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Old February 5, 2013, 07:58 PM   #1
mack59
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It isn't really the guns.

The Second Amendment protects a basic human right.

I often hear that individuals say that they support the Second Amendment and the right to keep and bear arms, but that we need reasonable restrictions to keep people and society safe as no right is unlimited. Or that no one needs a semi-automatic rifle and/or a magazine capable of holding more than ten rounds.

The vast majority of these public figures and elected officials who say - “I support the Second Amendment and the right to keep and bear arms, but…” do not in reality support the Second Amendment or the right to keep and bear arms at all. Most would be much happier if there was no Second Amendment or right to keep and bear arms. Many of these same individuals in years past argued publicly on the record that there was no such right. Most are unable or unwilling to delineate or even approximate what is protected by the Second Amendment and the right to keep and bear arms. They refuse to articulate what regulations are ultimately prohibited by it, except perhaps banning all arms save single shot black powder flintlock muskets. The phrase expressly added by the framers - that the right - “shall not be infringed” - is ignored and read as a nullity.

People who oppose the Second Amendment say that no right is unlimited and that we must have “reasonable restrictions,” as if the right were not regulated at all, when in fact it is more heavily regulated than any other enumerated right in the Bill of Rights. We argue over whether it is constitutional to require ID to vote, or whether felons should be barred from voting. Yet we require background checks, ID, and often waiting periods on the purchase of firearms. (And let us be clear on background checks, no new firearms are sold to any individual without that person having gone through a background check before or during the sale. The only firearms sold without a background check are used firearms sold person to person in legal private sales or by criminals in illegal sales.) Not just felons are banned from owning firearms, but anyone guilty of domestic violence or a crime or misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail, as are individuals addicted to drugs or alcohol and those adjudicated mentally ill.

A First Amendment example is also often given as a reasonable limitation, that one is not free to yell fire in a crowed theater. Well comparably, one is not free to indiscriminately shoot a firearm in a crowed theater either. But, we don’t practice prior restraint on free speech like we do with firearms. We don’t tape or glue individuals mouths shut because they might yell fire in a theater when there is no fire, because if there were a fire in the theater, it would be legal, responsible, and necessary to yell fire. Yet we commonly ban the carrying of firearms because of what someone might do illegally, leaving the unarmed unable to defend themselves from an armed perpetrator who has ignored the prohibition.

We are told that banning some types of firearms is not an infringement and is a reasonable limitation. If the Second Amendment was written, “A well educated electorate being necessary for the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and read books shall not be infringed.” Would we be fine with people saying, “I support the right to keep and read books but, we’re banning the Bible and the Koran and such because those books have contributed to incidents of massive violence. Or, we are banning books on chemistry and electronics without a license because individuals have used them to make bombs and poison gas. Would we buy the rational that because we could still have lots of books that the right to keep and read books was not seriously compromised or violated?

The right enumerated in the Second Amendment is not even held to the protections that many un-enumerated rights are given. Routinely individuals are told that unless they can articulate a specific acceptable need to own a particular type of firearm or meet a specifically defined need to carry a firearm for self defense they may not own a particular firearm or carry a firearm. So, why do you need an abortion? Couldn’t you have chosen to use birth control? If you chose to have sex and you weren’t forced to have sex, then why do you need an abortion? Couldn’t you give the child up for adoption surely it not such a great inconvenience or sacrifice? Is there a medical reason you need an abortion, if not why do you need an abortion? If you are going to have an abortion then you must attend a class on abortion on its risks and its effects. After all if it saves one life. So why do you need an AR15 or a magazine that holds over 10 rounds? (the same reason the police do) Couldn’t you use some other means of self defense? (per the National Crime Victimization Survey from the Bureau of Justice Statistics - a firearm is the single most effective means of self defense and the only means of self defense that results in fewer injuries than non-resistance or not defending one’s self - that‘s why police carry them). Couldn’t you call the police and wait for them to arrive? (legally, per the courts, the police are under no obligation to protect you and as any front line officer will tell you - when seconds count the police are only minutes away). Do you carry valuables or do you have a specific credible death threat that you need to carry a firearm? (because your basic right to defend your life should be limited by having to provide acceptable evidence of an acceptable need in the eyes of the state and we should have to provide evidence before we are attacked that we might be attacked). If you are going to carry a firearm you need to attend a class on its risks and how to use it, with a background check - which is the law in a majority of states. If it saves one life, well yes firearms can save lives and actually they often do.

The Second Amendment was put into the Bill of Rights as an enumerated right specifically to protect it and the framers added as extra emphasis that the right, “shall not be infringed.” It protects the right to defend one’s self and one’s loved ones, and one’s freedom. It was understood that the very adoption of the Constitution, the legal and binding contract between the people and the states was contingent upon the guarantee of the rights protected in the Bill of Rights, so much so that the people and the states would have considered the contract null and void were those rights, including the Second Amendment, not adopted. Explicitly or implicitly voiding parts of the Bill of Rights is a fundamental breach of that contract.

Yet, the right to keep and bear arms is subjected endlessly to utilitarian arguments of social cost and benefit, ignoring the entire moral and legal basis of our nation and individual rights. As though breaching fundamental tenets of the contract were somehow acceptable for supposed utilitarian reasons, reasons that are often articulated but have never been proven.

So we hear that England has strict gun control and they have a much lower murder rate than the US. Of course England’s murder rates were much lower than the US before they passed their strict gun ban and their murder rate has remained essentially unchanged in the aggregate of years since the ban, though their rates of violent crime have increased including rates of assault and rape. Their rates of rape and assault are more than double almost triple that of the US. Meanwhile, in the US during the last 20 years there has been significant decreases in violent crime including rape and assault, with the murder rate decreasing by almost half and accidental firearm fatalities falling well over half. Then we are given Australia as an example, after their gun ban their murder rate declined, yes it declined at about the same rate it was declining before the ban at a rate similar to the rate it has declined in US. But unlike the US and like England their violent crime rate has increased such that women are, for example, twice as likely to be raped in Australia as in the US.

Cross national and cultural comparisons are almost impossible to do on any realistic or useful basis due to the amount of variables that go into the causes of crime and violence as well as differing reporting practices and crime classifications. What we do know, as studies have shown, is that there is no significant correlation between gun control laws, gun ownership rates, and levels of violent crime in or between nations.

We are told that America is unique among nations in having such frequent and terrible mass shootings. Yet, Europe has two of the four most lethal mass school shootings and in Norway, a country with strict gun control laws, a mass shooting that resulted in 69 deaths just recently occurred.

We are told that 30 round magazines and semi-auto rifles contribute to these mass shootings and the ease of killing. Yet the most deadly mass shooting in this country at Virginia Tech was done with two pistols with 10 round and some 15 round magazines. The possession of two firearms meant the matter of magazine capacity was moot. The Report of the Virginia Tech. Review Panel appointed by the Governor and charged with examining the shooting and making findings and recommendations reported amongst its findings that a magazine capacity ban would have made no difference.

Additionally, anyone familiar with firearms also knows that almost all of these mass shootings could have been done just as easily with a revolver and a pump shotgun, as the killers planned their attacks with the express purpose of killing as many defenseless people as possible and thus were in control of the circumstances and situation until armed police or individuals arrived on the scene. The overwhelming majority of these mass shootings, including the most lethal, have been done with handguns. The Sandy Hook shooter had two handguns and could have just as easily killed as many as he did by using them instead of the semi-automatic rifle.

Why have these shootings recently involved semi-automatic rifles? We know these mass shooters crave fame/infamy and that they read and pay attention to previous mass shootings. We know that the media covers these tragedies 24/7 and reports the number killed and the weapons used. We know that the media focused incessantly on the weapons used in the Aurora shooting - the so called “deadly assault weapon.” Why would a copycat mass shooter not use a so called “assault weapon.” Though, in practical terms they are not the optimum weapon to use in these shootings - pistols are - as they are easier to conceal - may maintain comparable rates of fire - are easier to maneuver and more difficult to grab than a rifle with its longer barrel - and can be operated with one hand.

Still we are told common sense dictates that gun control laws will reduce violence and violent crime. It only makes sense that fewer guns would result in less violence and murder. Well “common sense” once dictated that the world was flat and that man couldn’t fly, but the world is round and man can fly. And facts are more relevant than feeling or intuitions of so called “common sense.”

So let’s see the evidence that gun control laws work, a peer reviewed study, an accepted academic study? Perhaps something like this: The National Academy of Sciences issued a 328-page report based on 253 journal articles, 99 books, 43 government publications, a survey of 80 different gun-control laws and some of its own independent study. In short, the panel could find no link between restrictions on gun ownership and lower rates of crime, firearms violence or even accidents with guns. The panel was established during the Clinton administration and all but one of its members were known to favor gun control.

Show me that the last “Assault Weapons and magazine ban worked” Like this: The previous Assault Weapons and magazine ban per the governments own studies on its effects, (the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and the National Research Council in 2004), concluded that they could find no significant measurable impact on reducing crime.

Banning guns would make it harder for criminals to get them. Yep, just like banning alcohol worked and just like the war on drugs makes it harder for kids to get drugs. Ask a kid which is harder to get, legal alcohol or illegal drugs like pot? Oh, they can get both easily enough, but illegal drugs are even easier to get than alcohol. So, will it be magically different with guns?

One would think that if one was going to violate a basic human right of all American citizens that one would have some hard evidence in favor of the proposed laws. Something besides feelings, intuition, or belief. Where is the evidence? Where is the actual proof that we need these laws because they will prevent of reduce violent crime and murder? Is it too much to ask for proof before you deprive individuals of a basic human right as explicitly guaranteed in the Bill of Rights?

Even if such non-existent proof existed does that mean that the right should still not be respected and other means or solutions attempted that do not violate the right. Is it not incumbent upon us to first seek to exhaust all alternative means of reducing these crimes and violence, before we resort to laws that infringe the basic rights guaranteed within the foundation of our nation? Are proposals being made to ban or restrict news coverage and reporting of these tragedies that lead to copycat killings? If that isn’t even considered, since it would violate the First Amendment, why are we intent on passing laws that violate the Second Amendment?

Who uses an AR15 for defense? During the LA riots store owners protected their stores and lives with them, during Katrina home owners protected their homes and neighborhoods with them against looters, just this last week a fifteen year old protected himself and his siblings from home invaders and a store owner protected himself from robbers. There are hundreds if not thousands of other instances some reported, most not. The police and border patrol use them when faced by the same criminals as citizens.

But might they not just as well have defended themselves with other firearms, with shotguns, or other rifles, or pistols? Mostly the answer would be yes, yes they could, and that same exact answer applies to the mass shooters who chose to use that same weapon.
There are circumstances, related to the Second Amendment, that would make these semi-automatic rifles more suitable than pistols or shotguns due to considerations of range but those remain unrelated to their use either in self defense or crime.

Still people who carry or want to carry a firearm for self defense must be paranoid and fear ridden as the odds are they won’t need to use it. Just like people who have smoke alarms, wear seat-belts, buy home owners insurance, or wear a motorcycle helmet are paranoid and live in fear. As the old saying goes, “better to have it and not need it, than need it and not have it.”

But not that many people actually use a firearm in self-defense. Well not exactly - surveys consistently show that hundreds of thousands of people if not millions use a gun to defend themselves every year. Thirteen surveys by researchers, (none of whom were affiliated with the NRA or other pro-gun organizations but some of whom were affiliated with gun control organizations), have found the anywhere from 800,000 to 2.5 million people use a gun in self-defense each year. The federal governments own survey for the Department of Justice resulted in an estimate of 1.5 million defensive gun uses per year.

But only highly trained professionals are capable of using a gun in self defense. Well leaving aside the immediately above statistics that argue otherwise, the National Crime Victim Survey (NCVS) also as referenced further above says otherwise. Individuals who use firearms as a means of self defense have fewer injuries than those who use any other means of self defense and are most successful at preventing the criminal from completing their crime - which is especially important if that crime is assault, rape, or murder.

That is why the right to carry a firearm outside the home for self defense is something that right to keep and bear arms activists have worked hard to regain and re-establish throughout the country. But, allowing people to carry guns outside the home will make, “blood run in the streets” make our towns and cities “the wild west” and “turn common traffic accidents into shoot outs.” Those were the “common sense” warnings of individuals, experts, and gun control activists and groups - and they never came true. Individuals licensed to carry have been shown on average to be as law abiding as the police. The have also been shown to be even less likely than police to accidentally shoot or injure an innocent person, as they are at the scene and don’t have to react and determine who the bad guy is unlike the police when they arrive. In the over twenty years that right to carry has grown to become the law of the land the rate of violent crime and murder have all continued to decline. Per the research of John Lott the argument has not become whether right to carry increases violent crime, but rather whether it reduces crime of not. This was verified by the National Academy of Sciences report as begun under the Clinton administration which found no significant negative impact from right to carry laws.

But the heart of the issue over firearms in this country, one that is rarely addressed by gun control advocates or proponents of gun control laws, is the issue of a basic human right or in law, a civil right. It is encapsulated in this simple quote in response to the question of why do you “need” an AR15? “I don’t ‘need’ an AR15 any more than Rosa Parks ‘needed’ to sit in the front of that bus.”

The NRA and the right to keep and bear arms movement was for many years moribund in the face of few national changes in firearms laws except for the National Firearms Act of 1934 which regulated rarely owned or used firearms such as machine guns. The 1934 act was originally passed in a response to gangland violence related to Prohibition such as the St. Valentines Day Massacre. Many Jim Crow laws and anti-immigrant firearms laws and restrictions also remained in place and most gun owners thought little of the laws or restrictions. Most NRA members were hunters or sport shooters.

Two things happened in the decade of the 60’s that changed all that forever. The Civil Rights movement to create in reality equality under the law for black Americans, a movement that had been growing for decades and finally blossomed to fruition. The second was the National Firearms Act of 1968.

The Civil Rights movement created a national awareness of civil rights, including the right to keep and bear arms. Black civil rights groups such as the Deacons for Defense, the Congress for Racial Equality (CORE), and the Black Panthers all embraced the right to keep and bear arms as a small part of their struggle for equal rights, sparking the nascent flame of the right to keep and bear arms.

That flame began to burn with the NFA of 1968 when gun owners found themselves stuck suddenly with a new layer of federal gun control laws and restrictions. Anger grew over the laws and led to strife within the NRA the largest national gun rights organization, as many gun owners felt their rights had been betrayed by the old school leadership of hunters, sport shooters, and hobbyists. Led by Right to Keep and Bear Arms activists, (I think the current code word for derision is Second Amendment absolutists), the old leadership was voted out and a new leadership devoted to the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, (RKBA), as a civil right was installed. Continuing dissatisfaction with the perceived moderation of the NRA led to the birth and/or growth of many more national organizations such as Gun Owners of America (GOA), The Second Amendment Foundation (SAF), and many more; much as the Civil Rights movement in the 60’s led to the birth of many Civil Rights organizations.

With a renewed purpose to repeal many discriminatory gun control laws, the NRA and like organizations began to wage the war to restore the RKBA. One of the first battle fields was stopping the gun control movement and repealing as much of the 1968 NFA as possible. Eventually that battle, with some defeats, was mostly won by the late 80’s. The focus then became offensive and changed to the right to carry a firearm for self defense. A right that had been lost piecemeal through Jim Crow laws and laws like New York’s Sullivan law.

For more than twenty years the fight for the right to carry a firearm for self defense and non-discriminatory gun laws has been going on - from one state that allowed carry with no license, eight states that were shall issue (all lawful citizens could get a carry license by completing standard background and/or training requirements), twenty-six states that were may issue (lawful citizens might or might not get a license depending on the laws - some were fairly easy and some were highly restrictive and discriminatory), and fifteen were right denied (no lawful carry allowed). By 2012 that had changed to four states unrestricted, thirty-seven shall issue, eight may issue, and one (Illinois) right denied.

Today there are over 8 million individuals licensed to carry a firearm in self defense. That does not include those individuals who reside in states where no license is required. Today only 8 states restrict through may issue laws who may carry a firearm for self defense and only one - Illinois, bans carrying a firearm in self defense. The fight for the right to self defense and against discriminatory “may issue” laws has been the work of state by state legislative battles waged by the NRA and other national and state level Right to Keep and Bear Arms (RKBA) organizations.

Those decades of battle reinforced by the imposition of the 1994 Assault Weapons and magazine ban forged a national RKBA civil rights movement. That RKBA movement was further reinforced by the Supreme Courts eventual explicit recognition of an individual right to keep and bear arms, through Heller 2008 and later the McDonald case 2010 that established that the RKBA was a fundamental right that applied to all citizens and all states.

The NRA sits on the tip of the ice-berg of the RKBA movement. It’s over 4.5 million paid members makes it by far the largest civil rights lobbyist group - but there are multiple millions of more in the RKBA movement who do not belong to any formal organization but who none the less vote and follow the RKBA movement. Though characterized by many politicians who oppose the RKBA and the media as extremist - within the RKBA movement the NRA is seen as moderate and often too willing to compromise. Many past NRA members have left over this perceived weakness or lack of principle and joined more hard line organizations like Gun Owners of America (GOA). Together these other national organizations total another one to two million more affiliated members. The core of the RKBA movement however resides in the State and local RKBA organizations who were the real muscle to get right to carry passed in state after state.

These organized groups of millions of RKBA activists are supported by even more millions of American gun owners who believe the there is a “Right to Keep and Bear Arms” and that that right embodies the right to self defense and the right to bear arms if necessary in defense of liberty against tyranny, foreign or domestic.

And this is were the RKBA movement is totally misunderstood by most of its opponents to their detriment and folly. Most opponents give lip service to the RKBA and its supporters but do not really see it as a true right essential to freedom but rather as an anarchic vestige from a barbaric past. Whilst those in the RKBA movement understand themselves as part of a vibrant civil rights movement, protecting a basic human right as essential to freedom as the right to life. For as black American’s rightly understood that the written promise of equality under the law was empty without the ability to actually live equally; so RKBA activists recognize that written freedoms and the right to life are meaningless without the concomitant means and ability to defend that life and those freedoms. Thus, they fight tenaciously to not only keep arms but to bear them. They resist with ferocity any attempts of derail or neuter the RKBA into the legal fiction of a government granted privilege.

Gun control advocates abetted by the main stream media with few exceptions, ridicule the RKBA movement. And make claims to a right to feel safe or to feel secure that trumps the RKBA which provides an actual measure of real safety and security. There is of course no right to feel safe or feel secure. Feelings are a state of mind that cannot be legislated or codified into law, because feeling are a function of individual belief. I am sure many white southerners and more white northerners than many would admit would have felt safer if black Americans would have just stayed in their place. Many would have felt more secure if blacks stayed on the back of the bus and just did as they were permitted and not frighteningly as they demanded, true freedom and equality.

Of course gun control advocates are in deep denial of this truth. That they are the one’s putting up signs and endorsing laws that say - no colored/no guns allowed. Laws that seek to restrict the rights of their fellow Americans because they cannot conceive of living with the freedom and concomitant responsibility of providing for their security and liberty.

Their solution to gun violence in schools and elsewhere are legal fictions with signs, called Gun Free Zones with no armed security. Their solution when that proves illusionary is to make even larger Gun Free Zones, as in the city of Chicago, and when that fails they call for a statewide and finally a nationwide Gun Free Zone. Hoping that banning one hundred year old technology will make them “feel” safe.

They fear black military looking rifles and in ignorance seek to ban them to feel safe and to feel secure, when such firearms are no more deadly in such recent close range mass shootings as a pistol.

RKBA advocates push for an end to Gun Free Zones - Second Amendment Free Zones - wanting at minimum only Gun Free Zones with armed security that would provide a measure of real security and protection for people.

RKBA advocates see a safer society as being a society of sheepdogs and not sheep.
And God forbid that we actually discuss the RKBA as a guard against the tyranny in this country. The eye rolls of the press and the gun control advocates and many politicians would cause a breeze. The smirks and snaky comments would cover the floor, walls, and ceiling.

The truth is that more than 100 million citizens were enslaved and killed by their own governments this past century and the slaughter continues. Yet the civilized world according to some has moved past this danger, modern mankind is immune. Ironic that many of those in the Gun Control movement who mock American Exceptionalism none the less practice their own brand of myopic exceptionalism with their naïve belief that it can’t ever happen here.

Of course if the conversation can continue past that hurdle of denial, the next statement meant to end all serious consideration and discussion is: “Bubba and his shotgun isn’t going to stand up to F-16’s, drones, tanks, nuclear missiles and the most powerful military in the modern world.”

Of course this betrays a superficial understanding of resistance and the real world application and consequences of force: ignorance of asymmetrical warfare as practiced by insurgencies throughout the world, presumes a military force that would retain monolithic cohesion if ordered to fire on American citizens, a citizenry unaware and totally reactive without the experience of the millions of recently retired military among them, no disruption of supply and secure bases when surrounded by insurgents. No dependence for re-supply from civilian contractors honeycombed with spies and saboteurs, no significant military defections, loss of public support for using bombs and heavy ordinance on American cities and populations, and etc….

That is a hypothetical yet potential future and one devoutly to be avoided at all costs, all but the cost of the loss of freedom. What is happening today is that a civil rights movement (whether the media or politicians or a segment of the population wish to acknowledge it or not) has grown up through years of struggle for right to carry and the 1994 ban and it has reached the point of mass where they aren’t going to go back to the back of the bus. There will be massive civil disobedience when it comes to new laws state and federal. All the laws, police lines, or Bull Connor’s like Andrew Cuomo will fall.

But the opponents of the RKBA are blind, they have no clue and many otherwise good people will be the victim of their blindness. They believe they are the future when they are the past holding on to power while the train of freedom, of the future, bears down upon them. They follow on in the footsteps of Lester Maddox, Bull Connor, and Orval Faubus, intent on using the power of the state to deny the most basic of human rights.
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Old February 5, 2013, 11:34 PM   #2
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Cliff Notes?
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Old February 6, 2013, 04:07 AM   #3
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To much crap to read. Is there a movie about this somewhere? Anyway.. grats on interpeting it whichever way works best for you. Theres a reason why smart men write ideas..and the less intelligent read them.
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Old February 6, 2013, 06:53 AM   #4
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Quote:
But, we don’t practice prior restraint on free speech like we do with firearms.
(Well, confession time...I didn't read much farther than this. But maybe I'll come back and read the whole thing later.)

This is a great point. It drives me wild when the anti folk talk about the 1st Amendment.

1. Of course the 1st applies to modern communications - radio, tv, internets - but somehow the 2nd only applies to flintlocks.

2. Of course there CANNOT be any 'prior restraint' put on the media. There is NO WAY the media should have to clear anything before printing it or reporting it. That is a bedrock right of the 1st Amendment. But they have no problem at all with putting up all kinds of 'reasonable' and 'sensible' restrictions on the 2nd Amendment.

Bah. Hypocrits.
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Old February 6, 2013, 10:34 AM   #5
HBoswell
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Well said. I certainly hope you sent this along to your Reps in DC. Lord knows what you have written here makes a lot much more sense than anything we have heard from those Bozo's in the last few months, if not years.
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Old February 6, 2013, 11:11 AM   #6
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Here's the counterpoint and the reality. We live in a pluralistic, political society, and in the real world there is going to be some "gun control."

There are a bunch of people out there who don't like guns (for whatever reason). There are also a lot of people who are scared of guns or of people who have guns or who want to have guns. Some think guns should be banned and private citizens shouldn't have them at all. Some may be willing to go a long with private citizens being able to own guns as long as they were regulated. And these people vote.

We may think these people are wrong and that they have no valid reason to believe the way they do. We might think that many of them are crazy (and maybe some of them are). Of course some of them think that we have no valid reasons to think the way we do, and some of them think that we're crazy. But they still vote.

Of course we vote too, but there are enough of them to have an impact. They may be more powerful some places than others. But the bottom line is there would always be some level of gun control.

Of course there's the Second Amendment. But there is also a long line of judicial precedent for the proposition that Constitutionally protected rights may be subject to limited governmental regulation, subject to certain standards. How much regulation will pass muster remains to be seen. But the bottom line, again, is that we are unlikely to see all gun control thrown out by the courts; and we will therefore always have to live with some level of gun control.

How much or how little control we are saddled with will depend. It will depend in part on how well we can win the hearts and minds of the fence sitters. It will depend on how well we can acquire and maintain political and economic power and how adroitly we wield it. It will depend on how skillfully we handle post Heller litigation.

So whether or not we like it, whether or not we think the Second Amendment allows it and notwithstanding what we think the Founding Fathers would have thought about it, we will have to live with some forms of gun control. We're left with opportunities to influence how much.
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Old February 6, 2013, 11:18 AM   #7
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Mack59 I like it.

You go right down the line and hit every mark. You write and argue like a real shooter.
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Old February 6, 2013, 04:53 PM   #8
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In todays world, we now find people that belive they know the way to live and want to impose this upon everyone else. People waiting for someone to mess up so they can dial 911. People taking movies on their phones waiting for that one moment a person messes up so they can dial up 911.

Others feel anyone with a gun is able to commit mass murders and wish to stop them before it happens.

Why dont these folks get out of their house and confront the criminals in their towns as these are the culprits that commit the crimes....they sure have no problems marching on an abortion clinic and voicing their displeasure. Why not target the criminals?

Because it is easier to target us those that abide by the laws of our land and wish to raise our kids in peace without fear someone will harm them or someone we care about.
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Old February 7, 2013, 08:45 AM   #9
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Wow, great read!! Took me part of last night and this morning to find the time to read it in its entirety but most excellent work! This needs to make it into an article somewhere.
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Old February 7, 2013, 10:29 AM   #10
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well said, im going to copy it and use it some if you dont mind.
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Old February 7, 2013, 12:49 PM   #11
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great read, yes. It sure does feel good to vent...

Just remember what Frank Ettin said. We can enjoy venting, and fantasizing about "what if",,, but in the end, we have to live in reality.

As I said 2 weeks ago in a similar thread:

The maintaining (and God willing, the expanding) of our RTKBA is both a legal fight and a political fight. Given the current realities of the Supreme Court and the Heller decisions, the courts are going to continue to affirm that the 2nd is an individual right. This is hugely important, yes.… BUT, I think we would be mistaken to rely on the courts to defend our right to own AR/AK rifles and 30 round mags. That is going to be a political fight. Keeping the right to private non-registered sales is also going to be a political fight.

It is a bit of a fantasy to think that the SCOTUS is going to rule that a ban on AR/AKs and other military-derivative rifles is unconstitutional, and wow, now we can all relax, and the battle is finally over... nope, I don't think it will work out that way. I think that keeping our "evil black rifles" will be a never ending political battle, and our side will gain and loose ground, and the other side will gain and loose ground.
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Old February 7, 2013, 01:03 PM   #12
horatioo
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Most people dont give squat about the constitution. I bet many of those saying that our constitutional right to bear arms should never be violated are more then happy to read that some American citizen was killed by drone attack in Pakistan just on the orders of the president.

Most people dont care about the constitution at all, at least not enough to pay more then lip service to it.
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Old February 7, 2013, 05:51 PM   #13
mack59
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Just got tired of hearing the same old arguments recited as gospel by individuals who have no real information on firearms or the RKBA and its history and of listening to too many talking heads who support the RKBA but can't articulate themselves. Tired of having a "national conversation on guns" that feels more like a lecture.

This is a long battle that will be fought in the legislatures, in the media, and in the courts - and we have few enough true friends amongst those.

Feel free if to take or use anything you find useful. I have been busy writing, calling representatives. Talking to friends and acquaintances. Donating more to NRA, ISRA, and SAF - for me personally with a limited budget that makes more sense than buying another gun right now.

But I do think that we need to make and try to win the moral ground on this issue in the public arena - to get others to understand the importance of the RKBA - I know of more than one person who has told me that they personally don't like guns (weren't interested in going shooting or joining NRA) but that they did not support infringements on the RKBA because they understood that allowing such infringements set the precedent for similar "reasonable" infringements on the First Amendment and other rights.

Take people shooting if you can, persuade gently don't lecture. At least that is what has worked best for me. Oh, and showing up in person has an impact on legislators.

I swear some days, as many of you know yourselves, it seems like a century instead of twenty some years of fighting this battle. But I really do sense a difference in the air this time, a collective NO MORE, from the RKBA community.

I don't think I am alone in saying/feeling, that I will no longer sit in the back of the bus.

What I wrote was a rant - so composition, grammar, and punctuation are not optimal.

Watching the New York resistance begins video is inspiring as is reading the letters and statements of many Sheriffs. I know I am in for the long haul, I want to leave my kids as many, if not more, of the freedoms that I was blessed with.
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Old February 7, 2013, 07:07 PM   #14
pelo801
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I mostly just wanted to say thank you to Mack, and I appreciate you allowing me to use some of your words. So thank you.
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Old February 7, 2013, 08:00 PM   #15
Buzzcook
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Quote:
Of course if the conversation can continue past that hurdle of denial, the next statement meant to end all serious consideration and discussion is: “Bubba and his shotgun isn’t going to stand up to F-16’s, drones, tanks, nuclear missiles and the most powerful military in the modern world.”

Of course this betrays a superficial understanding of resistance and the real world application and consequences of force: ignorance of asymmetrical warfare as practiced by insurgencies throughout the world, presumes a military force that would retain monolithic cohesion if ordered to fire on American citizens, a citizenry unaware and totally reactive without the experience of the millions of recently retired military among them, no disruption of supply and secure bases when surrounded by insurgents. No dependence for re-supply from civilian contractors honeycombed with spies and saboteurs, no significant military defections, loss of public support for using bombs and heavy ordinance on American cities and populations, and etc….
So basically terrorism.
The main goal of terrorism, is for government measures used to suppress terrorism become a hardship on the general population that is more onerous than the terrorists themselves. So a popular uprising because of measures used to stop terrorism.

I really don't see that as a any more of a realistic scenario than a neo civil war with standing armies of rebels.
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Old February 7, 2013, 10:09 PM   #16
mack59
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It would take pages to discuss in basic detail such a scenario and it would not be a discussion that the moderators here would tolerate.

Suffice to say that most military that I know and most law enforcement do not think that civilian resistance to actual tyranny would be inconsiderable nor would the outcome be a foregone conclusion. Patriot or Terrorist is an important moral distinction. And, the mere deterrence of such a potential horror is terrible enough to dissuade all but a tyrannical madman from pursuing such a course.

Today there is nothing like real tyranny in this country and to protect our rights the appropriate level of resistance is to vote, persuade, organize, write letters, make respectful phone calls, and engage in protest as practiced in the Civil Rights movement of the 60's. The above is only discussing a hypothetical since it addresses an argument made by the gun control movement and not meant to suggest that anyone should engage in any illegal behavior. Violence or threats of violence are not appropriate even if the gun control advocates are calling for the use of force at the point of a gun to circumscribe the RKBA.
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Old February 8, 2013, 06:48 PM   #17
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Quote:
It would take pages to discuss in basic detail such a scenario and it would not be a discussion that the moderators here would tolerate.
Pages to cover asymmetric warfare, but probably only a few paragraphs to discuss how the 2nd amendment is or isn't a revolutionary document and how that would or would not work.
The mods have been fairly tolerant of that kind of discussion in the past as long as current politics aren't brought into it.

Quote:
Patriot or Terrorist is an important moral distinction.
Either that or the winner writes the history.
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Old February 8, 2013, 09:34 PM   #18
Nick S.
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Long, but worth the read.
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Old February 10, 2013, 12:58 AM   #19
btmj
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Either that or the winner writes the history.
There is a lot of truth to that statement.

Generally, a political entity which is engaged in violent conflict will fall into one of three categories: An entity with enough power to raise a standard military will do so. An entity lacking in the power/resources to raise a military force will engage in guerilla tactics. An entity lacking in the resources to fight with a guerilla force will engage in terrorism. A recent article in the WSJ noted that a guerilla force is defeated about 65% of the time, and a terrorist organization is defeated about 85% of the time.

If I choose terrorism as my means to resist, it is a reflection of my lack of any other means. It is not a reflection on the morality of my cause. It became popular after 9-11 to demonize the methods of terrorists. But this is short sided IMO, and wrong IMO. The Norwegians, French, Greeks, and Dutch all engaged in terrorism during Nazi occupation, and their cause was just. Yes, they blew up cars with Nazis in them, even if the cars contained the children of the Nazis. The act of killing children during war is simply a part of war. British and American bombing of cities killed a lot more German children than did the French resistance.

It is a shame that the people of Cambodia did not have the means to engage in basic terrorism during the Khmer Rouge... A real shame.
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Old February 10, 2013, 06:46 PM   #20
P5 Guy
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A Very Precious Gift

My life and property are the the precious gift from my Creator. Now I don't care who or what you see as your creator, it could be your Mom and Dad, or a Supreme Being that endowed us with these gifts. And it cheapens these gifts to not protect them from harm with every possible means.
Those that would try to take the tools for my self defense or take the fruits of my being from me are the enemy and must be stopped from spoiling these gifts that I hold to be of value above all else.

No it is not just firearms.
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