Run time: 15:01
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=llt0307Wbwg
Posted on YouTube: January 14, 2011
By YouTube Member: BBQasaurus
Views on YouTube: 16
Posted on DU: January 14, 2011
By DU Member: baldguy
Views on DU: 1076 |
I know the delicate flowers from the gungeon hothouse won't like suffering under the bright sun of truth or being buffeted by the hard winds of the facts, but here they are.
Right now it is essentially illegal for civilians to own machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers, mortars, cannons, explosive time bombs, anti-tank guns, Molotov cocktails. I shouldn't say it's illegal - technically they're not actually outright banned, but we do restrict access to these things so greatly that these things do not circulate among American citizens broadly. But if you are with Alex Joneses, and Ron Pauls, and Paul Brouns - if you are with the radicals on gun policy then all of the laws that prohibit us from having these things need to change. In fact all of the laws that prohibit us from having access to anything you can imagine in terms of weaponry need to change because, in their view to do right by the U. S. Constitution you and I need to defeat the U. S. military in battle. We need to be able to overthrow the U. S. government. So we need not only anti-tank guns, and rocket-propelled grenade launchers, and bombs, if the United States military is armed with depleted uranium munitions, if they're armed with nuclear weapons, in order to be able compete with that, in order for you & me to go up against the tyrannical Commander-In-Chief of the U. S. military, and defeat him in battle, you & I should quite literally be able to obtain private nuclear weapons. This is not hyperbole. If you believe the gun radicals philosophy about guns: that gun rights are to protect our ability to overthrow the government, then we need to be able to destroy the U. S. military so we can overthrow that government. (He's) the Commander-In-Chief of the U. S. military. We need to be able to defeat him in battle. Is that what gun rights are for?