Pfft the 4th Amendment is dead and buried. It'd be a thread derail but I'll give you plenty of examples if you like.
Start another thread if you like. It's not appropriate here...
Pfft the 4th Amendment is dead and buried. It'd be a thread derail but I'll give you plenty of examples if you like.
Of course it's a waste of time. Your goal is to find out what people think about guns, right? You could accomplish that by talking to them about guns.
The other option is to just wait it out. No searching, just whats found is confiscated. As the older generation dies out, at least some of their kids would turn in banned firearms. Maybe in a century or so most would be gone.
Not banned.
Just requires it be bought from a Class 3 dealer. And, in practice the ones on the market are outrageously expensive.
As an aside, right up the road from me is McCaysville Gun & Drug, a Class 3 dealer.
...the problem seems to be that any attempt to solve it in any timescale whatsoever is simply shouted down by a declaration of the inerrancy and ubiquity of the Second Amendment.
If it was made on or before a certain date in 1986. So, any full auto firearm model that didn't exist until after, is in effect, banned.
Enforce the law. If you can ban certain drugs, you can ban certain firearms.
Enforce the law. If you can ban certain drugs, you can ban certain firearms.
I don't think there is an amendment for 'the right to bare drugs'.
The Founding Fathers almost certainly could not envision what “arms” might become in a couple hundred years.
But they did envision that times change, and that the Constitution might need amending, and then further amending to keep up with changing times. And they provided a simple way to do so.
But simple does not imply easy - it was made intentionally hard. But if it becomes the will of the people to repeal the Second Amendment, there’s a clear path to doing so. For those who want to ban or seriously restrict whole classes of firearms, that’s where their attention and efforts should focus.
Of course it's a waste of time. Your goal is to find out what people think about guns, right? You could accomplish that by talking to them about guns.
Instead you've decided to embark on a much longer, irrelevant journey: Establish that cars are similar to guns in certain specific ways. Establish that the person you're talking to sees the similarity you do. Establish that the person reaches same conclusions as you, about cars. Establish that the person agrees that the conclusion about cars properly carries over to the similar thing about guns.
I don't want to help you unpack and map out all the points of your analogy, just to have a conversation about guns.
If you want to talk about gun policy, talk about gum policy. If you want to know what someone thinks about gun policy, don't ask them what they think about speed limits.
With your analogy, the best case scenario is that you are ready to show the analogy between speed limits and whatever aspect of gun policy you *really* want to talk about. In which case, you could cut out the analogy entirely, and just talk about gun policy itself.
Enforce how?
As far as I can work out, the enforcement of firearm legislation immediately falls foul of the second amendment.
What would you say to anyone who, while you were exercising your right to free speech, asked you to prove you were entitled to that right?
Isn't it the same with carrying a firearm?
True, but I think the line has been drawn in the sand or dirt. I don't think any further bans would go across very well at all.
I find it hilarious that these discussions *always* degenerate into naive discovery of first principles.Thing is it says "arms", not "guns" or "firearms". Nor does it say: "right to keep and bear all types of arms". That's intentionally (I assume) very open. We ban civilian ownership of all kinds of arms in the US. Want to import some ex-soviet figher jets complete with missiles and bombs? Good luck with that, even for a billionaire. Want to keep a warehouse full of mustard gas? Good luck with that too.
Debating any topic is not helped by excessive hyperbole. Hunters don't use semi-auto firearms to "tear prey in two".
I find it hilarious that these discussions *always* degenerate into naive discovery of first principles.
The Supreme Court has considered the conundrum extensively. Their reasoning about where to draw the line, and why, is public record.
Likewise the reasoning, by the courts and others, about balancing human rights and human regulation, is also well developed and widely accessible.
But gun control proponents here always seem to start from a position of total ignorance of these things *and never advance*. They never study the court decisions that have already discussed the problem. They never show any sign of having reasoned out their own conclusions.
Every new thread, it's the same "I've never really thought about it, what does it mean?"
To be entirely fair, there are a lot of posters, and the wording of the 2nd doesn't really help.
Yes Full auto made after '86. Also anything greater than 50 cal with a rifled barrel (which makes 12 ga shotguns with rifled barrels a weird exception). Rifles with barrel lengths under a certain length, and certain other exceptions.
I find it hilarious that these discussions *always* degenerate into naive discovery of first principles.
The Supreme Court has considered the conundrum extensively. Their reasoning about where to draw the line, and why, is public record.
Likewise the reasoning, by the courts and others, about balancing human rights and human regulation, is also well developed and widely accessible.
But gun control proponents here always seem to start from a position of total ignorance of these things *and never advance*. They never study the court decisions that have already discussed the problem. They never show any sign of having reasoned out their own conclusions.
Every new thread, it's the same "I've never really thought about it, what does it mean?"