I worried about the same thing watching his speech (that a shot would ring out at any moment). Scared the piss out of me.
Then I realized that that kind of reaction is the direct result of the last 8 years. The outgoing administration had the Fear thing down to an exact science, and I still feel twinges of it every now and then.
That's one of the intangible parts of Obama's victory that gets me all excited: the idea that our nation will be moving from the fear end of the spectrum to the hope side.
Let's imagine for a moment that the U.S. government decided to take away your rights to free speech and free press, rights which I assume you hold dear. What, at its core, is stopping them from doing that? How would you protest? Hold a sign up? Make a poster from print-outs of the Constitution?
Gun factories do not have a magic ingredient for gun-making. You can make a gun yourself in your basement with the right instructions, so even if the government made them illegal across the board, that's not going to stop criminals from being able to have an unlimited supply. Similarly, many regular civilians are much better shots than police officers, who rarely have cause to shoot their weapons and therefore aren't really very experienced at using them.
Your article is sensationalist. Did any of the people buying those guns say they were intending to kill people with them? No. If you feared the government was going to make it illegal to own raw almonds (which, incidentally, they did), you'd probably go out and buy a whole lot of raw almonds.
I don't need any justification at all to own 100 guns, no more than someone else would have to justify owning 100 pairs of shoes or 100 steak knives. Owning guns doesn't mean you're going to kill anyone - killing is wrong, and illegal, and every law-abiding person would agree with me on that. If you don't want your rights infringed, don't infringe upon mine.
Having lived through the killings of John and Robert Kennedy and Marting Luther King, I find that Obama's election restored much of my hope for our country.
My biggest fear is that some nut will try to kill him. Well, actually, there have already been plots to kill him, but both were broken up before they got too far. The hardest thing to do is keep a conspiracy quiet.
My real fear is a lone gun-person with a 30.06 hunting rifle a la Lee Harvey Oswald. Doesn't say a word to any one, just does it. What a nightmare.
An assault weapon is useless in this type of operation. Not that accurate, relatively short range and not much stopping power. A 30.06, however. Very frightening.
@ben The Second Amendment is the only one capable of protecting any of the others. If you read up on the history of the amendment, many of the Founding Fathers considered an armed populace to be key to keeping the state's powers in check. It's a defensive, not offensive, position - a state is far less likely to try anything with an armed populace than an unarmed one.
Jacomus, define assault weapon. That's right, you can't because it is as redundant as a jumbo shrimp.
And if f you mean a military type rifle like an AK or AR you are quite mistaken.
How about a reference from the last century or two. I know rights issues come up every day. Do you overthrow the government or just put a bullet in the person you think is guilty?
I had always thought our rights were defended by our legal system. If you say that civilians with guns are the only way to enforce our laws then I'll go right out and get a gun.
I know quite a few people that aren't nuts, have arsenals of guns that hold lots of ammunition, and they don't intend to kill children. I have a Buddhist friend that is still drunk on the Obama win that owns more guns than most gun shops. For some people, it's just a hobby. For some it's a lifestyle.
I was talking to friend one night having a debate about this very topic and I jokingly said, I wish everyone would just use lightsabers or swords instead. They're so much cooler. And he quoted me this, and it shed a little light on the subject.
I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend. (J.R.R.Tolkien, The Two Towers)
That kind of helped me put things in perspective from where he's coming from.
hasobamatakenawayourgunsyet.com
Like the skittish conservatives did during the actual WTO riots? Oh wait ...
uuummm, maybe because he'd gone from "could be president" to "gonna be president"? you think?
I worried about the same thing watching his speech (that a shot would ring out at any moment). Scared the piss out of me.
Then I realized that that kind of reaction is the direct result of the last 8 years. The outgoing administration had the Fear thing down to an exact science, and I still feel twinges of it every now and then.
That's one of the intangible parts of Obama's victory that gets me all excited: the idea that our nation will be moving from the fear end of the spectrum to the hope side.
Let's imagine for a moment that the U.S. government decided to take away your rights to free speech and free press, rights which I assume you hold dear. What, at its core, is stopping them from doing that? How would you protest? Hold a sign up? Make a poster from print-outs of the Constitution?
Gun factories do not have a magic ingredient for gun-making. You can make a gun yourself in your basement with the right instructions, so even if the government made them illegal across the board, that's not going to stop criminals from being able to have an unlimited supply. Similarly, many regular civilians are much better shots than police officers, who rarely have cause to shoot their weapons and therefore aren't really very experienced at using them.
Your article is sensationalist. Did any of the people buying those guns say they were intending to kill people with them? No. If you feared the government was going to make it illegal to own raw almonds (which, incidentally, they did), you'd probably go out and buy a whole lot of raw almonds.
I don't need any justification at all to own 100 guns, no more than someone else would have to justify owning 100 pairs of shoes or 100 steak knives. Owning guns doesn't mean you're going to kill anyone - killing is wrong, and illegal, and every law-abiding person would agree with me on that. If you don't want your rights infringed, don't infringe upon mine.
My biggest fear is that some nut will try to kill him. Well, actually, there have already been plots to kill him, but both were broken up before they got too far. The hardest thing to do is keep a conspiracy quiet.
My real fear is a lone gun-person with a 30.06 hunting rifle a la Lee Harvey Oswald. Doesn't say a word to any one, just does it. What a nightmare.
An assault weapon is useless in this type of operation. Not that accurate, relatively short range and not much stopping power. A 30.06, however. Very frightening.
please tell me that's not what you're saying.
And if f you mean a military type rifle like an AK or AR you are quite mistaken.
nice link, but someone should really tell that person how to spell "morons." Sheesh.
Really? A bunch of gun nuts are defending our rights through armed civilian uprising? This happened when?
The Whiskey Rebellion of the 1790s would be a good start...
I had always thought our rights were defended by our legal system. If you say that civilians with guns are the only way to enforce our laws then I'll go right out and get a gun.
A Japanese admiral remarked why they did not invade the US mainland in WWII: 'a rifle barrel behind every blade of grass.'
Wounded Knee, SD 1973.
I was talking to friend one night having a debate about this very topic and I jokingly said, I wish everyone would just use lightsabers or swords instead. They're so much cooler. And he quoted me this, and it shed a little light on the subject.
I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend. (J.R.R.Tolkien, The Two Towers)
That kind of helped me put things in perspective from where he's coming from.