The
"draconian gun control" laws insisted upon by the likes of the NRA and Ronald Reagan, and even implemented by the founding fathers?
Reagan went back and forth on the issue, though I don't really care, I'm not much of a Reaganite. The Founding Fathers disarmed British loyalists who they were actively engaged in a military conflict with; we do the same thing today when we disarm Taliban and al-Qaeda forces. The NRA during the time you mentioned was a professional competition shooting organization, not a grassroots populist gun rights organization. As you said yourself, the organization changed over the years, rebranding itself from an organization that represents elite competition shooters, to an organization that represents your average American gun owner.
I see the PMs in my inbox, and I won't comment further on your posts until I've taken the time to read them thoroughly. Thanks for taking the time to split the essay into separate PMs - I know how annoying that can be
But please understand if I continue to comment on other posts in the meantime. I don't always have 30 minutes at a time to think about this forum
You don't have to read it if you don't want to, it was just something I wrote up a long time ago to be an "end all, be all" to claims made by the gun control lobby. Luckily it wasn't too annoying, as I managed to fit it into two private messages and the waiting time on these boards isn't very long (20 seconds?).
Hai Arctic, I don't believe we've had the pleasure of conversing. I won't have 30 minutes to read a 14 page paper, but could you break out for me in the kiddy version why you think that weapons designed around squad based warfare, area level sustained supression fire, high powered explosives, tanks, and possibly even tactical weapons should be available for private rather than communal response? Privitized warlords counterbalancing or even overriding state and federal government will in open conflict is about the only thing that's springing to mind for me. Is that it or something else?
Well for starters, the guns you're referring to have been heavily regulated since the 1930s and were effectively banned (with few exceptions) in the 1980s. The guns that the gun control lobby are trying to ban now are not fully automatic, nor military weapons. They are civilian semi-automatic and bolt-action rifles, and the gun control lobby openly admits they are trying to deceive the public by calling them "assault weapons" and using phrases like "a hundred rounds a second" and "VRRM VRRM VRRM," and "war weapons." I'm not saying that you're referring to those particular civilian semi-automatics and bolt-action rifles, I'm merely pointing out the difference so that other people who happen to read this can understand the difference.
To answer your question, I believe the people have the right to own such weapons, for the very reason the Founding Fathers supported the right of the people to own such weapons, defense against government. The Second Amendment isn't about hunting, self-defense or target shooting; the Second Amendment is about defense against tyranny. The people should be every bit as well armed, and as well trained, as the government.
I'm dying to hear all about how draconian gun control measures implemented well over 200 years ago by our founding fathers, as well as those from the early and middle 20th Century largely in reaction to blacks getting access to firearms, have affected Second Amendment case law and crime. It should be quite interesting.
As I stated above, the Founding Fathers supported disarming the British loyalists, whom they were actively engaged in a war against. It should be noted that the Bill of Rights only applied to the federal government in the early and mid 19th century. It wasn't until the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868 that the Bill of Rights applied to state and local governments.
The issue of Democrats disarming blacks was one of the main reasons the Fourteenth Amendment was created to begin with, so that the blacks would be able to exercise their right to bear arms, which was being infringed upon by white Democrats. Unfortunately for the civil rights movement, however, the Supreme Court ruled in
United States v. Cruikshank ruled in 1876 that the Fourteenth Amendment only applied to the federal government, not to state and local governments. This allowed southern Democrats to continue their policies of limiting the freedom of speech, right to assembly and right to bear arms of newly freed African Americans. Over the years, the
United States v. Cruikshank ruling was largely ignored by both lower courts and the Supreme Court and the ruling was never enforced.
United States v. Cruikshank was formally overruled by
McDonald v. Chicago.
An M72 Rocket launcher isn't a 'gun'. Sorry.
It's the right to bear
arms, not the right to bear
guns.
Rather than trying to score political points over semantics, perhaps you should try engaging in an actual discussion?