EeneyMinnieMoe said:
I'm sorry, Moby and Moochie, but I'm with Senex on this one. I'm for tighter gun control but not at the expense of my Constitution.
And for your information, our Constitution is brilliant both because of the principles it upholds and the provisions for the future.
That's why it's lasted for three centuries and all of yours...have not
Eeney...you're kidding, right? "...at the expense of [your] Constitution..."???
Why do you think that there are provisions IN the Constitution to CHANGE the Constitution? They aren't just there to look pretty - they're there because the people who drafted the Constitution knew that this wouldn't always be the same, that at some point in the future it may be necessary to change the Constitution.
I'm not saying, 'Gee, the US Constitution is a load of bollocks,' I'm pointing out that this "constitutional fanaticism" re not changing the Constitution completely goes against the Constitution itself!
Oh, and by the way - regarding your jab at the end: Both Moochie and I are Melbournites: Australian. Claiming superiority because your Constitution has lasted "three centuries" is both presumptuous and wrong.
Just because Australia has not been around for three centuries does not mean that we will have to adopt a new constitution before those three centuries are up. Things are going fine here, thank you very much.
And just so you know, the US Constitution has not been around for anywhere
near three centuries. At the moment it's been in existance close to 220 years - lets get our facts right about the country you know and love, shall we?
Also, the idea of an unchanging Constitution is ridiculous when you realise that the part of the Consitution granting the 'right to bear arms' is itself
an amendment to the US Constitution! So far there have been twenty-seven amendments to the US Constitution (from 1791 to 1992), and the right to bear arms is the second of those amendments.
In other words - if the Constitution was never meant to be changed, you wouldn't have the right to bear arms to begin with!
I don't buy this as a record. I'm certain many sadistic individual soldiers mowed down hundreds of Chinese civilians in the late 1930's or early 1940's in a day (far beating your record) and many German soldiers shot down even more Jewish people during this same time period with one gun in an hour (again, surpassing your numbers). Children with guns in Africa often have at least challenged the numbers you point to. The day after those 30+ students died in Virginia 130+ people in Iraq died in car bombs. It seems to me you pick and choose the strangers you wish to mourn. Your massacre doesn't make this any clearer to me.
Read what I said. One person, with guns. Not car bombs or similar. Drawing a comparison to child soldiers or the military is ridiculous: The people you speak of were not 'one person' alone, but were working as part of a group.
Don't try to take the 'moral high ground' by telling me that I am picking and choosing who I shall mourn. War is a horrible thing, and atrocities are committed, don't think I don't know this.
If you can find a report of ONE PERSON, ACTING ALONE who has killed more people WITH GUNS in ONE SHOOTING than the Port Arthur Massacre, I will withdraw my statement that it remains the biggest one man gun massacre in history. If all you have, however, is an uncorroborated "I'm certain..." then I would suggest that maybe you haven't done your research.
If you knew about the American constitution you would realize that it was so statistically improbable a document that could have been written at that time period that if you deprive it of 'divine' status then you make 'divine' a word that has no meaning.
Wiktionary said:
divine (comparative more divine, superlative most divine)
- of or pertaining to a god
- eternal, holy, or otherwise supernatural.
- of superhuman or surpassing excellence
- beautiful, heavenly
I would humbly suggest your understanding of the word 'divine' is a little bit off.
The Constitution is a
legal document. It is an IMPORTANT legal document, to be sure, but it is none-the-less a legal document, in which provisions were made for the alteration of the document, should the need arise!
Calling the American Constitution antique shows me that I need not argue with you any more. Even your life is better because of this antique document my friend. The improbability of the brilliant people who founded this country being together in power at the same time makes me proud to be a citizen of the US.
I meant antique in the sense of it being 'old'...if you took it any other way, I apologise. If you're trying to say that it is not old...well, then I don't know what to say.
Being an Australian citizen I'd say that the American Constitution has very little of a day-to-day effect on my life.
If you are not in favour of gun control, that is your opinion. But I would suggest that you find a better justification for your opinion than just, "You can't mess with the Constitution."
To summarise again why this is:
- The Constitution contains within it the provisions for amending the Constitution;
- The 'right to bear arms' is itself an amendment to the Constitution (i.e. If you the Constitution was never meant to be changed then you wouldn't have the 'right to bear arms' in the first place); and,
- The second amendment was drafted at a time when it would have been quite sensible for the citizens to have firearms, 'just in case' anything should happen. With a professional military force, this is no longer a necessary or sensible idea.
Peace Out
Mobyseven