triforcharity
Banned
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- Jun 23, 2009
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Surrender to whom?
You know, the indian populace managed to throw off the yolk of a tyrant without any weapons at all.
Really? Something tells me that might be wrong.....
Surrender to whom?
You know, the indian populace managed to throw off the yolk of a tyrant without any weapons at all.
So, a private person can own a Nuclear weapon.
Norm
No. What I am suggesting is that had they understood the possible future ramifications of Automatic Weapons and mass shootings, they may have put some limitations on the right to bear arms.
The second Amendment was conceived in times when what can be done today was simply incomprehensible.
But Governments all over the place do make laws relating to all these things. As new things come along, new laws are made.
I think that if I yell fire! in a dark theatre and cause a panic, that this does not come under "free speech" laws. Similarly there are slander and libel laws everywhere, even in the USA. Are you saying that Magazines, radio and TV is not regulated at all?
Or the internet? I suspect that Internet Kiddie Porn is illegal pretty much anywhere, and certainly your founding fathers never considered that.
My question is, does the second amendment or subsequent SCOTUS decisions specifically preclude anyone from owning a Nuclear Weapon?
.Yes, I do understand the limitations. How well they are policed is another issue
And, no I am not an anti gun nut. My brother has a shotgun on his small farm to (illegally) shoot Tiger Snakes because he has young grandchildren who often visit and play in the paddocks. Tigers are protected from humans. Unfortunately the reverse does not apply.
Norm
I think you've got me mixed up with the OP. Someone asked repeatedly did the SA allow you to own a nuclear weapon? No one would directly answer it thus [see highlighted part above].
I do find it fascinating that a country so keen on spreading democracy seems to be populated by so many people who seem have no faith in it within their own borders....
You are seriously arguing that if a burglar/home invader bursts/sneaks into your home planning to shoot, stab or cosh you that the police or a spare army unit will be popping in to save you? I know that does not happen in the US and I am pretty sure it doesn't happen in Australia, England, Canada, etc.
I do not like situations where I am denied the right to (fairly likely) superiority of weapon over an invader (why I have learned how to make and use things that do not look like weapons but are very nice ones for places I can't carry the best stuff) and the right to keep and use same and, thus, the right to life. And, I would rather the intruder(s) not survive while I do instead of being captured, maybe tried, not even executed, just jailed a few years if they kill me. I want whoever manages to kill me to die in as terrible a way as possible - worse if they harm a child, my wife, any of my friends.........
So you have a problem with someone who actually look into the issue? Really, you feel that for the sake of class someone should remain ignorant of how they can defend themselves?
sounds like you just think guns are icky and are trying to justify that position.
1. "Right" in scare quotes is dishonest. The Second Amendment is part of our Constitution, and part of the bill of Rights.Personally, I'm of the opinion that there shouldn't be a right to bear arms.
Why is arming oneself with a potentially deadly weapon considered something that all Americans have a right to do? I don't see it as anything like the right to freedom of speech or assembly, or religion, or anything outlined in the UN Declaration of Human Rights. Why in America - as far as I know alone in the developed world - is gun ownership considered a right?
Well THAT's what makes it anachronistic. Citizens today have no hope of overthrowing a modern state with small arms.
It sounds like we're heading towards, "It IS legal for someone in the U.S. to sell a nuclear weapon and also legal for someone to buy one."
Yike!![]()
I don't - though I am certain a good number of them (Southern old guys) have a hunting background On the other hand, I am a 66 year old B.S., MLS, white Democratic male born North (West Virginia and moved to middle Tennessee - also mostly North) but now Southern by location. As to their level of risk - most of us in the US are now aware that crazies not properly attended to have killed others (sometimes in remote places, sometimes in small towns, sometimes in big cities, sometimes in malls or movie theaters or school campuses or churches, etc. The risk of any of those and other places is small as a nationwide statistics set but it is not zero. My philosophy (like most of mine such as pro-abortions, anti -censorship, anti-racist, pro-Democrats...) was developed early on and it definitely included being prepared to halt/exterminate attackers- that last solidified when my brother pointed the loaded .22 at me and I realized I was not in fear of guns pointed at me as well as my precise attitude toward their holder. That was when I told my brother he had two options - shoot and make sure he killed me or put down the gun - I also told him, though I can't repeat it here (Rule 10 iirc) what would happen if he did not manage to kill me. I was 12 or early 13 at the time.It is very specifically the police's job in Scotland to save you, the Police Scotland's prime aim posted on all police vehicles is "Keeping people safe"
Then there is a legislative requirement, the Police Scotland Act 1967, Section 17 states " the duties of a constable as being to "to guard, patrol and watch so as - (i) to prevent the commission of offences, (ii) to preserve order, and (iii) to protect life and property."
So a call to a home invasion is a top priority, immediate attendance and the police know it is their job to catch the criminal and protect the victims.
I am sure the above also applies to the rest of the UK. From my experience in the US the police will turn up and confront and arrest violent people and protect victims.
The problem is that in the US the decision is too often based on emotion and not actual need, so you get lots of people armed for self defence who are jittery or have a tough guy attitude or have guns available when not needed that get stolen or misused. Furthermore, how do you explain why older, white, Republican males with limited education and who live in the South are the most likely group to have a gun?
http://www.statisticbrain.com/gun-ownership-statistics-demographics/
Are they at a particular level of risk? This is a sceptics forum, but many gun owners ditch scepticism and go to emotion when it comes to their supposed need for a gun.
It was my understanding that in the 17th and 18th centuries it was common for gentlemen to wear swords.
Presumably you mean elected politicians? I think we all get the fact that back in the 18th century, the British subjects decided they didn't have any faith in their government (i.e. the British one), but what seems weird is replacing it with a local one that their descendants don't seem to have much faith in, either. Most people in western democracies have a cynical view of politicians, since power and privilege can corrupt (can - it's silly to say it always does like its an immutable law), but the idea that a people having their own small arms is what stops becoming the Fourth Reich overnight seems to be over-egging it.It's not so much the concept of democracy that people don't have faith in, it's the people who make those decisions that we have no faith in. Feinstein for instance. Anyway, it's not the concept, but the people in authority to further that concept.
There was no shortage of small arms in Yugoslavia due to the pre-existence of organised local militia-type units. What was unbalanced was that the Serbians had control of most of the heavy weaponry at the start.Yeah, but then again, some people in modern states such as Syria or the former Yugoslavia or Rwanda could probably have done with some guns, eh?
I don't - though I am certain a good number of them (Southern old guys) have a hunting background On the other hand, I am a 66 year old B.S., MLS, white Democratic male born North (West Virginia and moved to middle Tennessee - also mostly North) but now Southern by location. As to their level of risk - most of us in the US are now aware that crazies not properly attended to have killed others (sometimes in remote places, sometimes in small towns, sometimes in big cities, sometimes in malls or movie theaters or school campuses or churches, etc. The risk of any of those and other places is small as a nationwide statistics set but it is not zero. My philosophy (like most of mine such as pro-abortions, anti -censorship, anti-racist, pro-Democrats...) was developed early on and it definitely included being prepared to halt/exterminate attackers- that last solidified when my brother pointed the loaded .22 at me and I realized I was not in fear of guns pointed at me as well as my precise attitude toward their holder. That was when I told my brother he had two options - shoot and make sure he killed me or put down the gun - I also told him, though I can't repeat it here (Rule 10 iirc) what would happen if he did not manage to kill me. I was 12 or early 13 at the time.
As a side note, most US police departmenst do not by law have a requirement to protect you or your belongings. I do have that as a personal requirement. I do not sit up worrying about any such happening, just prepared if it does (which is why I do not need to worry about it).![]()
That last part is weird to me. I believe it came about to stop the police from being sued for not getting there in time. But it is the fundamental role of the police, to protect life and property and I am sure US police officers still see their job as just that.

I'm not really part of the 'anti weapon crowd', whatever that is. I have a deep fascination with the apparent US love affair with firearms, however, with the above, you hvae missed my point entirely because: Wrong Indians.
That's exactly what happened. It's called 'peaceful non-co-operation' and it freed a nation.
Any idea how many people make a rational decision to arm themself fro self defence and those who use emotional reasons?
Is the likelihood of being a victim in any way linked to the likelihood of having a gun?
I think from the demographics of who has the guns, there far too many people who make emotional decisions to arm themself and there is little to no link between need and having a gun.
It is considered a right because it was listed as a right in the country's founding documents. Second amendment and all that.