To those assuming I was bashing pokerman: - this is a fallacy, my purpose with this thread was intended to point out the improper use of the English language, IMHO - not unlike a former POTUS's comment from the past, "It depends on what the use if "IS" is......", applies to those proposing one should "guess" at the meaning of words - especially a red-neck that says what he means such as myself.
The comment was - "never even seen" - grab a dictionary, look up the word "seen" - (why should I assume that pokerman was unaware of the meaning of "seen" vs all the other appropriate words like handled, held, fired, used, etc.... - would that not have been more insulting?). I found that to be a sad thing, poor guy never even "seen" a firearm, show the poor guy some. I also found that to be a disingenuous statement; especially after recalling the fact that English gamekeepers (called game wardens here), around since the 18th century "do" carry firearms and even AFO "bobbies" are ever increasing in number, given the terrorist situation and ALL police carry in Northern Ireland, IIRC.
To those talking "militias" - Don B. Kates, one of our leading Second Amendment scholars, observes:
"The 'militia' was the entire adult male citizenry, who were not simply allowed to keep their own arms, but affirmatively required to do so.… With slight variations, the different colonies imposed a duty to keep arms and to muster occasionally for drill upon virtually every able-bodied white man between the age of majority and a designated cut-off age. Moreover, the duty to keep arms applied to every household, not just to those containing persons subject to militia service. Thus the over-aged and seamen, who were exempt from militia service, were required to keep arms for law enforcement and for the defense of their homes."
To those - who claim that the only purpose of the right to arms is to enable citizens to resist a military takeover of our government sometimes argue that the Second Amendment is obsolete since a populace armed with only small arms cannot defeat a modern army. That is doubly wrong. Even if overthrowing tyranny were the amendment's only purpose, the claim that an armed populace cannot successfully resist assault stems from an unproved theory.
To those claiming "NO CHANCE" - The twentieth century provides no example of a determined populace with access to small arms having been defeated by a modern army. The Russians lost in Afghanistan, the United States lost in Vietnam, and the French lost in Indo-China. In each case, it was the poorly armed populace that beat the "modern" army. In China, Cuba, and Nicaragua, the established leaders, Chiang Kai-shek, Battista, and Somoza lost. Modern nations like Algeria, Angola, Ireland, Israel, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe only exist because guerrilla warfare can triumph over modern armies. While we may not approve of all the resulting governments, each of these triumphs tells a simple truth: a determined people who have the means to maintain prolonged war against a modern army can battle it to a standstill, subverting major portions of the army or defeating it themselves or with major arms supplied by outside forces.
The Founders’ purpose in guaranteeing the right to keep and bear arms was not merely to overthrow tyrants. They saw the right to arms as crucial to what they believed was a prime natural right-of-self-defense.
As the Founding Fathers knew well, a government that does not trust its honest, law-abiding, citizens with the means of self-defense is not itself worthy of trust. Laws disarming honest citizens proclaim that the government is the master, not the servant of the people....
The Bill of Rights does not grant rights to the people, such that its repeal would legitimately confer upon government the powers otherwise proscribed. The Bill of Rights is the list of the fundamental, inalienable rights, endowed in man by his Creator, that defines what it means to be a free and independent people, the rights which must exist to ensure that government governs only with the consent of the people.
People in my country use "firearms" everyday properly (and improperly) saving others and themselves, a good thing IMHO, as long as the bad use is properly punished, which all too often is NOT the case. (just in the last weeks, a man having a meal with with his wife in Dallas, "licensed to carry" stopped a crazy man that killed the manager of the Zona Caliente -think a hispanic "hooters" place - when he was planning on shooting others - just one example of a daily "good use" of concealed carry occurrence in America)
In Texas - the quote "it's better to be judged by 12 than carried by 6" always comes to mind for those who have a heritage containing generations of gunsmiths - mine does, not a brag simply a fact - we are all products of our environment, none with an actual choice in that regard.
To those questioning the "sadness" - I'm always sadden for those that refuse to learn from the mistakes of the past, it's the difference between a "subject" and an "individual", or being "free" or a "slave.
ps - it's also a way to better understand the body of the folks one is dealing with on an open forum and this allows me to learn who folks are - like me or not, insult me or not, no skin off my teeth. I'm always me and guns, knives, swords along with speed and racing on 2 wheels or 4 and even water, are like firearms apart of my heritage. Long Range shooting requires the same precision from the shooter as a F1 car requires from it's driver and ya can't be "excellent" at either using crappy equipment.
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