Wintermute_ said:
Ok, even without considering the recent events in Tuscon (So hundreds/thousands can die each year from gun crimes but if its a politician then suddenly "holy shit, guns may be dangerous"?) I'm really tired of hearing anyone in the news or wherever talk up 2nd amendment rights.
Hate to tell you, but the 2nd amendment is RIDICULOUSLY OUTDATED.
It reads
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
Lets run this down. Firstly, the second amendment was written when there was still a serious threat of Indian attack, British attack, and in general no exceedingly superior standing army in the U.S.. The National Guard was farmers and home owners with rifles and pistols. further more, it was written to ensure that if ever a oppressive regime took power, the American citizens could revolt much the same way we did against the british.
But hey guys, guess what?
In regards to the second half of that statement, if the U.S. government today suddenly was ridiculously oppressive, enough to warrant a revolution of some kind, sorry to tell you that U.S. citizens would be screwed. As the owners of the most powerful military in the world, average, untrained citizens armed with pistols, rifles, and maybe some semi or automatic weapons are not going to defeat the well trained, organized, supplied, well armed, and massive U.S. army. It would not happen. We would need bazookas, jets, tanks, the best automatic weaponry, and a lot of ammo. We reasonably can't give those to citizens. Why give them light weight guns that usually end up in the perpetration of crimes instead?
Secondly, you don't need an automatic weapon. You are not fighting any insurgents. Cops, officers of the law, have those to stop all those gangs or criminals that got their hands on automatics who whoa! did illegal things with them. You do not need more then at most 1-2 guns. What the hell are you using them for if its for defense, unless your a collector, and even then, collecting tools of death is questionable. What I'm getting at is everyday someone who has a gun uses it for criminal purposes. Furthermore, having a gun or concealed weapon means the likelihood of you firing your gun and killing someone just soared into the realm of very possible, instead of not possible. Gun regulation should be intensified several folds before I can see it being reasonable to own weapons.
BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY, the groups of hardcore gun owners/advocates that hide behind the second amendment for their right to own a god damned AK-47 or something of another unnecessarily large scale need to have that shield taken away so law making can continue and reduce the levels of gun toting potential criminals and deaths.
Am I justified in this view escapists? Or is there something I don't get about laws regarding a tool meant to kill something or someone?
I think you haven't thought some of this through. The right to keep and bear arms is one of a system of safeguards. It very much does exist to balance govermental power and to ensure that the people are not totally at the mercy of the goverment. The police can deal with an aberrant person, a small group of criminals, or even a riot, but they aren't going to be able to handle a popular revolt. What's more even on a small scale the danger posed by armed civilians means that the police are not going to just callously follow whatever laws they are handed to enforce. If there was some kind of draconian free speech issue and the police were sent to arrest people with say "M" rated video games after a certain date (note, this is a lot more extreme that what we're currently seeing so far), chances are there wouldn't be widespread enforcement of the law (and it would probably be repealed or buried until it became blue law) because your generally not going to see the police wanting to risk getting their heads blown off over someone owning a game like "Silent Hill" or whatever. Compare this to say how the police have operated in Chile and other countries, no real fear of civilians means that the police are willing to do pretty much whatever the goverment tells them to (path of least resistance). I am very pro-police in most matters, but I think personal armament and not being entirely on their mercy is a good thing.
The above is a very "practical" example in how the balance helps things today. Truthfully the goverment is more careful than they might be otherwise due to someone having to go out and enforce those laws in this enviroment. Nothing so dramatic as an overall popular rebellion.
On the other hand though, consider that one of the reasons why our goverment is unlikely to go massively off the deep end on a large scale is because of that right. The problem with your logic that civilians with small arms wouldn't be effective against the military misses the point that if the goverment needed to use those kinds of forces it would destroy it's own country. The small arms mean they wouldnt be able to do it any other way, and if they DID carpet bomb the major cities and have tanks driven through everything, the entire nation would be decimated. The people calling the shots presumably want an empire, not a mountain of rubble.
On top of this we have a lot of safeguards in our military, among them it being a military primarily made of volunteers. There are limits to how much of a role the goverment can play in actual military administration (it has it's own justice system and everything), despite gradual attempts to work around this. The reason for this is to prevent the goverment from effectively creating a "military caste" or a specific govermental group from being able to determine who is filling out the majority of the military positions based on loyalty to their ideals. The result being that it's very unlikely that the US military would participate in a coup on the orders of the goverment. It's doubtful that the military would engage US civilians if say Obama decided he should be president for life (like has happened in other countries).
In the US we also have relatively free access to explosives, Plastique, Dynamite, etc... are controlled, but a lot more loosely than in a lot of other countries which fueled a lot of terrorism concerns. It's used by private companies who use it for demolitions and construction, and while liscenced there is tons of this stuff in circulation out there and it's relatively easy to get your hands on compared to other places in the world. If there was an all out conflict of some sort, you also have to consider this. Not to mention other things that American citizens have access to. To put things into perspective remember the Killdozer incident:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marvin_Heemeyer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZbG9i1oGPA
You can find more on this, but while it's a bit off subject the combined freedoms in the US pretty much mean things like this can happen. This guy lost because he was a lone wolf (I have mixed opinions on the incident itself, which I won't go into) but consider this guy used a modified and armed bulldozer to pretty much demolish part of the town where he lived and the nation guard and police couldn't stop him, even with their own vehicles. His downfall was while demolishing a building one of the treads fell partway into the basement and... well, you can see it.
At any rate, my basic point here is that I don't think the right to bear arms is even remotely oudated. Indeed with some of the free speech issues coming up it's becoming increasingly relevent. Like a lot of people I've been putting more serious thought into armed insurrection against the goverment than I ever have before. I doubt any of these laws will ever pass, but if they start to, and if things start snowballing, then yes I would consider going after goverment officials with weapons, and I'll also say that this is EXACTLY what the right exists for. Let's say we DO start losing the rights to free speech, and people then start showing up and shooting the politicians responsible and their supporters to try and force the goverment to change the policy. A few people are no big deal, but if enough people start doing it, the goverment is pretty much going to have to comply or deal with anarchy. What are they going to do? Carpet bomb? ... and yeah, the goverment deciding to mess with fundemental constitutional rights is why we have that right.
Do not mis-understand what I'm saying here. I make no pretensions of being entirely sane (heh), but I have no real desire to go on anti-goverment shooting rampages, or see it happen (despite some rhetoric here and there). I'd vastly prefer for threats to things like our freedom of speech to be overcome within the system by groups like The Supreme Court. In the end though there are reasons why I would pick up a gun and go after my own "leaders", just not many of them. I think there are enough people like me where as long as we maintain the second amendment our leaders are going to keep this at the back of their mind and it prevents the goverment from getting too excessive in it's behaviors.
I think you don't realize how much freedom we have in the US, and what role our armament plays in that. Just because you don't have politicians going "noes, please don't shoot me" on public TV doesn't mean they aren't aware of the possibility. In a lot of countries the politicians do whatever the frakk they want, with the entire country against them, because the people don't present any threat whatsoever.