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Previous comments... You are currently on page 4.
Criminals with always have access to weapons including firearms. Police aren't usually present when violent crime occurs. The usually come after the crime has been committed.
I reserve my rational right to self protection. I choose to have a gun. Who has the right to deny me this?
If so, there is no excuse needed but there are reasons. I'm sure I speak for many when I say I have no desire to have to use it for protection but I will without hesitation.
I've only had one occasion to use one in the United States but I'm glad I had it and yes, I would use it without hesitation. I'm 72 and no one gets the chance to assault me which is what the issue was without endangering themselves..
Both Federalists and Antifederalists believed that the main danger to the republic was tyrannical government and the ultimate check on tyrannical government was an armed population. Both sides not only agreed that the people had a right to be armed, both sides assumed the existence of an armed population as an essential element to preserving liberty.
Valparaiso University Law Professor David E. Vandercoy, puts it this way in his piece on the history of the second amendment, "English history made two things clear to the American revolutionaries: force of arms was the only effective check on government, and standing armies threatened liberty. Recognition of these premises meant that the force of arms necessary to check government had to be placed in the hands of citizens. Because the public purpose of the right to keep arms was to check government, the right necessarily belonged to the individual and, as a matter of theory, was thought to be absolute in that it could not be abrogated by the prevailing rulers...
"...These views were adopted by the framers, both Federalists and Antifederalists. Neither group trusted government. Both believed the greatest danger to the new republic was tyrannical government and that the ultimate check on tyranny was an armed population...The check on all government, not simply the federal government, was the armed population, the militia. Government would not be accorded the power to create a select militia since such a body would become the government's instrument. The whole of the population would comprise the militia. As the constitutional debates prove, the framers recognized that the common public purpose of preserving freedom would be served by protecting each individual's right to arms, thus empowering the people to resist tyranny and preserve the republic. The intent was not to create a right for other governments, the individual states; it was to preserve the people's right to a free state, just as it says."
Clearly, this had nothing to do with muskets or guns of one size or another, and everything to do with citizens' ability to fend off tyranny.
This is why so-called "progressives" favor disarming the citizenry; so that they can't fight back against the progressive dissolution of individual liberty.
Wow, sounds a lot like 2015...
This argument will never be resolved. Each and every generation will have to take it up in turn as they have since the invention of the gun or any other martial device or training.
"Most people can’t think, most of the remainder won’t think, the small fraction who do think mostly can’t do it very well. The extremely tiny fraction who think regularly, accurately, creatively, and without self -delusion— in the long run, these are the only people who count." —Robert A. Heinlein
appreciate the eloquence with which people have
expressed them. But the proper answer to the
government (not that it would accept it) is,"It is my
right, and it's none of your **** business."
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