But to follow that thread to its logical conclusion you're saying it guarantees our right to own any kind of weapon we want at all, with no limits. That would include biological and nuclear. |
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Any limitation put on the right to bear arms counts as an infringement. If the British government made it illegal to insult Islam, would that be an infringement on your right to free speech, or would an infringement on the right to free speech only be a complete ban on communication that is not ordered? |
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You are dreaming right now.
But to follow that thread to its logical conclusion you're saying it guarantees our right to own any kind of weapon we want at all, with no limits. That would include biological and nuclear. |
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Yes we can say that, in fact the Minutemen are a famous example. In the early days of the revolution there wasn't much of an army, the vast majority were militiamen and most of them only had the equipment they brought them self. The basic idea of that time was that if everyone had guns they could all join up into a militia to fight. If individuals didn't have guns they couldn't create a militia because they wouldn't have any guns at all, since all the equipment is what the individuals brought. |
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I was not saying in my last post what I think should be. I was just saying what I think the Second Amendment means. I think "arms" was supposed to mean "guns." As for how I think things should be, I said earlier that we have a problem on our hands if they meant "weapons in general." I don't think citizens should be allowed to have things like WMD's. I think speech should be limited when it comes in the form of harassment or other victimization. I don't think extortion, blackmail, sexual harassment, death threats, perjury, slander, etc. should be legal. As a former teacher, I think there should be death by firing squad for talking loudly over the teacher the entire class period. Well, maybe that last one is a little harsh, but I once worked for a principal who was too scared of the parents to do anything about that kind of stuff, so I have a special hatred for it. |
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You are dreaming right now.
I was actually talking about this earlier today with my friend. Basically the way I see it, you take away guns, guns will still be here. There will be more black market for guns. So many guns exist and are everywhere its unrealistic to get rid of them all. It's our rights as individuals to be able to arm ourselves. We all have a right to self defence. We all have a right to stand up against something and fight. It's our god given right to do these things. Just look at other countries where they are waging civil wars to over come their oppressive governments. We live in this mind state where we think we are safe and comfortable and nothing can hurt us and that is bullshit. Just because people decide to go and randomly go on shooting sprees doesn't mean that the government should take away guns. It's the individuals choice what to do with the gun. They are the one who pulls the trigger. The gun it's self is a tool. It can be used to save lives or to take lives. Really the problem has to do with the individual who makes that choice. I think that our constitutional rights should come first and make sense. Despite your reasoning of what use they have. They were created to protect basic rights of individuals and to empower individuals. Laws and morals change over time but those rights should stay because its one of the only solid things protecting us, even though they are already infringed on. |
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Our truest life is when we are in dreams awake
If you want to be practical about it, there are just way to many guns to ever get rid of them all. You would basically need to bring the army in and do a house to house search of every home in america to get rid of the guns, and if you do that it is going to cause huge problems. If you just pass a law saying all guns are illegal and then you don't do anything to actually get the gun then all guns would just go black market and we can no longer track them and it would likely increase violence dramatically. |
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Researching it might indicate whether they just meant guns, but it does need to be explicated further than that. Should the 2nd amendment guarantee the rights of citizens to own howitzers and anti aircraft guns? And if not, then where to draw the line? Should it be legal for citizens to own fully automatic machine guns? Assault rifles? |
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Last edited by Darkmatters; 01-12-2013 at 06:17 PM.
You do realise they can just change the Bill of Rights, right? |
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Good points. They should outlaw alcohol and tobacco and legalize weed before criminalizing assault rifles. |
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There is an American expression that goes, "It takes an act of Congress to do that." It means that something is really difficult to accomplish. Well, changing the Bill of Rights would literally take an act of Congress, and there are not going to be enough people in Congress supporting such a thing. It would be political suicide and probably result in a government overthrow. They aren't going to just change the Bill of Rights on a whim. It is the most sacred thing our country has. |
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You are dreaming right now.
Also if you just want to protect yourself from government or home invaders, gun control doesn't stop that. |
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Tanks aren't worth that much in guerilla warfare. The threat of about 100 million people running around with guns to fight for a cause they are willing to die for is enough deterrent to keep the government from suddenly going totalitarian on us. That's what really matters. |
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You are dreaming right now.
That's a rather poor argument, Xei. Do you really think that if there was an uprising, that the government would order an all out assault on entire cities - mowing down both their dissidents as well as supporters? That would just fan the flames for anti-gov't sentiments, and exasperate matters to the point of a full on revolution. Support for the gov't would start dropping rapidly, among both the citizenry as well as many within the gov't as well. Just like many of the Nazi's couldn't stomach the on-going executions they had to carry out personally (before gas chambers were introduced), soldiers would start to lose morale and eventually refuse to fire. Although the higher-ups of the armed forces may be amoral opportunists with little regard for right and wrong, the soldiers themselves joined for the sake of protecting their fellow citizens. |
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Last edited by GavinGill; 01-13-2013 at 04:07 AM.
Thanks. |
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You are dreaming right now.
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Sweet dreams and roses on your pillow.
The worst thing that can happen to a good cause is, not to be skillfully attacked, but to be ineptly defended. - Frédéric Bastiat
I try to deny myself any illusions or delusions, and I think that this perhaps entitles me to try and deny the same to others, at least as long as they refuse to keep their fantasies to themselves. - Christopher Hitchens
Formerly known as BLUELINE976
While people wouldn't individually own tanks and jets, ideally independently organized militias would collectively own such military technology. In fact it would be necessary for such militias to exist if you aspire for a stateless society of any kind, syndicalist, communist or anarcho-capitalist. Spain was anarcho-syndicalist before the fascists overwhelmed them due to their complete lack in military. Likewise if any other society became stateless and lost their central government they would need to maintain some system of military in order to protect themselves. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
I much preferred this later interview due to the original interview. |
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Please click on the links below, more techniques under investigation to come soon...
Lmao. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
Even if I were a conspiracy theorist and on Alex Jones side.. this interview made him look like an angry asshole and made Piers look like a saint (saw the whole thing when it aired). |
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Things are not as they seem
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