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Edited on Wed Dec-03-03 11:21 AM by Brotherjohn
No, this is maintaining the right of self defense.
The right to self-defense is inborn. The right to own a gun (or other arms) is not. You cannot say a right to own a particular object is innate. You are born with your thoughts, your being, your person. They are part and parcel to who you are, and that is what the First and Fourth amendment protect. If the right to bear arms is inborn, then so is the right to bear cars, or balloons, or chocolate cake.
No, "arms" is not a specific term.
Yes, it is. Arms are not cars, or balloons, or chocolate cake, or anything else. They are arms... weapons. They are a specific type of object. Sure, one could get even more specific, but I suppose if it said "guns" and I said that this was specific, you'd say it was not because it didn't say "Walther PPK"?
(my text)"well regulated Militia" was "necessary to the security of a free State" (a part always curiously left out by gun advocates).
(your text)They knew (as many of us know today) that a gun is merely a tool, and it totally dependent upon the character of the person wielding it.
In trying to justify why they put the "well-regulated militia" phrase in the amendment, it sounds to me like you are making an argument for gun control! In fact, the amendment as written clearly states (in plain English) that the reason for the amendment is that a well-regulated militia is necessary. NOT the right to self-defense and NOT so that any person may have the right to own a gun.
(my text) Well, times have changed, and the Constitution was written so that it could be amended with changing times.
(your text)Irrelevant. Should freedom of the press be limited to the type of printing press they had in 1789?
If the people so desire, then yes. But the fact of the matter is that the principle behind free speech is immutable. The First Amendment does not guarantee the right to own printing presses. We have the right think and believe and express those beliefs without fear of repercussion (Sticks and stones, and all that). But the Second Amendment concerns the right to bear specific manmade objects for a specific situation, and those objects and situations have changed with time. These changes are not irrelevant. The Constitution is a living document meant to be interpreted and amended as conditions change. This is why it has survived so long.
In answer to some of your other points:
I am NOT saying that all arms should be banned. But I am saying that it does not allow for any individual to own any conceivable form of arms, and it does not dis-allow any form of gun control (indeed, a "well-regulated militia" can be viewed as a pretty strict form of gun control).
If there are few to no gun control laws, then nearly every gun purchase is legal. I am not too familiar with the workings of the Brady Law, but if most or all gun purchases require at least some form of background check, then perhaps more criminals are trying to obtain guns illegally. I accept this. But it is the PREVALENCE of guns combined with the LACK OF CONTROL that allows so many guns to get into the hands of so many criminals.
The fact remains thousands die every year. You can say all you want that the "guns" themselves don't shoot people, but the people are still dead. Cars do not kill people, but the people are still dead. We have relatively very strict regulations and control over driving of vehicles in this country.
Heroin or PCP being just as easy to get with the drug war is not a valid comparison. Drugs are addictive. People will find a way. It is a medical issue.
Yes, much of this has to do with the culture of guns and violence in our society, and that is another issue altogether (although I believe the NRA and others promote this culture).
I am not saying "with a stoke of a pen" we could solve this problem. Much has to do with the culture of violence in the U.S. But gun control laws do not simply affect law-abiding citizens. We simply differ on this. You believe that criminals get most or all of their guns illegally, and therefore gun control laws would not affects them. Sure, the most direct immediate effects would be increased beuracracy for law-abiding citizens, and sure, criminals would still try to obtain guns illegally. But, if legislation is approached properly, the more lasting effects would be the gradual removal (of course never total) of guns from the criminal element, while law-abiding citizens would still be able to obtain guns. But it is the prevalence and lack of controls that makes this much more possible and easier for them.
We simply differ in the opinion of whether or not legislation can lower gun violence. I strongly believe the right legislation can, and yes, that means some restriction of gun rights. Again, I would cite evidence (see above posts) from countries with gun violence rates an order of magnitude lower than the U.S.; similar, western industrialized nations with similar poverty and income levels, etc.. But again, I am not for outright banning of all guns, either. I'm not also using big government as an argument that we should ooutlaw guns. If that were the only issue at play here, I would be on your side.
Hey, at least we agree about the paranoid KKK or Nazi style "they're gonna take my guns" groups. We simply disagree on the effects of gun control legislation. For myself, I believe the issue comes down to weighing what are we protecting and at what cost. I think the argument that we need to maintain an ability of self-defense against a rogue government is simply not enough... particularly since it is questionable as to whether that is possible at all by individuals, and the fact that the Second Amendment specifically says the right is there because of the necessity of a "well-regulated militia". I know that over the years, while we have debated this and the potential boogey-man of a repressive regime taking over the U.S., hundreds of thousands of Americans have actually died real deaths. I don't care if those deaths came from guns jumping out of cabinets, jealous lovers, careless kids, gangs, or a repressive government. They are deaths just the same.
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