In response to this quote from rich, simply put, because it isn’t just about YOU. I know it is pleasing to think that it is, and that in American we are all kings (as opposed to simply all equals), but that is the fundamental disagreement of our time. One side wants to keep a paradigm that has favored some groups historically, the other wants to change it to make it more amenable to those who are disfavored.
Oh, but it IS about me. It's MY rights that you are encouraging others to take away. Just as it is about everyone else's rights that wish to keep them and try to encourage OUR representatives to use the US Constitution and Bill of Rights literally, both in letter and intent of the restrictions they itemize concerning the restrictions AGAINST what our government can do to OUR rights. OUR rights are specifically spelled out on the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights. THAT gives us the RIGHT to demand them, regardless of what people wish otherwise.
1. In terms of this ‘criminal’ statement, all of these premises begin with a false dichotomy between good guys and bad guys. This is a reductive oversimplification. The kinds of 'road rage' shootings I brought up in a previous post are generally between two hot-headed folks who happen to have loaded guns in the glove without having taken a gun safety course or having had to reflect at all upon the ramifications of carrying said weapon. In fact, when I recently had a gun pulled on me, if I had my own gun in the glove and pulled it, one or both of us would have ended up dead (rather than simply annoyed). Guns don’t always solve disputes – even violent ones. When I was growing up, we’d just fight. What happened to that? Education is always good, not some kind of impediment or burden. And if you think it is… well all I can say is that once those in favor of regulation have a majority (now, but still a problem), everyone will still be able to have a gun, they’ll just have to put a modicum of work into securing it.
Both sides of this argument can easily come up with examples to support their arguments. It's a diversified world we live in with all kinds of people living within it. Bad guys are here. Stupid people are here. Again, my argument is that why should I, and people of a like mind, be punished because of the actions of a minority that are bad, stupid, or both? Why should we be preemptively branded as being dangerous and particular weapons withheld from us based on what someone else has done? This is the equivalent of removing everyone's vocal chords when they walk into a movie theater to keep them from being able to yell out "FIRE!" just to cause a panic. Yes, it certainly can cause injuries and possible deaths when someone does that. But are we really willing, as a country, to preemptively rubber baby buggy bumper the entire planet to make it a warm, fuzzy, cozy and safe cocoon for us? Are we REALLY willing to give up our freedoms for the sake of the illusion of security?
Nope, guns don't ALWAYS solve disputes. On the other hand, neither are they ALWAYS used in a dangerous manner, regardless of what they look like, nor how many rounds their magazines hold, or what they CAN do if misused. And yes, sometimes they DO help resolve issues in a positive manner that probably would not have ended as well without them.
Education? Sorry, I must have missed where that came into the conversation. What sort of education has been proposed in relation to background checks?
And in case this little detail escaped your attention, the USA is NOT a Democracy, whereby the rule of law is based simply on a majority. The founders of this country were wise enough to realize that a majority of those people voting on an issue can be easily enough hoodwinked into having bad and dangerous laws passed that are actually contrary to the PEOPLE of this country's welfare. Which is why we are a Constitutional Republic instead. Even if a majority is hoodwinked into wanting a law to pass, it must still be Constitutional (in theory anyway) to be legally enforceable. Boiled down to it's most simple analogy, the definition of TRUE Democracy can be shown by the concept of two wolves and a sheep voting on what is for dinner tonight.
2. I already addressed this 'criminals follow laws' concept in an earlier post by referencing James Q. Wilson's essay "Just Take Away Their Guns." I realize the limitations of gun control fully, this point is clear, and since no one has ever suggested taking away anyone's guns, it is really a red herring. But as I stated previously, the people who have been doing the killing in FL recently aren’t criminals… just hot heads with guns.
Really? What about the laws that have taken away imported firearms? Firearms that don't pass some nebulous "sporting" definition? Fully automatic weapons are illegal to manufacture and sell to the general public now. Those rare one still available have been priced out of the reach of the average person completely. The "assault weapon" ban attempted to remove an entire class of firearms with arbitrary details of what constituted those firearms, and they want to bring that up again in a much more broad context.
Representatives have flatly stated that if they could they would remove ALL guns from private ownership. And you can state here that "no one has ever suggested taking away anyone's guns"? Are you ignorant of the facts and history, or just being purposely blind to such details merely to support your arguments?
3. The tone of this entire argument mirrors the national debate. The majority of people are logical enough to realize that some regulation of any 'liberty' is required, but a strong and very vocal minority constantly filibusters it. This thread epitomizes that: like-minded people huddle in a circle, convince themselves that they have some kind of insight and are 'seeing through' everything (despite many of their arguments being reducible to axioms most high school students live by) and then refuse to listen to outside opinions, creating an 'us vs. them' sense of alterity, and often using derisive language and ad-hominem attacks against those few who infiltrate the circle.
Oh really? Seems to me that there is a vocal minority of people who are so fearful of their own personal welfare and afraid of those black military style weapons that they just want them taken away from everyone. It is all about fear, you know. People fearing being hurt. People fearing other people
might have the means to hurt them.
And yes, the same could be said about the pro-gun faction in that there is some fear involved. The fear that professed good intentions hide a darker intent. That "reasonable" laws are only reasonable to the ones who make them. Yes, there is fear that our government does not have our best interests at heart, and history has shown plainly that this is not an impossible future for the USA. We fear a government who fears US, because we wonder what in the world they have to fear from us if they have our best interests in mind. So yes, we will tenaciously and vigorously defend our RIGHTS from all parties who try to take them from us. Sorry if that is scary to you, but that's just the way it is. We have a right to not have our ability to keep and bear arms (and that means ALL OF THEM) infringed. It's right there in the Bill of Rights, IN WRITING.
4. Justice Warren Burger once said, in reference to the debate over whether the 1st Amendment covered pornography, that using the amendment to protect porn "demeaned" the Amendment's "grand conception in the historic struggle for freedom." I see this gun debate in the same way: it is shameful to use an amendment intended simply to protect the people in order to keep one’s own collection of the most aggressive and violent forms of weapons. We can say what we want, but this whole thing comes down to hobbyists who don't want to give up their toys, since no one has EVER questioned whether a revolver, shotgun, or rifle can be owned.
I see. So what exactly DOES the Second Amendment mean to you? Why exactly was it put into the Bill of Rights in the first place? Do you propose it has something to do with people being able to collect toys? So you apparently believe that as long as we are able to keep even one gun, even if it is only a single shot .22 pistol, then our Second Amendment right is being satisfied fully concerning the intent and letter of what that Amendment means?
5. I know it can be hard to think outside of one's own cultural and historical moment (for me as well), but consider this: Imagine that you are listening to debates between two opposing groups in a foreign country – the Sunni and Shiite, for example. Assuming both groups share equal rights, and assuming that executive power is more or less evenly distributed among the two of them, with periodic fluctuations of course, imagine if one group was constantly speaking about how they needed weapons, without any further restrictions even on magazine size, and that it was essential to keep these weapons in case the government was ever not to their liking so they might be able to act. Now imagine the other side was constantly talking about education and health care for everyone…
Is there a world somewhere where that is actually happening?
Oh… and about the brick wall… YOU guys have been my bricks! And because my head is needed elsewhere, I will try to gracefully bow out of this thread soon (you are some very stubborn bricks indeed!). Nonetheless, I will continue to listen to your advice on Corn snakes! (I am consistent as well… I believe in the regulation of potentially invasive exotic species (get a license… make people work for it so only those who actually are capable and serious about it can have them!)).
Apparently you are a really great guy for wanting to restrict anything that you don't have any interest in, and to hell with what others may want to have. It's not my (gun, animal, right) being taken away, so what the heck do I care, eh?
Do you know what the REAL cost of TRUE freedom is? Well, it's cost is having to put up with other people having the freedom to do something that you may not particularly like. Otherwise, YOU may be doing something that THEY don't like, and they can take that away from you. So they have to bear that cross as well.