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Here speaks a "city kid" who probably lives in a gated and guarded community with a police substation next door.
Fortunately, "highly regulated and highly policed" isn't the state of affairs in most of the country and if that were the case, it would be the kind of situation the Founders intended american citizens be able to resist -- whether by the power of the press or the power of the gun.
You personally may not be a "city kid" but the argument that "the police can protect us so we don't need guns" is only valid for a city environment -- and one with a heavy police presence at that.As to the first point, hardly. But if you need to mischaracterize rather than confront my arguments there's not much we can debate.
And "highly regulated and highly policed" was a description of our society relative to the 18th and 19th centuries' frontier areas. Or do you really think present day Idaho is comparable to Idaho of 1850? Also, Eastern states even in the 19th century were filled with laws and regulations, and would be deemed "highly regulated and policed" by any reasonable standard.. Just go read some Thoreau.
You don't think the Southerners circa 1860 viewed the Federal Government as "Tyrranical"? Really?
The only difference between a civil war and an armed insurrection is the number of people involved.
As to the first point, hardly. But if you need to mischaracterize rather than confront my arguments there's not much we can debate.
And "highly regulated and highly policed" was a description of our society relative to the 18th and 19th centuries' frontier areas. Or do you really think present day Idaho is comparable to Idaho of 1850? Also, Eastern states even in the 19th century were filled with laws and regulations, and would be deemed "highly regulated and policed" by any reasonable standard.. Just go read some Thoreau.
I'll bet the true list is highly classified.
if you think the only difference between a civil war and an armed insurrection against a tyrannical government is the number of people involved your more ignorant and in dire need of a history book than I had previously thought. No wonder you are against the basic right to defend one's family, property and self.
Yes but "highly regulated and highly policed" dose NOT ensure that you, your family or your property are safe from assault or vandalism. Therefore it is every persons responsibility to ensure their own personal security, not the governments.
A) I'm not against the basic right to defend one's family, property or self, I just think that if no one had guns then there would be less need to defend oneself, and fewer people would end up dead as a result of such confrontations.
and B) Please, enlighten me on the difference. Perhaps we are using different definitions, but in my mind a Civil War means the outcome is in doubt, whereas an armed insurrection is going to be put down by the overwhelming power of the state in short order, with lots of violence done to those who dare raise arms against their homeland.
Though C) inherent in your responses is the idea that a Civil War is bad but an armed insurrection is good. While you say you know several people who right now would be willing to exercise their right to overthrow the government through force of arms, to me that means you know several traitors. I doubt any of them could state a convincing argument why the political process has failed and thus armed rebellion is currently necessary.
Ah, so you're saying that people who don't own guns and are willing to use them against others, either for personal, religious, philosophical, or any other reasons, are irresponsible. Interesting. And here I thought our government's primary purpose (aka responsibility) was to establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty. In my mind, that means taking steps to protect from and to punish those who dare attempt to harm my family and/or my property. But if you have an argument to the contrary I'd enjoy reading it.
.C) Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, Madison etc. all dared to raise arms against their homeland.
Theoretically, ok... but technically? Washington did combat - Franklin, Jefferson, Madison did not.
Supporters of the Second Amendment make all kinds of aspersions towards the idea that gun ownership is a protection against a tyrannical government. In today's day and age, that's ridiculous. No citizens militia armed with legally obtained weapons is going to form up and succeed in overthrowing a government backed by the most powerful military in the world. The limitations that our society has already accepted on the ownership of arms has guaranteed that already. So the aspersion is either a complete falsehood or a delusion.
So if you've already accepted that this is a falsehood, that we've already denuded the Second Amendment beyond our Founders' intent, then is it so much of a push to argue that gun ownership isn't needed in our society? In the 18th and 19th centuries gun ownership was necessary on the frontier for self-protection. Today? We live in a highly regulated and highly policed society. Gun ownership is no longer necessary, nor can it protect against a tyrannical government. So what's left is personal pleasure in having that kind of power in your hands versus the risk of death or serious bodily injury from accidents and hotheads. I think the risk isn't worth it. There have been a spate of murder-suicides in my area lately. Every one just makes me sick.
Okay, that's too much.A weapon is a nessecary evil.
They hadn't, to my knowledge, before that. I would send them $25 or $50 sometimes, when I thought what they were doing had merit. Suddenly, I got that letter, and I was floored.Interesting. The ACLU normally doesn't get involved in gun rights. There stance has always been that they don't care (more or less). That was enough to turm me against them.
All the other things they do to turn me against them are just bonuses.
I am an American. And I hate staple-guns.I am a liberal. I hate guns.
Ain't that a daisy?Liberals want to rule, and you cannot rule an armed populace - you can only govern them.
It's amusing, but you're a cat playing with a punctured lizard, now.So, you toss out a statement, "No citizen militia is going to succeed..." in paragraph one, and then assuming that statement is a universal truth - proceed to use it to validate your theory that Gun Ownership is unnecessary?
We live in a highly policed state. *your para 2* --- in which the police are not required to protect the citizens (Castle Rock v. Gonzales, 545 U.S. 748 (2005)).
So, That being proven (by law) and obviously true (unlike your circular logic argument against gun ownership). Who is to protect the citizens if not themselves?
You also state that a militia cannot hope to overthrow a state with the most powerful military...
Perhaps you should think about the obvious untruth of that statement as well. And look to your own liberal friend's arguments over the last 10 years in Afghanistan and Iraq. Look to the weapons pouring in from other states to assist the rebels (terrorists) who are fighting the Great Satan. Don't you think, perhaps, maybe that Iran might ship some weapons here too, if it might bring down the U.S.? Don't you think 100 million gun owners here in revolt can stop nearly all shipment of food to New York City? I wonder if the chief Engineer operating Hoover Dam's generation plant is an NRA member? Perhaps the Commandant of the Marine Corps also? Hmmm?
Okay, that's too much.
It's nec and esse.
Hence, "necessary."
That's pretty much a global sentiment.I am an American. And I hate staple-guns.
Me don't use spell-check.Me lazy. Me browser has no spelcheque.
And you apparently understood what I was trying to say anyway.
Ban nails.That's pretty much a global sentiment.
Me foreigner. English is second language.Me don't use spell-check.