. The true believer's version of 2A is not currently compatible with reality. So we can let that belief kill itself (like the Soviets and Third Reich did) or adapt like the Chinese. There is no prize for the loser that was "right". |
November 13, 2013, 06:33 PM | #142 | ||
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Seams like once we the people give what, at the time, seams like a reasonable inch and "they" take the unreasonable mile we can only get that mile back one inch at a time. No spelun and grammar is not my specialty. So please don't hurt my sensitive little feelings by teasing me about it. |
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November 13, 2013, 07:37 PM | #143 | ||||
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I imagine that exploring that would be an unwelcome tangent, but I think you meant to make a point about public persuasion. If you purport to have the authority to barter away a right naturally possessed by free men, how do you persuade anyone that you actually believe it is a right? An eagerness to negotiate away matters of principle necessarily undermines a claim that the right is anything but a grant from the state. Compromise has a time and place. When people are forming an opinion as to the correct reading of the 2d Am. is not the correct time for compromise. Quote:
I also accept that we have properly constituted courts with constitutional authority to resolve disputes about those rights. Am I a true believer? If so, how is that incompatible with reality? Quote:
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November 13, 2013, 08:00 PM | #144 |
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Zuk,
Your 2A rights are already greatly reduced! Your comments would make sense if we were living in a time when that wasn't true, but the reality is that 2A has not been a limitless right at any time in it's history. It's an idea that has never been put into full practice, so it is a little difficult to make the theoretical practice of that right the only jumping off point for the discussion. It does make sense to say "Our rights are being violated by the current regulations. We propose these regulations instead." There has never been in our history a right that has been exercised without limits. That's the reality. I recommend we choose to decide what those limits are rather than insisting they don't and can't exist. You can't barter away something you've never had. Words on paper are not having a right. Given that it is impossible to have zero gun laws, why continue to insist that there should be zero gun laws? Foolish pride? Let's stop acting like children, stomping our feet and yelling "NO!" It doesn't work for two year olds or legislatures. Decide what's important in that right and protect it however you can. |
November 13, 2013, 08:16 PM | #145 | |
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I see the 2A movement in much the same light. Restrictions that would never have been tolerated for a recognized constitutional right accumulated in the decades before the 2A was recognized as an individual, fundamental constitutional right. We will not unwind those restrictions overnight, but we should not unwisely bargain away parts of our right to secure other parts more quickly. |
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November 13, 2013, 11:21 PM | #146 | |
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Of course, the new generation accomplished almost nothing for themselves. But they sure had their principles. We could use a few Whitney Youngs - people willing to figure out what a stable and useful democratic solution looks like. But we're acting more like Stokely Carmichael. Gun Power! |
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November 14, 2013, 01:00 AM | #147 | |
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We move forward one step at a time. Like the civil rights activists who demanded everything immediately, simply shouting "Shall Not Be Infringed" will not achieve anything because it is too big a leap at one time. But, with "Shall Not Be Infringed" as a goal, we can press to eliminate one law or restriction at a time. The young civil rights activists you referred to confused persistence and patience with compromise. We should take care that the 2A movement does not make the same mistake. We should never compromise by forsaking our goal and bargaining to exchange one restriction of our 2A rights for another. The only acceptable compromise involves recognizing that removing the restrictions on our rights may proceed more slowly than we might wish. |
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November 14, 2013, 01:01 AM | #148 |
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...and we have officially wandered off topic. Everyone's had a chance to put in their $.02, so let's call it a night here.
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