HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
We all know that's a joke. The very short definition of the amendment is open to several interpretations. The conservative courts choose the interpretation that aligns with their political views.
Not really, we can be very sure that the original definition, in the vernacular of the time, pretty much means, "because it's important for national security to have a well regulated roster of potential conscripts, we must let people have weapons."
And like in any X => Y situation, it kinda falls apart when either
1. X becomes false, or
2. the guys claiming to be in X aren't actually, or
3. the implicit other premises in that reasoning become false, or
4. the same can be applied to lead to an absurd Y
And I'd say that nowadays all 3 apply.
1. The US has moved from a national militia conscription model, to a professional army. Not the least because professional troops kick a militia's ass any day of the week, and twice on Sundays.
2. Sorry, part of that conscriptable definition was always being "able bodied" Some obese guy who isn't even able to run 10m before getting winded, is NOT what "militia" meant. So that alone would still disqualify about half the population.
3. As I was saying before, we're no longer operating under the assumption that people would largely be dependent on their civilian training, much less that they might bring their own weapons. We're no longer in the flippin' 14'th century where you had to have civilians training archery weekly, to have any competent archers.
3.A. The weapons which REALLY kill these days are stuff like artillery, HIMARS, planes, etc. We DON'T expect people to come pre-trained in how to operate an F-35, or a supercarrier, much less bring one from home
3.B. Knowing how to aim down iron sights is the LEAST important skill even for infantry. Stuff like coherent squad tactics, combined operations, being conditioned by training to shoot to kill before you think, or even the basic not panicking when it turns into a second person shooter (i.e., you're the one that some unkind guys are shooting several medium machineguns at), are not even things that 99% of civilian ranges won't teach you, and most of the rest won't teach correctly.
4. It would be absurd to actually expect that any gun policy would mean some hillbilly would come pre-trained on how to do any job on an aircraft carrier, except maybe cook or medic/nurse
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