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BS: Anyone defend US gun law?

Rapparee 30 Aug 14 - 10:55 PM
olddude 30 Aug 14 - 11:42 PM
olddude 31 Aug 14 - 01:26 AM
olddude 31 Aug 14 - 01:42 AM
MGM·Lion 31 Aug 14 - 01:51 AM
olddude 31 Aug 14 - 01:55 AM
olddude 31 Aug 14 - 01:58 AM
MGM·Lion 31 Aug 14 - 02:40 AM
olddude 31 Aug 14 - 02:42 AM
Musket 31 Aug 14 - 03:21 AM
Lighter 31 Aug 14 - 08:44 AM
Big Al Whittle 31 Aug 14 - 08:49 AM
Musket 31 Aug 14 - 09:32 AM
Lighter 31 Aug 14 - 09:55 AM
Bill D 31 Aug 14 - 11:01 AM
GUEST 31 Aug 14 - 11:16 AM
Greg F. 31 Aug 14 - 02:59 PM
Lighter 31 Aug 14 - 03:11 PM
Greg F. 31 Aug 14 - 03:44 PM
Rapparee 31 Aug 14 - 09:10 PM
Bill D 31 Aug 14 - 11:29 PM
Greg F. 01 Sep 14 - 09:04 AM
Rapparee 01 Sep 14 - 06:40 PM
Big Al Whittle 01 Sep 14 - 07:23 PM
Lighter 01 Sep 14 - 08:06 PM
Greg F. 01 Sep 14 - 09:00 PM
Rapparee 01 Sep 14 - 10:50 PM
Greg F. 02 Sep 14 - 10:27 AM
Lighter 02 Sep 14 - 10:52 AM
Greg F. 02 Sep 14 - 10:58 AM
Ebbie 02 Sep 14 - 11:03 AM
Greg F. 02 Sep 14 - 11:09 AM
Bill D 02 Sep 14 - 12:20 PM
Lighter 02 Sep 14 - 12:29 PM
Jack Campin 05 Sep 14 - 09:19 AM
Ebbie 05 Sep 14 - 12:51 PM
GUEST,Carl, Yank from VT 06 Sep 14 - 06:00 AM
Stu 06 Sep 14 - 06:11 AM
Lighter 06 Sep 14 - 08:29 AM
Jack Campin 06 Sep 14 - 08:51 AM
Musket 06 Sep 14 - 08:58 AM
GUEST,Sol 06 Sep 14 - 09:28 AM
Lighter 06 Sep 14 - 09:45 AM
Greg F. 06 Sep 14 - 10:08 AM
Bill D 06 Sep 14 - 10:50 PM
GUEST,Stim 07 Sep 14 - 01:43 AM
Backwoodsman 07 Sep 14 - 02:25 AM
Musket 07 Sep 14 - 04:10 AM
Stu 07 Sep 14 - 07:34 AM
GUEST,Rahere 07 Sep 14 - 09:13 AM

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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Rapparee
Date: 30 Aug 14 - 10:55 PM

Not just the picture, but how did she get to Facebook?

The Amish I'm familiar with wouldn't be on FB, although they might use electricity if it came with a farm they were working for someone else because it wouldn't be "right" to insist that it be removed to satisfy their beliefs.

Hey, I still read "The Budget" when I can get a copy.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: olddude
Date: 30 Aug 14 - 11:42 PM

Rap at that age she could have been on rumspringer or however it's spelled that would explain fb and photos,


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: olddude
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 01:26 AM

Really I think most Americans don't give a rats ass what the British or any other country thinks
Most don't care who is banging who in Hollywood. But firearms, that Is political suicide for political leaders that is why we get laws that don't make sense. However no one is forced to visit
I been all over the world and ya know what guns exist everywhere. Even in your country. It is naive to think otherwise. Maybe your news media doesn't have an agenda other than news. Ours now is a rag magazine. So guns is a high sensational value to them. The world is an unsafe place. Your naive views are not real world. People kill people people want to harm others and their way of love. It is sad but true. Burying your head in the sand only gets your ass kicked. Freedom is not free. Go to Langley and look at some stars on the wall or go to Arlington. You are talking here because someone else picked up a weapon to allow youto
talk.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: olddude
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 01:42 AM

That is way of life. Can't type. Anyway my service is done it is now up to younger people to understand the nature of what it takes to keep a nation strong and it ain't folk music. It is up to them to gather the information and protect and defend the constitution. Because in America that is the only thing that keeps this nation free. And up to our military to act on threats in a decisive manner
That all starts at a civilian level. And yes jack I am a crazy son of a Bitch and I am proud of it


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: MGM·Lion
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 01:51 AM

"Because in America that is the only thing that keeps this nation free".
.,,.,.

How pathetic!


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: olddude
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 01:55 AM

Yes you are but I can give you a quarter to call someone who gives a shit


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: olddude
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 01:58 AM

Any time you would like to discuss this personally I would be happy to oblige just drop me a line michael and be there


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: MGM·Lion
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 02:40 AM

No, thanks, Dude. Do not wish to become embroiled in private correspondence on topic on which we start at two such different points. What, after all, could we find to say which can't be said here on the thread -- which it probably has already been anyhow? But would draw attention yet again to my views on our national differences in this topic, which I copied from posts on previous thread, above on this thread on 20 Aug at 0100 am.

Best regards nevertheless

≈M≈


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: olddude
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 02:42 AM

Same to you michael by the way Cambridgeshire is a lovely place. If recall SIS had an office near by beautiful area
I actually love great Britain so much history


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Musket
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 03:21 AM

The history is one thing.

The advances in society compared to Dumbfuckistan?

Priceless.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 08:44 AM

> Most don't care who is banging who in Hollywood.

Which, as we know, is far more important.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 08:49 AM

perhaps they're more advanced than us. its a sort of check on over population.

Apparently Jeremy Paxman doesn't think we've paid for the health service or the old age pension.

it could the way forward - give everyone a gun when they get to pensionable age. let them shoot it out for a hospital bed.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Musket
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 09:32 AM

Who gets the bed, winner or loser?

(An aside. When I do a wee bit of teaching, medical students mostly and management trainees occasionally, I tackle the thorny subject of paying for The NHS. I demonstrate the business model of over trading as a problem. I then ask them to guess which was the first year The NHS over traded, (did more than it was given money to do.)

1948/49.

And ever since.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 09:55 AM

Man of the people?:

http://dailycaller.com/2014/04/09/iowa-senate-hopeful-will-use-his-glock-to-blow-your-balls-off/


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Bill D
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 11:01 AM

*sigh*... that particular senate race has 2 crazies running. We can only hope they split the vote. That "man of the people" has reason to be angry, but his message is just beyond the pale.
It is quite common for wing-nuts to use an election they have no hope of winning to attract attention to their 'cause'.

The Democratic candidate Bruce Braley seems to have a reasonable agenda, from a brief read.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: GUEST
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 11:16 AM

I think there is a serious risk the American attitude of My Country Right or Wrong could cause civil war in the UK, now the FBI is helping in Heathrow. True, we saw a first step in allowing the French to run their border controls at St Pancras for Eurostar, but none the less.
The point is that in the UK, we neither love nor trust our police and security services, not least as a direct consequence of the incessant spin telling us that we do. There is nothing more guaranteed to make a Brit question what's going on than telling him what he has to think or believe, something which has not yet penetrated the noddles of our politicians. On occasion, we respect our armed forces, but as guarantors of the peoples freedom and not as our rulers. The Army first overthrew Parliament in 1648, might have done so again in 1848 (special political measures were undetaken), 1919 (Spanish Flu blocked it) and did for certain in 1945, in General Election. The aftermath of that rumbles on in the South Yorkshire child abuse case, where people complaining were fankily not only given the bum's rush, but gagged and discredited into the bargain, and in the King case, where a British citizen has ended up under arrest without breaking the Law, simply because he disagreed with the NHS - a clear breach of Article 5 of the Convention on Human Rights and Articles 1, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, 45 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights.

By contrast, OldDude considers the population are a form of militia, right behind the Armed Forces. He may be, but many aren't, even in the US: if they were, better provision would be made for the Veterans Administration, which cares for those who have paid the butcher's bill the hard way. Worse, organisations like Homeland Security (and how oxymoronic that last word is, Insecurity more like) trade in it, demolishing the reputation of their country elsewhere. He just doesn't get how seriously we disagree with that fundamental Might Is Right approach, because it plays straight into the hands of the less reputable business interests of the US. As it is, there is now, I think, every likelihood of a Labour government being elected in nine months time, as people have had enough of the economy recovering but the population still being made to suffer. If we're damned if we do and are damned if we don't, then we might as well go down with people doing something to help rather than hinder.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 02:59 PM

The Democratic candidate Bruce Braley seems to have a reasonable agenda, from a brief read.

Wanna bet he loses to one of the wingnut assholes in a landslide, Bill?


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 03:11 PM

> the American attitude of My Country Right or Wrong

You mean the attitude of nationalists everywhere. If not, you're applying a double standard.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 03:44 PM

You mean the attitude of nationalists everywhere. If not, you're applying a double standard.

If he is so applying, does that render the American attitude of My Country Right or Wrong correct and morally justifiable?


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Rapparee
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 09:10 PM

"My country, right or wrong; if right, to be kept right; and if wrong, to be set right."
                                     --Carl Shurz


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Bill D
Date: 31 Aug 14 - 11:29 PM

It can be very difficult and awkward to get OUT of one's own country if it has problems.... like Carl Shurz says, it's better to fix it.
Trouble is, so many things in this 'modern' age have created an atmosphere where is looks like Sisyphus & King Canute had it easy.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 01 Sep 14 - 09:04 AM

OK, Rap, but Schurz was responding with his "revised" version to the prevalence of the "un-revised" version of the saying at the time (1872).

Unfortunately, most U.S. folks using the phrase today aren't referencing the Schurz version.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Rapparee
Date: 01 Sep 14 - 06:40 PM

How about Stephen Decatur's quote? Note the qualification.

'Our country! In her intercourse with foreign nations, may she always be in the right; but our country, right or wrong.'


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 01 Sep 14 - 07:23 PM

well if you have intercourse with foreigners, you have only yourself to blame....
I dunno....shagging foreigners and shooting each other!

You yanks know how to live...!


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 01 Sep 14 - 08:06 PM

> Unfortunately, most U.S. folks using the phrase today aren't referencing the Schurz version.

Or even the original version, an after-dinner toast proposed by Commodore Stephen Decatur in 1816, and reported in its earliest appearance as the rather less bellicose,

"Our country – In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be in the right, and always successful, right or wrong."

It was a dinnertime witticism and a hope rather than a fervent declaration of aggressive nationalism.

Observe too that Decatur thought being "in the right" nearly as important as being "successful."


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 01 Sep 14 - 09:00 PM

One might rather observe that Decatur meant that it was most important that the U.S. be successful, even if in the wrong.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Rapparee
Date: 01 Sep 14 - 10:50 PM

You obviously don't know about Stephen Decatur.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 02 Sep 14 - 10:27 AM

Actually, I know quite a bit about the Commodore, Rap. Particularly his service in the War of 1812- posible the most idiotic war the U.S. was ever inviolved in, barring Viet Nam and Iraq.

And that he was killed in a duel - that equally idiotic testosterone-poisoned American institution.-

What precisely is your point? That he was a "patriot" & that he's lionized as a "hero" by some and thus can have done or said no wrong?


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 02 Sep 14 - 10:52 AM

> One might rather observe that Decatur meant ....

One might, but who cares?

He wasn't setting policy, and he wasn't whipping up jingoes. He was being convivial.

Anyway, "nations" and their policies are never morally pure or 100% right.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 02 Sep 14 - 10:58 AM

He wasn't setting policy, and he wasn't whipping up jingoes.

But perhaps he was reflecting policy and was a jingo himself?

One might, but who cares?

Apparently, you & Rap do - I did't bring up Decatur, YOU did.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Ebbie
Date: 02 Sep 14 - 11:03 AM

"duel - that equally idiotic testosterone-poisoned American institution.-"

As you must know, Greg, dueling is far from being an American-inspired institution.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 02 Sep 14 - 11:09 AM

Yup, I DO know, and didn't say that the U.S. invented it.

But the U.S. sure as hell practiced and institutionalized it for a good chunk of the 19th Century - with devastating results. I'll have to look up the stats some time.

Now I think on it, its a wonder that the National Rifle Assassination doesn't promote duelling to increase firearms sales.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Bill D
Date: 02 Sep 14 - 12:20 PM

hmmmmm... dueling as a recognized 'sport', with round robin tournaments like jousting... using modern, rapid fire guns.

Might be useful to thin out the testosterone fueled bunch .......


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 02 Sep 14 - 12:29 PM

Russian roulette has never really caught on.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Jack Campin
Date: 05 Sep 14 - 09:19 AM

But the hunting season for your own feet seems to have started:

http://newsdaily.com/2014/09/03/idaho-professor-accidentally-shoots-himself-in-the-foot-in-chemistry-class/

Heck, some Americans don't even need a gun:

http://newsdaily.com/2014/09/03/washington-state-hunter-mistakenly-stabs-himself-with-arrow/


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Ebbie
Date: 05 Sep 14 - 12:51 PM

sheesh I do believe that if I felt the need to 'conceal carry', I'd spring for a holster meant to carry. Putting a loaded pistol in one's pocket... For pete's sake.

Interestingly enough, when Congress decided that it was the right of armed people to attend all these places, they did NOT include the halls of Congress itself.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: GUEST,Carl, Yank from VT
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 06:00 AM

Well, if I were to start from the top & respond on down it would be quite an entry, so I'll mention a few highlights & argue a little & when I next have time to get bogged in Mudcat maybe answer a bit of the firestorm resulting. :)

Preface - OP, you didn't perchance hunt up olddude and recruit him for a foil before you started? I'll believe you if you deny it, but I've sure got to wonder.

Prologue - where I'm coming from: (physically, rural Vermont, small peaceful place in New England, no concealed carry permits here because it has never been illegal to carry either concealed or openly in this state) I am "pro-gun", an NRA member, and in fact even a Libertarian party member - apparently my ilk is mainly what is mostly wrong with the U.S. these days.

1. Greg E. & the hideous jihadist Obama - You're right, there are people who believe that crap, and you may well believe we are often bedevilled with them in the Libertarians. But the great majority of Libertarianns have no use for it, and even fewer of the country at large.

2. Various posts - There seems to be an impression that the NRA is supported by the firearms industry. I have no doubt they contribute, as virtually every business in this country supports those whose lobbying is favorable to their interests, but I believe the NRA is overwhelmingly financed by the voluntary contributions of us members. (I stand correctable if you will produce reliable data contra.) We(NRA members) hardly feel our political spendings to be improper when we are faced with the same from opposing views. I saw the very conservative Koch brothers mentioned above, but no mention of the vast expenditures of Bloomberg, the anti-gun activist from NYC. I am however delighted to hear that the NRA has "unlimited" funds for lobbying, and won't have run into the kitchen and send them a big check as a result of being scared by this thread.

3. Little Amish girl - coincidentally, my first gun, which my non-hunting, non-gunning-owning dad let me buy when I was 16 was a .44 mag Ruger. Dozens of woodchucks have bitterly regretted it.

4. Bill D. et al. - The other 75% of the country "allow" us to keep on owning guns (If enough of them wanted, the constitution could be amended) because most of them, tho not believing that they personnally need a gun, do not see most of us 25% people as threats. This might also be the place to ask the statistics-citers if they could kindly post per-capita gun death statistics. I daresay the U.S. will still lead the pack, but I think some of what's posted is absolute numbers, and when there are about 400 million of us (milliards to you Brits, no?) we are likely to have very absolute impressive numbers. Also, a comparison of overall murder rates might be enlightening - 'tis no pleasure to be shot, as RK remarked, but it's not noticeably better to be hatchetted or bludgeoned or carved.

5. Advance apologies to punkfolkrocker and anyone else closely touched by gun suicide, but it's part of the discussion. A good many of us, and I, believe that a person's life is primarily his/r own, and that s/he has a right to end it if so desiring. We don't advocate suicide, we believe in trying to talk our friends out of it if possible, but in the end we think a person is not a possession of the Socialist Collective, or a Resource of the Aryan race, or a Subject of his Most Royal Majesty; s/he is a human being that has a right to dispose of him/herself. Without guns would there be fewer successful suicides? No doubt of it - guns do provide a quicker and deadlier way of killing people than a lot of other things, and there are some suicides (and murders) that would not happen without a gun available. But first, how many? And second, what right do the rest of us have to coerce determined suicides into less reliable, quite possibly painful and mutilating ways of trying to end themselves? Why do we need laws permitting physicians to "assist" suiucides (a hot topic in these our incomprehensible ex-colonies these days) rather than simply saying to them "We recognize your right to shoot yourself if you insist"?

6. Con Law lecture: When the Supreme Court rules that the 2nd amendment prohibits the Federal (National) government from "infring[ing] the right of the people to keep and bear arms" it did not "corrupt" anything. The first ten amendments were put into the constitution at the insistence of the individual states, as a condition of their adherence to the constitution, to keep the Federal government from interfering with state dispositions in various matters, and when the court rules that the Federal government therefore can't do so, they interpret it precisely as it was intended to be. Whether that idea is still a good one is another question, but nothing has been "corrupted" or distorted thereby. Next, for what it's worth, the framers did *not* say "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of such militias to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed", they said that the right of the *people* to do so might not. They may have been crude backwoods colonial upstarts if you insist, but they understood how to say what they meant. Further, look at the thing in the light of common sense - just how much help does the well-regulated militia provide when an irritated algonquian unexpectedly arrives to torch your house, or the bear is devouring the family pig? And most particularly, what happens when the sovereign, who controls the army & administration, needs to be restrained, either by fear of the power of the general population or worse-coming-to-worst by their use of it? It was very much on the minds of those constitution-makers that the government was responsible to the people and the people were to have the means to enforce that that relation. The militia *is* the armed people, which constituted itself, elected its own officers, and responded more or less as it felt inclined to its state governors. The necessity was for a "well-regulated" one as nobody, especially a bunch of well-to-do landed gentry but also the people in general, wanted miscellaneous mobs roaming around raising hell, but it was not conceived of as being merely an arm of the government. Again, maybe or not that's pertinent to today's conditions (arguments to follow that it still is), but as far as the constitution as she stands being "corrupted" when the court construes the 2'Am. as it has - balls.

7. I admit the opposition to what seem reasonable measures to curb the worst of the gun killings. But at least a significant part of this is indeed a fear of the "slippery slope", and the circumstance that most of the people in favor of "gun control" do not sound, when you study their ideas, as if they want to make & enforce only reasonable limits and restrictions, but wish to essentially disarm the people as a whole. I see very little in this thread to contradict that impression. If the "gun-controllers" stood up and said something like "I believe we must put significantly enhanced machinery in place to ensure that only sane persons of mature understanding and with basic safety-&-firearms-handling training are permitted access to firearms or ammunition, but **I firmly and adamantly support the right of such persons to own, carry & as legally permitted use them in self-defense, and in the militia**", and could still be believed when they did, they would find at least somewhat more of a willingness to compromise. I don't know anybody, even the idiotfringers, who don't support some "gun control". I don't know anybody who thinks a 5-year-old should be able to walk into a gun shop and buy a .45 and and ammo; I don't know of anybody who thinks convicted arsonists, murderers, rapists, aggravated assaulters should be allowed to possess guns; nobody thinks the evidently mentally unhinged should. So we all favor "gun control", and the debate is over what is a reasonable degree; and we "gun-people" say that a general disarming of the people is too much, and that much of the "anti-gun" legislation appears headed in that direction. Lord knows, not much of it seems to be consistent with other stated objectives.

8. Which leads on to what to me, and a good many others, is the fundamental reason for having an armed people: The need to restrain our own government. This is *not* an outdated notion, quite the contrary. The ability of the modern state, especially a high-tech one like the U.S., to become crushingly tyrannical is a hell of a lot greater than was Napoleon's, or Alexander II's, or ... you name them. Right, how could I forget George III? ;) It can't happen, people wouldn't let it, the Hitler stuff, and the Stalin stuff, Pol Pot, Rwanda, Darfur, that's all past, we're not like that anymore? Plenty of people still walking around who can tell you we haven't grown out of it. But the internet, underground publishing, modern telecommunications, it couldn't happen in any advanced country? Most countries have military & security planners who sit around working out responses to more or less far-fetched attack scenarios, and surely there are contingency plans for shutting that stuff down in a hurry if it comes to that. And those plans are to be carried out by the sort of people who are trained to carry out orders without a debate. Are these plans and capabilities aimed at their own countrymen by those who devise them? Rubbish. But if the capacity is there, the system is in place, sooner or later someone will come along who will pervert it if he believes he can make it work. So in the absolutely worst case, far-fetched but possible, the people have to be able to restrain the government & military by force. In the still remote but much more likely case, they restrain the would-be power-grabbers simply by their presence & numbers making a successful putsch look a very long shot. Do the people need howitzers and bombers, and tanks? No, they couldn't fight a conventional war against a conventional army anyway, and the government isn't going to be taking over the country by destroying it. What the people do need is to be a force of maybe 200,000,000 people who are, or at least might be, armed not too less effectively than a government soldier, facing a government military of perhaps 2 or 3 million. And those civilians will never need to fire a shot, because any administration will know that a putsch would be nothing but a huge messy disaster, and the attempt will never be made.

I realize that to most of you this sounds like the kind of paranoia people get from calling their crisps "chips" and their chips "Fries", but this stuff happens, it never has happened until it does, and it is most likely to happen to those who are not in a position to resist it. I have a copy of Conrad's novel *The Secret Agent*, with an introduction to the translation by a prominent author. He goes on (after mostly explaining various literary things about Conrad)
to tell the readers how it will be difficult for them to understand the mindset of the characters, because they (the readers) live in a country where authoritanism and czarist-style repression are so far behind them, where their degree of civilization will make the whole atmosphere of the story seem bizarrely improbable. I can't say how much difficulty those readers did experience, but I can say that within ten years of his introduction Thomas Mann had left the country where his works were being thrown on bonfires. The land of Goethe & Schiller & Rilke, of study & science & modernity, the last place anyone would have nominated for it, had been subjected to National Socialism. Would a true armed German people have prevented it? Maybe not, a lot of them embraced it, at least for a while, but by the time most of them were disenchanted with it, they *couldn't* realistically do much about it. Did the army rebel against what much of its leadership considered to be simplistic, ill-advised, ruinous policy? OK, was that because Germans are particularly prone to blind obediance to orders & constituted authority? That's what soldiers of any country are trained to do, follow their orders, and mostly they do. Anybody taking over a country is going to make it look to as many people as possible as if it's the only reasonable thing to be done under pressing circumstances, and he'll probably do it with utmost sincerity.

Ahem. Sorry about the long rant, but there's been plenty of wondering what can possibly be the matter with our Americans' minds on here, so some evening-up can't hurt you. One further pargr. and I will leave w/o addressing the entire rest of the thread.

9. Crime & self-defense: The victim is the first responder. As it is said, when seconds count the police are just minutes away. The police are a response force, not an on-the-spot deterent. A general deterent, yes, but most criminals attempt to operate when the police aren't present. What is an on-the-spot deterent is a suspicion that the victim is present, armed, & incalculably likely to resist lethally. Most people don't want to fight it out with somebody who's shooting at them, even if they suspect that person might not be too much of a marksman. (Tho that is one reason why what seem to be absurd amounts of firepower are not necessarily so. If the housebreaker/assaulter/&c. is confronted with a shaky, nervous victim who doesn't look like shooting straight, he might decide to risk one or two shots taken at him (the bad guy). If he sees 3 inches of clip sticking out of the bottom of the gun confronting him, it's going to cross his mind that *some* of those shots are going to hit him, just on random odds, and maybe it's time to call it a day. And if he doesn't, I hope some of them do.) Where I live, up in the hills, there is no cell phone service, no local cops (township of <700)and the state troopers minimum 10-15 minutes away - if we're lucky. And places do occasionally get burgled hereabouts, tho Vermont being a fairly high gun ownership place, most burglars are at considerable pains to be sure nobody's home when they set to work. Now, to actually have enough police to "protect" people, how many would you have to have? How much would it cost if you actually wanted that? The thing is impossible, even if it weren't horrible, and that would apply as well in the city as out here in the sticks. I doubt if there are a dozen houses in Vermont where you can't perfectly safely walk up to the door and knock like a civilized person, but there are quite a few where opening the door with a crowbar would be a very poor idea, and whatever statistics may claim, I can't believe that doesn't have a substantial deterent effect. An added bonus of our system vs. the Brits' is that you can credibly indulge in a little propaganda. ;) Shoot yourself a couple nice groups in paper targets, at a distance of 2 yards if necessary, or have a friend do so if you don't have a gun, and leave them lying carelessly on the porch, maybe with the widest shot circled and marked with appropriate vernacular. In merrie olde England they'll know your lying thru your teeth, but here it should give 'em pause. The idea, in re crime as in re tyranny, is to prevent the worst right from the beginning by a credible threat of resistance, but to be able to deliver on it if necessary.

One further advantage of on-the-spot crime-fighting: Say the convenience store/gas station gets held up, let's say at night. Bad guy[s] get nervous, one clerk gets shot/head-bashed with handy fire extinguisher/squashed with getaway car. After due investigation cops give the prosecutor their best suspect, other clerk is pretty sure it was him, B. S. can't clear himself, off he goes to clink for a nice long sit (specially, in all too many places still, if he's black). Eventually, after he's lost multiple years of his life behind bars, turns out it wasn't him. Very sorry Sir, but do have a nice life from now on. Now if, on the other hand, the perp is shot by the clerk right in the midst of his red-handed perpetrating, there will be no such confusion. Come on then, Honi Soit Qui Mal Y Pense, eh what? Seems fair to a lot of us.

Speaking of black men, let us close this overgrown post with a quote from Frederick Douglas, approximate, like most of the quotes I can't lay my eyes on at the moment, but guaranteed close:

"American freedom depends on three things: The ballot box, the jury box, and the cartridge box." He was right when he said it, and he's still right.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Stu
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 06:11 AM

"The need to restrain our own government."

it doesn't work. Your government spies on your every move and allows corporations to do the same. It gathers data on where you are, allows business to construct profiles of you to target advertising and who knows what else. Your phone allows them to track your physical movements. They're fucking you (and everyone else) over and all your guns can't do a thing about it. Heck, most people don't even know it's happening.

Your gun might allow you to take a pot-shot at a soldier or copper, but it's useless in the face of threats to your freedom other than violence, and even then if it's between you and a marine I know who'd I be betting on.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 08:29 AM

> American freedom depends on three things: The ballot box, the jury box, and the cartridge box.

He was talking about the Civil War. Makes a difference, I think.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Jack Campin
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 08:51 AM

Two screenfuls of pompous guff like Carl's says to me that your typical American gun nut doesn't have enough self-control to be trusted with anything more dangerous than a popgun that spits out a BANG flag.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Musket
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 08:58 AM

Bloody hell, a real NRA member, complete with cut and paste from their propaganda. This Carl specimen positively chills your bones, reading his awful bullshit.

To think, I like going to Vermont, skiing in Killington. I just thought it was the bears at the end of the season that were a danger to people. Seems some of the locals need key worker input before being let loose in public too...


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: GUEST,Sol
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 09:28 AM

"... the NRA president, Charlton Heston, gave an interview blaming the parents of the shooters, and the permissive culture that had allowed them to wear black trench coats to school"
----------------------------------------------------
Above is Mr Heston's view on the Columbine tragedy.
Says it all really.
Trench coats should be banned, not guns.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Lighter
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 09:45 AM

> blaming the parents of the shooters

Sounds more relevant to me than blaming licensed gun owners generally, even if it's nowhere near the whole story.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Greg F.
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 10:08 AM

Which leads on to what to me, and a good many others, is the fundamental reason for having an armed people: The need to restrain our own government.

Oh, Lord, not one of THOSE loonies.

RE: the boxes metaphor, which originated with Stephen Decatur Miller, South Carolina "fire-eater", Congressman and Senator in 1830- and those cartridges were to be used to protect the "freedom" of southern slave owners to own property in human beings.

RE: Douglass using this same metaphor: the speech was made at the time that large numbers of Blacks in the South were being regularly murdered for attempting to exercise theit right to vote (which is what Douglass was talking about if you don't take his quote out of context. And it wasn't the government doing the killing: it was the Ku Klux Klan.

Note to VT Yank- its not 1830 or 1867 any longer - time you realized its 2014.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Bill D
Date: 06 Sep 14 - 10:50 PM

awwwkkk!! I just discovered Carl from Vermont's post.

It would take me a week to unravel the convoluted reasoning there.

The most important point to deal with is the 2nd Amendment, its history, its meaning or lack thereof, and it relevance to today's society... along with the practicality of even trying to update it.

I am too busy this decade.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: GUEST,Stim
Date: 07 Sep 14 - 01:43 AM

As a white American male, Carl is a lot more likely to shoot himself than anything else.   He seems to be OK with that. Who am I to argue?


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Backwoodsman
Date: 07 Sep 14 - 02:25 AM

We live in hope, Stim. Him and the other crackpots like him.


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Musket
Date: 07 Sep 14 - 04:10 AM

Of course Backwoodsman, being a Derbyshire lad, I'd rather live in Hope than die in Staveley.

But this is about The USA and it wasn't really funny the first time.

But neither is the subject title. Although with his Hollywood credentials, I am at a loss why Charlton Heston became associated with an organisation for inadequate men to compensate for having small dicks?


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: Stu
Date: 07 Sep 14 - 07:34 AM

"I am at a loss why Charlton Heston became associated with an organisation for inadequate men to compensate for having small dicks?"

Because he's a shite actor?


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Subject: RE: BS: Anyone defend US gun law?
From: GUEST,Rahere
Date: 07 Sep 14 - 09:13 AM

How anyone in their right mind can consider that the American Government is constrained by their gun owning citizens beats me. But then of course, the NRA lobby don't seem to have minds, let alone hearts.


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