Opinion There's no way to fix the Second Amendment. Let's just get rid of it

Link (Archive)

There's no way to fix the Second Amendment. Let's just get rid of it​

Who says history doesn't repeat itself? It sure does when it comes to the aftermath of mass shootings.

After Columbine, Aurora, Sandy Hook, Orlando, Virginia Tech, Margery Stoneman Douglas, El Paso, Buffalo, Uvalde and so many others, it's always the same.

First, shock. Then, grief. Then, a demand for action. Then, the phony claim: Too bad, but we can't do anything about guns because of the Second Amendment. And then, nothing is done to prevent the next attack.

This time, could things be different? After the senseless assassination of 19 elementary school students and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, senators of both parties are actually talking about a compromise on guns.

But don't hold your breath. No matter what they come up with, chances are still slim that there will be 10 Republicans willing to override the filibuster. (A total of 60 votes are needed to end a filibuster in the evenly-divided US Senate.)

Anything they agree on will probably just nibble around the edges of the gun issue. Sen. John Cornyn, the lead Republican negotiator, has already vetoed one of the most sensible proposals: raising the legal age for buying an assault weapon from 18 to 21 years.

There's no way, especially in this election year, that Republicans will let anything out of the Senate that would ruffle the feathers of the National Rifle Association.

President Joe Biden's proposals come close to what's really needed, with his bold call for universal background checks, eliminating ghost guns and renewing the ban on assault weapons. But even that's not enough to convince some conservative Americansthat the Second Amendment is an open license arm themselves, even with weapons that belong on the battlefield.

Let's face it. The way many judges and conservatives interpret the Second Amendment is a total con job. And, as wildly misinterpreted today, it is, for all intents and purposes, a license to kill as many people as you want with as many guns as you want.

The only effective way to deal with the Second Amendment is to repeal it — and then replace it with something that makes sense in a civilized society.

I'm hardly the first person to say that the Second Amendment has been a disaster for this country. In fact, two Supreme Court justices — justices appointed by Republican presidents — have said as much.

In a March 2018 opinion piece for the New York Times, former Justice John Paul Stevens, who was appointed by then-President Gerald Ford, wrote that Americans protesting the massacre of 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School "should demand a repeal of the Second Amendment."

He explained: "A constitutional amendment to get rid of the Second Amendment would be simple and would do more to weaken the NRA's ability to stymie legislative debate and block constructive gun control legislation than any other available option."

And decades earlier, in 1991, former Chief Justice Warren Burger, appointed by President Richard Nixon, told the PBS Newshour: "If I were writing the Bill of Rights now, there wouldn't be any such thing as the Second Amendment.

Burger called the Second Amendment "one of the greatest pieces of fraud — I repeat the word 'fraud' — on the American people by special interest groups that I have ever seen in my lifetime."

The words: "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."

Read it again. There's no way you can logically leap from those 27 words about the existence of a state militia to the unfettered right of any citizen to buy as many guns — and any kind of gun — that they want, without the government being able to do anything about it.

It's clear from the wording of the Second Amendment itself that it has nothing to do with individual gun ownership; nothing to do with self-defense; and nothing to do with assault weapons. The amendment speaks, not to the rights of well-armed individual citizens, but only to citizens as members of a group, a "well regulated militia."

And its history is well-known. The founders saw no need to mention guns in the original Constitution. As many constitutional scholars and American historians have shown, the Second Amendment was added later by James Madison as part of a deal to secure the support of Patrick Henry and other White racist Virginians for confirmation of the Constitution. Noted academic Carol Anderson, for one, describes the "anti-Blackness" that lies at the heart of the Second Amendment in her book "The Second," as well as its "architecture of repression."

As such, it was not about self-defense. It was, in the opinion of these historians, about reassuring Whiteplantation owners that the new federal government would not interfere with their practice of forming White militias to patrol the South, ready to put down rebellionby disgruntled Black slaves or chase down slaves who tried to flee.

And again, the amendment has nothing to do with self-defense or allowing ownership of any kind of gun. As Stevens noted in his New York Times op-ed: "For over 200 years after the adoption of the Second Amendment, it was uniformly understood as not placing any limit on either federal or state authority to enact gun control legislation."

Two things changed that. First, a band of gun extremists took over the NRA at its 1977 annual convention in Cincinnati and changed its mission from championing the Second Amendment as the right of hunters to giving every American the right to own a gun for self-defense. The NRA proceeded, successfully, to sell that unfounded idea of self-defense to politicians and the general public.

Second, in 2008, former Justice Antonin Scalia wrote the majority opinion in District of Columbia v. Heller,which — again for the first time in over 200 years — established the right of every American under the Second Amendment to own a gun for self-defense. And he rounded up four other votes.

However, it's important to note that even in Heller, Scalia took pains to argue that as with other rights, those granted under the Second Amendment are not unlimited — and that governments retain the power to regulate what kind of guns, or how many, people may own.

Of course, those provisions of Heller are conveniently ignored by gun worshippers like Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who uphold the Second Amendment as reinterpreted by Scalia. That flawed reasoning allowed a Texas teenager to buy two AR-15's on his 18th birthday, walk into an elementary school and mow down 19 students and two teachers.

We are a sick nation indeed, if we allow that idiocy to stand.

Of course, it won't be easy to repeal the Second Amendment. It would require a constitutional amendment, passed by two-thirds of the House and Senate and three-quarter of the states. Or a constitutional convention, called by two-thirds of the states, with any proposed changes approved by three-quarters of the states. But, difficult or not, it's still the right thing to do.

We are condemned to more and more mass killings until we do the right thing: Stop arguing about the Second Amendment — and just get rid of it.
 
that the founders of your country anticipated the pragmatism of civilians having protected access to weapons, thus granting a unique means of self-agency and protection found almost nowhere else on Earth?
While there's a lot to unpack here, and I could describe the mass murders committed in "safe" gun-free countries--some of which put even the most inventive American maniac to shame--all I'll say is that keeping and bearing arms was not a unique right when the Constitution was ratified. It is a natural right. Every organism exercises self-defense. Anatomically modern humans have been doing it for a couple hundred thousand years without much debate over its propriety. Creating and using weapons is a defining trait of behaviorally modern humans. Being unarmed is unnatural. People can only be put in this unnatural condition by a greater force threatening them with overwhelming violence.

The greatest legal influence on the United States was England (Great Britain after the Act of Union) through the common law and governance of the colonies. The right to keep arms for protection of "personal security, personal liberty, and private property" was recognized by the common law in England/Great Britain. In spite of this right, the government would occasionally disarm certain ethnic or religious groups for fear of insurrection. At various times these groups included the Welsh, Catholics, non-Catholics, non-Anglican Protestants, Whigs, and Tories. Disarmament was a political weapon or prophylactic used when too many subjects found the government offensive. It was not a universal measure for public safety.

The American colonies disarmed persons they found dangerous or quarrelsome; some allowed their rights to be restored once the danger passed. (Modern laws are much more strict and impose lifetime bans for many nonviolent offenses.) A few colonies disarmed Catholics, because American Catholics might not be sufficiently loyal to the British king. During the Revolutionary War, persons insufficiently disloyal to the British king were disarmed. Disarmament was only contemplated when an individual (or sometimes a group) was considered dangerous to public order.

After the war, tempers cooled and many proposals for codifying the pre-existing right to bear arms were considered. All specified that people could not be disarmed unless they committed crimes or presented a danger to the public. So we got the 2nd Amendment, then we got Heller, then we got McDonald. The result is that an individual can only be disarmed following due process of law.* We take due process very seriously. The legislature can't deprive me of a natural right. They don't have that power. Only a court can do that, and only if I'm found guilty of a crime or mentally defective following due process.

Or is it that routine shootings with automatic firearms is just the expected price to pay so one can defend one's own turf? Is this what's going on? ... I seriously want to understand what people are experiencing that makes the idea of any reduction of civilian access to machine guns unacceptable.
We don't have shootings with automatic firearms** and civilians don't have access to machine guns unless they are very rich, live in the correct state, and get permission from the Federal government.

* There are states that violate this. We're working on it.

** I'm sure there have been some but I can only think of one in living memory.
 
I'm genuinely trying to figure it out. I seriously want to understand what people are experiencing that makes the idea of any reduction of civilian access to machine guns unacceptable.
Armed people get fucked over less by government. People armed to the teeth even less so. If you start chipping away at the types of guns they can own it’s a slippery slope.
I also used to wonder what the American obsession with guns was. After covid, I see it very clearly indeed.
 
This is why I hang out in the A&H, so much to learn. This remains the sole thing about America that I've still not at least partially wrapped my head around.

I get the practical cynicism, you can 't get rid of this amendment because nobody wants to be the first person to back down on owning their gun, and you're all very jumpy because you know everyone else has guns, I think I get that. You're not getting rid of sad bastards who want to shoot schools up, because it's just social wear and tear at this point. You can't put faith in either the police to help responsibly, because they're too corrupt or inept, nor can you trust the black people, since they're only qualified and solvent for organised crime. The media is obviously going to try and pretend this is unbecoming and embarrassing for the greatest nation in the world, even though I'm pretty sure you can't work in a newsroom over there without a shooting range membership. Even President Biden has to pretend that he thinks arming teachers is crazy while he waves his dual wielded shotguns in his dog's face.

But is that it, unironically? Like no snarkiness, for all the libtard memes and macho posturing and strange equivalencies about abortion, is the message that we're not getting outside that you actually don't feel safe in your own country, from minorities, from crazy people, from corrupting influences from gays and socialists, from your own "white supremacist" law enforcement, that you genuinely believe that teachers and schoolchildren should be trained and armed with guns? So the only practical solution to mass shootings is mass deterrence? Or is it that routine shootings with automatic firearms is just the expected price to pay so one can defend one's own turf? Is this what's going on? When Wayne LaPierre describes a world that's almost predatory, did that actually gel with your reality? I'm going to guess that you hold the 2nd Amendment in such broad esteem less because of what it actually, logically means, but rather than what it stands for - that the founders of your country anticipated the pragmatism of civilians having protected access to weapons, thus granting a unique means of self-agency and protection found almost nowhere else on Earth? Is that it? I'm sorry if this sounds like a Spock monologue, I'm genuinely trying to figure it out. I seriously want to understand what people are experiencing that makes the idea of any reduction of civilian access to machine guns unacceptable.
The gun is the most practical equalizer available to address disparity of force between an aggressor and would be victim. It's an invaluable tool.
 
This is why I hang out in the A&H, so much to learn. This remains the sole thing about America that I've still not at least partially wrapped my head around.

I get the practical cynicism, you can 't get rid of this amendment because nobody wants to be the first person to back down on owning their gun, and you're all very jumpy because you know everyone else has guns, I think I get that. You're not getting rid of sad bastards who want to shoot schools up, because it's just social wear and tear at this point. You can't put faith in either the police to help responsibly, because they're too corrupt or inept, nor can you trust the black people, since they're only qualified and solvent for organised crime. The media is obviously going to try and pretend this is unbecoming and embarrassing for the greatest nation in the world, even though I'm pretty sure you can't work in a newsroom over there without a shooting range membership. Even President Biden has to pretend that he thinks arming teachers is crazy while he waves his dual wielded shotguns in his dog's face.

But is that it, unironically? Like no snarkiness, for all the libtard memes and macho posturing and strange equivalencies about abortion, is the message that we're not getting outside that you actually don't feel safe in your own country, from minorities, from crazy people, from corrupting influences from gays and socialists, from your own "white supremacist" law enforcement, that you genuinely believe that teachers and schoolchildren should be trained and armed with guns? So the only practical solution to mass shootings is mass deterrence? Or is it that routine shootings with automatic firearms is just the expected price to pay so one can defend one's own turf? Is this what's going on? When Wayne LaPierre describes a world that's almost predatory, did that actually gel with your reality? I'm going to guess that you hold the 2nd Amendment in such broad esteem less because of what it actually, logically means, but rather than what it stands for - that the founders of your country anticipated the pragmatism of civilians having protected access to weapons, thus granting a unique means of self-agency and protection found almost nowhere else on Earth? Is that it? I'm sorry if this sounds like a Spock monologue, I'm genuinely trying to figure it out. I seriously want to understand what people are experiencing that makes the idea of any reduction of civilian access to machine guns unacceptable.
For someone who declares that they don't know what they're talking about, you sure write walls of text. And a lot of loaded language. And a lot of basic factual inaccuracies. (For one, "machine guns" are not easily available to citizens.)

I don't think you're asking anything in good faith, and I think you're an absolute idiot. People like you make me feel much better about holding an opposing stance.
 
I also used to wonder what the American obsession with guns was. After covid, I see it very clearly indeed.
Its not an obsession with the gun, the tool, its an obsession with the idea the individual can be responsible for their own safety, and it doesn't have to be entrusted to 3rd parties who may fail the individual, out of incompetence, laziness, or active malice. Or dangled over your head and threatened with removal if you vote or live "wrong"

Guns are just the easiest way to do it.

No sane gun owner wants to use theirs unless they have to, they are not dreaming of the day they get to mow down the neighbors, but, look how fast the Summer of Love ended when just ONE armed person said "no more mobbing me and my town"
 
Its not an obsession with the gun, the tool, its an obsession with the idea the individual can be responsible for their own safety, and it doesn't have to be entrusted to 3rd parties who may fail the individual, out of incompetence, laziness, or active malice. Or dangled over your head and threatened with removal if you vote or live "wrong"

Guns are just the easiest way to do it.

No sane gun owner wants to use theirs unless they have to, they are not dreaming of the day they get to mow down the neighbors, but, look how fast the Summer of Love ended when just ONE armed person said "no more mobbing me and my town"
A gun in the hands of a sane individual who's sick of bullshit is a promise that more bullshit will have dire consequences.
 
Its not an obsession with the gun, the tool, its an obsession with the idea the individual can be responsible for their own safety, and it doesn't have to be entrusted to 3rd parties who may fail the individual, out of incompetence, laziness, or active malice. Or dangled over your head and threatened with removal if you vote or live "wrong"

Guns are just the easiest way to do it.

No sane gun owner wants to use theirs unless they have to, they are not dreaming of the day they get to mow down the neighbors, but, look how fast the Summer of Love ended when just ONE armed person said "no more mobbing me and my town"
You’re right. I guess my point is that that’s how I saw it before. Now I see it in a very different light, more akin to what you explain here. I was very wrong. The last couple of years have shown me I have been wrong about a lot of stuff. It’s been a humbling experience. The ability to truly protect yourself is a right everyone should have. As a Brit, I suppose I have to wield a spoon.
Although, we have done our share of tyrant removal in the past, and maybe we will do it again.
 
I live in a country with the strictest gun laws around and we keep having mass shootings and violent crimes. The reason you don't hear about it is because 99,9 percent of the shooters are immigrants and nothing bad can be said about them, and second those who carry the guns here don't care about keeping the law, they have ak-47's and grenade launchers and our law enforment keep out of certain no go zones because if they go there its practically a death sentence.
Instead of scrapping the second amendment, scream for improving mental healthcare and insane asylums to keep idiots of the streets.

I envy your gun laws, i feel rather unsafe here in the city and the government rape us without any care in the world.

Same here, and we don't. No darkies, no big crimes like that. If we ousted every foreigner*, violent crime would be cut down to almost nothing but bar brawls. Orbán wall worked.

*or just gypsies and maffia slavs, really.

US needs guns because it has spics and niggers. The 2nd amendment is thr last protection the people there have from the feral hordes of nignogs and another fiery but peaceful summer of love protest.

You can't get rid of the only bandaid keeping the animals in check.
 
You’re right. I guess my point is that that’s how I saw it before. Now I see it in a very different light, more akin to what you explain here. I was very wrong. The last couple of years have shown me I have been wrong about a lot of stuff. It’s been a humbling experience. The ability to truly protect yourself is a right everyone should have. As a Brit, I suppose I have to wield a spoon.
Although, we have done our share of tyrant removal in the past, and maybe we will do it again.
Exactly, it's not that I "love me gunz!"....... it's that I loathe anyone who tells me with a straight face: "you can't exercise self-preservation without prior approval"

AKA - you got a loicense to not be murdered?
 
Last edited:
Its not an obsession with the gun, the tool, its an obsession with the idea the individual can be responsible for their own safety, and it doesn't have to be entrusted to 3rd parties who may fail the individual, out of incompetence, laziness, or active malice. Or dangled over your head and threatened with removal if you vote or live "wrong"

Guns are just the easiest way to do it.

No sane gun owner wants to use theirs unless they have to, they are not dreaming of the day they get to mow down the neighbors, but, look how fast the Summer of Love ended when just ONE armed person said "no more mobbing me and my town"
That's why I can never wrap my head around "acab but no guns"

You can't have it both ways, retards. Either we police ourselves on equal grounds or we die.

It's a moot point because the people who believe this have never fully detached from their mother's teat, but whatever.
 
Every time I read a fucktarded article like this it makes me want to see a law passed that forces anyone, especially journoscum and politicos, who wishes to restrict 2A to read the personal writings of the Framers and see for themselves why they believed so strongly in the individual liberty of normal people to codify certain rights in a document specifically to restrict a centralized government from infringing on those rights. Because many of the Founding Fathers kept journals and memoirs that go in depth into their reasoning and thought process while framing the Bill of Rights and Constitution, and in particular stating clearly that the Second Amendment is an INDIVIDUAL RIGHT and the militia is any able bodied male citizen willing to take up his arms in defense of liberty, home, and country.

Fucksake, a big part of why we declared independence and fought the Revolutionary War was because the Crown was disarming people and forcing them to house and feed Red Coats against their will. Taxation on tea was just a part of it. When the Framers started proposing a new American government and asking the colonials to trust them to run it, many colonials were skeptical. They had been suffering a long time under the tyranny of the British Crown and didn't want to trade one tyrant 2000 miles away for another tyrant right on their doorstep. The Bill of Rights was a promissory note to the American people: we recognize and respect that you have certain God-given, inalienable rights. Rights that the governing body serving you is obligated to respect and defend. You have a right to speak your mind about your elected representatives and worship any way you see fit. You have a right to protect yourself and your family from any threat, be it a criminal invading your home, a foreign army attacking your country, or a tyrannical government using the standing army to oppress you. You have a right to a fair trial and due process. You have a right to refuse giving room and board to the military and agents of the government. If you allow us to create this new government and give us permission to represent you, we will make no law that infringes upon these most paramount of rights.

The Second Amendment was ALWAYS about average citizens being able to arm themselves to a degree that they could counter any organized military, be it an invading foreign army, or America's own military being bent to the twisted will of a tyrant. It is also meant to be a deterrent to keep the government from becoming tyrannical, and to remove said government if it somehow DOES become tyrannical. Once the government forgets that its supposed to be SERVING the American people and decides its job is to rule over them instead then that cancer was meant to be cut out by any means necessary, including force of arms.

Americans have become lazy and complacent, and they have wilfully blinded themselves to the cancer of tyranny that has grown ever since the Civil War (War of Northern Aggression). Bad actors with evil agendas have lulled the American people into believing the notion that they don't need to be armed, that the only guns anyone should have (if any) are hunting guns, that the Federal Government is the big friendly nanny who only has their best interests at heart and would never turn on them, and that they're safe because the police are only a phone call away. Politicians have forgotten that their job is to serve US and have forgotten the fear they should be feeling whenever they do the American people dirty. Their lust for power and control has overridden any concept of civil service.

And despite what President Bad-Touch says, the Framers did believe in the American people owning military grade weapon. Benjamin Franklin owned literal cannons and loaned them to the civilian militia during the Battle of Boston. Cannons were common because many of the ships in America were privately owned and much of the US Navy in our early history were privateers (basically government backed pirates and what we'd consider civilian military contractors now). The reason short barreled shotguns and rifles were added to the NFA was because the judge overseeing that case stated that they were not in use by the US military, thus had no place in the civilian militia.

The idea of living in the kind of country/society that the Democrats want the US to be in the future terrifies me. The question shouldn't be "Why do you need a gun?" What the question should be is "Why do they want us disarmed and defenseless? What do they plan to do to us if we can't fight back?" It's not paranoia and it's not unreasonable. The only person you can count on 100% of the time is yourself. And it shouldn't be just an American thing. I believe everyone in the world has a right to defend themselves from any enemy, even if that enemy is their own government.
 
Armed people get fucked over less by government. People armed to the teeth even less so. If you start chipping away at the types of guns they can own it’s a slippery slope.
I also used to wonder what the American obsession with guns was. After covid, I see it very clearly indeed.

It was really obvious after the 1992 LA riots, when blacks sought to destroy the Korean section of LA in response to a poor dindu nuffin getting put in a grave by middle-aged Korean woman who wasn't interested in getting robbed. With the encouragement of the media, the LA city government, and the LA police, blacks proceeded to burn, loot, and murder their way across Koreatown. A number of Koreans, realizing that blacks were being used as Zergs by LA city, took to their roofs with guns, and kept their stores safe.

That was when it was obvious to me that automatic weapon bans are a bad, stupid thing. Rifles and shotguns are better than nothing, but this was an obvious case where crew-served machine guns would have done a much better job of protecting lives and property. But this also taught me why gun control is so important to liberals. It's not that they want to keep children safe from gun owners. They want to keep their Zergling rush safe from Rooftop Koreans.
 
It was really obvious after the 1992 LA riots, when blacks sought to destroy the Korean section of LA in response to a poor dindu nuffin getting put in a grave by middle-aged Korean woman who wasn't interested in getting robbed. With the encouragement of the media, the LA city government, and the LA police, blacks proceeded to burn, loot, and murder their way across Koreatown. A number of Koreans, realizing that blacks were being used as Zergs by LA city, took to their roofs with guns, and kept their stores safe.

That was when it was obvious to me that automatic weapon bans are a bad, stupid thing. Rifles and shotguns are better than nothing, but this was an obvious case where crew-served machine guns would have done a much better job of protecting lives and property. But this also taught me why gun control is so important to liberals. It's not that they want to keep children safe from gun owners. They want to keep their Zergling rush safe from Rooftop Koreans.

And they want to impose their policies and agendas on you without fear of armed resistance. It's a lot more difficult to subjugate and oppress a populace, forcing them into a lifetime of poverty and servitude, stripping them of even the right to own property or voice their opinions, when they have the capacity to tell you to fuck off and back it up with firepower.
 
And they want to impose their policies and agendas on you without fear of armed resistance. It's a lot more difficult to subjugate and oppress a populace, forcing them into a lifetime of poverty and servitude, stripping them of even the right to own property or voice their opinions, when they have the capacity to tell you to fuck off and back it up with firepower.

Their main policies they're pushing now:

1. Black people should be allowed to kill you any time they get mad
2. Cross-dressers should be allowed to rape your kids
3. The government should be able to put the whole country on house arrest for any or no reason

Pretty obvious why they want to ban civilian ownership of light artillery and warships, if you ask me.
 
Every time I read a fucktarded article like this it makes me want to see a law passed that forces anyone, especially journoscum and politicos, who wishes to restrict 2A to read the personal writings of the Framers and see for themselves why they believed so strongly in the individual liberty of normal people to codify certain rights in a document specifically to restrict a centralized government from infringing on those rights. Because many of the Founding Fathers kept journals and memoirs that go in depth into their reasoning and thought process while framing the Bill of Rights and Constitution, and in particular stating clearly that the Second Amendment is an INDIVIDUAL RIGHT and the militia is any able bodied male citizen willing to take up his arms in defense of liberty, home, and country.

Fucksake, a big part of why we declared independence and fought the Revolutionary War was because the Crown was disarming people and forcing them to house and feed Red Coats against their will. Taxation on tea was just a part of it. When the Framers started proposing a new American government and asking the colonials to trust them to run it, many colonials were skeptical. They had been suffering a long time under the tyranny of the British Crown and didn't want to trade one tyrant 2000 miles away for another tyrant right on their doorstep. The Bill of Rights was a promissory note to the American people: we recognize and respect that you have certain God-given, inalienable rights. Rights that the governing body serving you is obligated to respect and defend. You have a right to speak your mind about your elected representatives and worship any way you see fit. You have a right to protect yourself and your family from any threat, be it a criminal invading your home, a foreign army attacking your country, or a tyrannical government using the standing army to oppress you. You have a right to a fair trial and due process. You have a right to refuse giving room and board to the military and agents of the government. If you allow us to create this new government and give us permission to represent you, we will make no law that infringes upon these most paramount of rights.

The Second Amendment was ALWAYS about average citizens being able to arm themselves to a degree that they could counter any organized military, be it an invading foreign army, or America's own military being bent to the twisted will of a tyrant. It is also meant to be a deterrent to keep the government from becoming tyrannical, and to remove said government if it somehow DOES become tyrannical. Once the government forgets that its supposed to be SERVING the American people and decides its job is to rule over them instead then that cancer was meant to be cut out by any means necessary, including force of arms.

Americans have become lazy and complacent, and they have wilfully blinded themselves to the cancer of tyranny that has grown ever since the Civil War (War of Northern Aggression). Bad actors with evil agendas have lulled the American people into believing the notion that they don't need to be armed, that the only guns anyone should have (if any) are hunting guns, that the Federal Government is the big friendly nanny who only has their best interests at heart and would never turn on them, and that they're safe because the police are only a phone call away. Politicians have forgotten that their job is to serve US and have forgotten the fear they should be feeling whenever they do the American people dirty. Their lust for power and control has overridden any concept of civil service.

And despite what President Bad-Touch says, the Framers did believe in the American people owning military grade weapon. Benjamin Franklin owned literal cannons and loaned them to the civilian militia during the Battle of Boston. Cannons were common because many of the ships in America were privately owned and much of the US Navy in our early history were privateers (basically government backed pirates and what we'd consider civilian military contractors now). The reason short barreled shotguns and rifles were added to the NFA was because the judge overseeing that case stated that they were not in use by the US military, thus had no place in the civilian militia.

The idea of living in the kind of country/society that the Democrats want the US to be in the future terrifies me. The question shouldn't be "Why do you need a gun?" What the question should be is "Why do they want us disarmed and defenseless? What do they plan to do to us if we can't fight back?" It's not paranoia and it's not unreasonable. The only person you can count on 100% of the time is yourself. And it shouldn't be just an American thing. I believe everyone in the world has a right to defend themselves from any enemy, even if that enemy is their own government.
My kingdom for a :semperfi:

:semperfidelis:
 
Back