Ed said:Yes, but what of Europe today?
How is that relevant to his question?
Ed said:Yes, but what of Europe today?
Luke T. said:(edited to add an example given: Wearing a weapon in your belt under your shirt at the beach and the wind blows your shirt up and exposes your gun to little children and a visiting Dane in the area, scaring the bejeesus out of them.)
Reading your own links, the term "brandishing" is used distinctly separate from "pointing" and "holding". So it comes down to "in such manner as to reasonably induce fear in the mind of another" which reminds me of sexual harrassment cases. Some sexual harrassment takes place in the mind. What offends one person may not offend another. Thus, the 50/50 rule.
shanek said:Look at the posts directly leading up to that. The post of Claus's that inspired the comment was:
shanek said:
See, THIS is Claus's mentality. I have attended many, many public functions where people in attendance were wearing firearms. And that's just the ones who were carrying openly; I of course have no idea about how many places I've been where people have been carrying concealed firearms.
Fact #1: People carry firearms. Fact #2: Fact #1 is a good thing.
shanek said:Claus, you have once again accused me of a crime. Brandishing a weapon is illegal. Cease and desist.
Brandishing:
to exhibit in an ostentatious or aggressive manner.
Webster
shanek said:All of the public functions I mentioned above were peaceful.
Ed said:Oddly, I watch O'Rielly briefly this evening and he had Newt as a guest. Newt (speaking about another topic) pointed out that an essential difference between the US and Europe is that we get our rights by what he termed "Covenent" that is to say natural rights or rights from on high or from God, point being that they exist and are not subject to a "granting". Europe has what he calls "Contract" rights which sound a bit like a quid pro quo between the governed and the government.
Shanek, have any thoughts on this? It explains a lot. Is this a vestage of Feudalism wherein rights and obligations were contractually driven but where the individual had no rights except those that were granted by a structure that provided some benefits for the relinquished power?
shanek said:Well, you have to remember that at the time of the revolution we were operating under the "divine right of kings." The King got his power from God Almighty and doled it out as he saw fit. King John granted some of those rights to others with Magna Carta, for example. But it was still very much in the structure of the British government that the King got his rights from God, and so all of our rights came from him.
The Declaration of Independence eliminated the middleman. It was a bold move, suggesting we got our rights from God or from nature and not from any human authority. The language of the Constitution is written under this idea: that all of our rights already exist and the Constitution is just stopping the government from infringing on them. So it doesn't say, "freedom of speech is hereby granted," it says, "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech." It doesn't enable the people; it restricts the government.
CFLarsen said:That's part of the explanation. There are many other factors, e.g. the right to strike, something that was fought for.
It's an ongoing process, based on the realization that what worked then does not necessarily work today.
How is that relevant to his question?
Ed said:I see where you are going but it is a non-starter. We too can change things as conditions warrent. The issues that I am interested in the the "granting" of rights? Are rights in Europe enumerated?
CFLarsen said:Why would you need a gun at a skeptics' meeting at all?
CFLarsen said:We cannot disregard the intent: Shanek considers bringing a gun to TAM with the expressed intent of intimidating me.
CFLarsen said:It shows that you are deliberately trying to intimidate me. You are most definitely not helping yourself here.
CFLarsen said:Why would you need a gun at a skeptics' meeting at all?
How are you going to piss me off if you are not going to exhibit the gun?
Bringing a gun to a skeptics' meeting solely with the purpose of intimidation is hardly "peaceful".
CFLarsen said:Dancing around the issue. I would still like to know what "Creator" meant to the Founding Fathers, if not "God".
Luke T. said:No, he said he would do it to piss you off. It's not like he said he had something to tell you that would scare the crap out of you, and that he was going to follow you everywhere you went.
CFLarsen said:Pissing me off with a gun is intimidating me. The intent is clear.
It will be impossible for us not to meet at TAM3.
CFLarsen said:We cannot disregard the intent: Shanek considers bringing a gun to TAM with the expressed intent of intimidating me.
shanek said:Claus, the thing about having rights is, you don't have to explain your motivation for taking advantage of them to anybody. Again, it's NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS. It's the Stardust's business. You could argue it's the JREF's business, too. BUT NOT YOURS. Get over yourself and your bloated ego.
shanek said:Just by wearing it, as YOU said you would demand a search of me for fear of me doing.
shanek said:Claus, you have LOST. You have NO SUPPORT here among the others. My only real consolation here is that more people are seeing you for what you really are.
CFLarsen said:Why would you need a gun at a skeptics' meeting at all?
How are you going to piss me off if you are not going to exhibit the gun?
Bringing a gun to a skeptics' meeting solely with the purpose of intimidation is hardly "peaceful".