Hi
This really goes a bit outside what I wanted to discuss, since my only point is that the guns will not be needed, and that the revolutionary justification for having them is invalid - not that you should need such a justification.
But since you mention it, I actually do feel that you need to justify owning a gun. Someone owning a gun means an extra gun around, and yes, it actually does damage other people in the long run. Accidents happen, regardless of the frequency of them, but what's worse, there's a risk that the gun will be stolen or otherwise get into the wrong hands. You might think it's safe, and that you handle it responsibly, and for all I know you may well be perfectly right. But the risk is still there, and what if something happens to you? Then there will be a gun around which you were responsible for bringing into society, but are no longer capable of caring for.
So - if someone comes into your house with a knife and starts cutting people up and trashing the place, do you call the police?
It's a weapon. It's designed for violence. Violence may be used for good, but that's an exception - it defaults to bad. You have increased the capabilities of humanity as a whole to kill and maim. Yes, you need to justify it.
...and target shooting, and cowboy action shooting, and bowling pin shooting, and hunting, and controlling populations of deer trapped inside fenced in state parks and military reservations that will all starve to death without the control, and controlling farm pests and predators, and killing large predator animals that have become man-killers, and defending the citizenry against the predations of the lawless... oh, and a lot more.
If all you look at are the crime reports, you get a bad picture of gun use. In a country with about 75 million law-abiding, conscientious gun owners, the evil is a small number.
A single individual in the entire population is more likely to die of unintentional poisoning (about 7.97 in 100,000) than he is to an unintentional firearm discharge (somewhere between 0.25 and 1.05 in 100,000).
(Have I mentioned the US
Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration's chart of
Comparison of Risk, Accidental Deaths - United States - 1999-2003 recently?)
As for criminal activity, I'd have to ask you that, if you think that everyone with a gun is a criminal, why something like 75 million of them persist in stubbornly obeying the law and behaving sensibly and diligently?
In every freedom, there is risk. To eliminate risk, you have to eliminate the associated freedom to take the risk. Once you decide that safety is worth more than a freedom,
where do you decide to stop? If you decide to curtail a freedom by law to prevent risk, why do you believe that the lawless (1% of the US population is in PRISON! Another maybe 5, maybe 7% are waiting for them to get OUT!) will
obey that curtailment?
Civil disobedience is not all about lying down in front of tanks. If enough of the German people had opposed their government peacefully, by refusing to work for them (I refer to the people in general here, not the concentration camp prisoners), refusing to go to war for them, refusing to listen to them, and many, many other things which can be done peacefully, the government could try ignoring them and then lose WWII before it had earned its name.
The German people were into it, for the most part. The Geheime Staatspolizei had regular reports from the Blockleitern (block leaders) about the rest.
The Nazi Program was making them respected as a nation, prosperous as a people, and the foundation of the new world. It would have been very hard to convince even a moderate number of them to passively resist, especially because as soon as someone rolled over on you, you'd be in a camp with the Gypsies, the Jews and the Quakers who 1) went with the Jews to protest the injustice, and 2) preached pacifism, and the Jehovah's Wittinesses who were nonpolitical and pacifist.
As long as you tell the last unarmed Jew in the Warsaw Ghetto that he should have gotten a gun in time. They were victims of the circumstances and of the failure of other people to stand up to evil. Lack of guns was not the problem.
Lol - lack of guns when facing an implacable and relentless foe is always a problem.
The REAL trick to not having enough guns is to get hold of the enemy while they're still... mmm... placable... and... relentey. (are those even a word?) If you get them while they're still tender and juicy and draw the line, they may get used to staying on their side.
It is true that they were too late in arming and didn't have enough backing, but if you're choices are to go down swinging or to go down
anyhow....
Never. Although I admit it may sometimes be the best idea.
I feel that violence, and especially gun violence, is never a good, better, nor best idea. Any time it's guns-out, it's time for some poor mother to lose her baby.
I have go with the old Shaolin on this: Speak before fleeing, flee before striking, strike before harming, harm before damaging, and damage before killing. To me, it's all about balanced response.
...and you'll notice that it says, "when it becomes
necessary to dissolve some bands," not when it's convenient or when it's comparatively advantageous.
See: I'm a
pacifist... of sorts. Yeah: I know how to kill people, and I can get the job done, but it's my firm intention never to do it.
However, if it's go down swinging to protect whoever I can or go down anyhow....
If I had the impression that you would use your guns to kill people as anything but a last resort, I don't think we would even be having this debate.

You've come across as a peaceful enough person. It's not that.
I didn't mean that you should force people to vote, it's a choice and a freedom I support as well. Only that anyone worried about the democracy collapsing enough to keep weapons in case it would, should be concerned about things like these and try to do something about them. If anyone counts on the gun owners to be able to restore a proper government by firepower in case of collapse, surely the same amount of people should be able to keep it from collapsing?
Of all the people I know, the two groups that vote most regularly are the Democrats and the gun owners. They are both deeply concerned about maintaining the government, guiding the nation, and exercising and preserving The Franchise.
...and the gun owners are concerned about the Democrats.
...and, well - it's not about a collapse, per se. The things that threaten the existence of a free state are attack from without, attack from within, lawlessness, and governmental abuse. (NOT an exhaustive list.)
Against all of these named, the People as a whole, the Posse Comitatus is, bottom line, the best defense.
We don't keep guns in preparation. We keep guns in case.
(...and because we believe it is our right as Americans, and the best way to maintain a right in good health is to take it out often and exercise it vigorously.)
I'll not get into what I think about the way the US is governed - it has strengths and weaknesses, like any other system of government.
What was it Churchill said? "Democracy is the worst form of government except for all the others that have been tried."
We have similar laws where I live which can not be changed by simple majority and regular political process, for the same reasons. Nothing wrong with that. But I'm not talking about changing laws, I'm talking about what's right.
Being in the right is one of the most wonderful things in the world.
Being
alive and in the right is better.
Again, with the guy and the knife and the cutting and the trashing and the Oh! BLOOD!! and the
gleben... police?
I understand what you mean, and I'm also concerned about people who choose to limit their freedom beyond what I consider reasonable. It's a troublesome matter, I agree. But in terms of limitations from the government, total and complete freedom exists only in anarchy. All else is a matter of opinion. A man who can have a gun is more free than one who can not. A man who can shoot an innocent person with his gun is more free than one who can not. It's all about finding a balance, which is a subjective matter, really.
The problem arises when trying to convince persons, especially legislative persons, who are absolutely and unshakably positive that they are capital-R 'Right' that the limitations of freedom they seek to impose are unreasonable.
At that point, you kind of need a legal and binding codification of minimum rights; Keep the populace informed and communicating, allow the populace to make up their own minds, a way to remain secure in your person and effects, a means for the populace to seek redress...
...and some means to defend all those other rights.
(...and anarchy isn't freedom. It's rule by superior firepower and whim.)
The thing to always keep in mind is that freedom doesn't mean license: All freedom bears commensurate responsibility. If you either can't, won't, or fail to address that responsibility, you have the freedom taken away.
On the other hand, if you bear the responsibility in a dutiful and legal manner, then there's no reason to preemptively curtail the freedom.
...and there's only one way to find that out. Look at the person's past performance, and if the proper level of conscientiousness has been demonstrated, let 'em give it a try.
Some will fail. Some will excel. Most will schlub along, stumbling, but safely enough to be allowed to keep going.
Yes, but I'm not disputing that they could be used, only if they should be - or rather, if that's a good use to justify owning them with.
The fact that it's a right (if, in fact it IS a right - I already have three pounds of butter and a five-gallon bucket of maple syrup in the 'fridge in expectation of having SCOTUS deliver one huge, crispy, steaming
WAFFLE) is justification enough.
The best way to keep a right healthy is to take out frequently and exercise it, right?
If it's not a right, I'll have to review my position on firearms ownership... and a lot of other things.
I disagree. Guns are weapons. They can destroy and destroy only. If that destruction is for a greater good is another matter. They are tools of destruction and - unless you use them for sticks to support flowers - nothing more.
See: Comes, right away, the Vishnu paradigm.
Vishnu is thee different guys. Brahman, the creator, Krishna, the preserver, and Shiva, the destroyer.
Krishna preserves what is, you see, until it's time for a change and re-creation, which is Brahman's job. Only problem is, Brahman can't re-create because what already is... is... well... still hanging about... you know...
BEING and stuff.
So Shiva has to open his eyes and sweep away the old before the new can come into existence.
The thing here, Advaita Vedanta quite aside, is that guns built this country, right or wrong, first by sweeping aside the old government (it wasn't that easy, but that's the case), then empowering the nascent country to form a government and lay down a foundation of rule by law, and then to act to preserve that same foundation and the edifice that same government has built atop it.
Guns are a tool. Their primary purpose is to do what you need that type of tool to do, when you need it to do it.
...and the thing is: The Revolution is
NOT OVER!
Just the first, weird, shootey bit is. The edifice-building is still going on.
Mentioning the strength made me remember something I've been meaning to ask: Where do you draw the line? Should people be allowed any kind of weapons? Surely a revolution could use something more than just handguns and rifles.
My line is when a single, stupid, block-headed mistake runs a good chance of damaging your neighbor's house. I say this as someone who has made three major and several minor gun-oriented stupid, block-headed mistakes in my time.
When you own a gun, there are a number of overlapping rules you drill and drill and drill into yourself:
- ALWAYS keep the gun unloaded until ready for use.
- ALWAYS assume the gun is loaded, anyhow
- NEVER point it at ANYTHING you aren't willing to destroy.
- ALWAYS keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot.
- ALWAYS confirm your target and know what is beyond it.
The thing is, if you screw up ONE, maybe TWO, the rest still cover you and prevent damage.
If you have THE major stupid, block-headedness firearm event, an unintentional or accidental discharge, its being pointed in a safe direction saves you from damage. If you point it at your shooting buddy or your leg, not having your finger on the trigger saves you from damage. (If it's your buddy, it probably won't keep you from getting thrown out of the shooting range, though. If it's your own leg, the entire shooting range full of people will holler, "
MUZZLE CONTROL!") If you bobble it and wind up pulling the trigger, keeping it unloaded keeps you from damage.
With high explosive devices, a single, stupid, bone-headed mistake is all you get because you have no overlapping rules that will prevent damage in any meaningful way.
I figure, if I want to keep something that can let me shoot myself in the leg or blow off a finger, it's my job to make sure it doesn't. If I want to have something that is able, from from my house, to blow out the windows in your house, the government and I should talk.
A conflict is nicer with weapons? How?
It's not the conflict that's nicer. It's the availability that's nicer, so's not to be the only unarmed person at the a gun fight.
Again, if you have either to go down fighting to defend yourself and your friends, or go down anyhow....
I didn't really mean to question that, but it's nice to know that you would accept change if it came about.
I'm still sworn to defend the Constitution, you know.

Have I mentioned that?
Since you say many gun owners feel a duty to the government, which side do you think they'll be at in a revolution?
The one they think is right. There's lots of different kinds or revolutions out there.
During the Revolutionary War, the Brits had the Cowboys, the Revolutionaries had the Minutemen, and the Skinners ran around doing whatever they damn well wanted. Three groups of American gun-owners, and no real consensus.
Danged if that freedom stuff ain't sticky and inconvenient.
Governments should fear their people all right. I'll be the last to question that. I believe we can be feared without guns.
ETA: After rereading this overly long post, I noticed some unconscious V for Vendetta references slipped in. Damn am I hopeless when it comes to that.
I don't want anyone to fear anyone, but respect is born of knowing the other person's stand and the esteem we hold for him and that stand.
My stand, among others, is that I am ready and prepared to hold my Constitution, my Country, my neighbors, and my friends; Posse Comitatus by any legal means at my disposal, against anyone who would violently or unlawfully act against any of them. As such, I try to keep handy my forensics, my citizenship, my vote, and my firearms.
It's said there are no rules in a gunfight.
Nonsense.
Rule #1:
HAVE A GUN.
....
<<pant, pant>>
LONG post....