OT-Nugent comments right to bear arms

Voted Worlds #1 Most Loonatic Fanbase

Moderator: Andrew

Postby lights1961 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 6:47 am

strangegrey wrote:
Since 78 wrote:Just found this on Yahoo, didn't check the stats:

Vermont... no gun laws lowest crime rate in US. Anyone can concealed carry, with no permit.

DC...strictest gun laws in US. Virtually no ownership yet HIGHEST crime rates in US. That goes for NY, California, NJ (Newark and Camden are war zones, yet NJ has strict gun laws.)


It's probably fairly acurate. You can walk into a gas station in Burlington, Vermont (or any other city in VT) with a somewhat concealed, holstered hand gun. In fact, I've seen a customer in a gas station with a holstered 38. He wasn't a cop.

There's one thing that the liberals don't want you to conceptualize....would-be criminals don't like the possibility that someone's going to return fire. Simple as that.



SF-Dano wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:we no longer need an absolute right to bear arms</b> to protect ourselves from our own government or an invading imperial power.

.


Totally disagree with this statement. In fact, this is one of the main reasons we still need the right to bear arms. When "our" government finally denies law abiding citizens to own guns, that is when "our" government will find it very easy to become dictatorial. In many ways, the US government is already no longer "our" government. At least as far as heeding the majority of the people's wants and desires pertaining to issues both foreign and domestic. :x


Agree with you Dano, whoeheartedly. Thomas Jefferson said the safest and surest way to enslave the people is to disarm them. The fact of the matter is that the second amendment interpreted correctly, is a way to ensure that the government stays honest. The 'militia' was a people's army, during revolutionary times. We also had an 'american' army during the revolution. The militia was not part of that. The concept here, is that a militia is not the 'national guard' as nancy pelosi or harry reid would try to have you believe....the modern day equivalent of the 'militia' is your tom's, dick's and harry's across america protecting themselves, their families and their liberty.


Someone that doesn't believe in the second amendment, is not a patriot. I would go on further as to say that someone who wants to argue it's validity in today's day and age or worse, subvert it (like our friend above who picks and choses his/her stats from liberal university book reports) is guilty of high treason.


it goes back to I own a gun, but my neighbor should NOT be allowed to own a gun. and I dont own a gun.. as i would be way too affraid of it.

Rick
lights1961
Compact Disc
 
Posts: 5362
Joined: Tue Jul 04, 2006 7:33 am

Postby RedWingFan » Tue Jul 01, 2008 6:57 am

Calbear94 wrote:When asserting the second amendment "right to bear arms" let's not forget that the Constitution was <b>meant to be flexible</b> (hence the ability to be amended). This is a good thing indeed.

What exactly does the Supreme Court have to do with "amend"ing anything?
Amendments are done through a process that goes through the people. What the Supreme Court continues to do is going around the people and the Constitution. Your whole argument is based on a falsehood. Nice try though. :roll:
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
User avatar
RedWingFan
Digital Audio Tape
 
Posts: 7868
Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:37 pm
Location: The Peoples Republic of Michigan

Postby Gin and Tonic Sky » Tue Jul 01, 2008 7:42 am

Good for Nuge, the good folks up in Michigan ought to elect him governor up there :!:
Matt
User avatar
Gin and Tonic Sky
Cassette Tape
 
Posts: 1926
Joined: Wed Nov 28, 2007 7:46 am
Location: in a purple and gold haze

Postby Saint John » Tue Jul 01, 2008 8:56 am

MrsPerry wrote:As Charlton Heston said. "Out of my cold dead hands". I live in South Dakota, where i can carry not only concealed ( I have a permit) I can also carry openly without a permit. Give the GOOD people in DC a chance to defend their homes, families and property LEGALLY. And honestly, if someone wants to commit a gun crime, i dont think they really give a shit if the law says they can or not. But give the law abiding people some leverage against these shitstains.


(Standing Ovation) 8)
User avatar
Saint John
Super Audio CD
 
Posts: 21723
Joined: Fri Jun 23, 2006 1:31 pm
Location: Uranus

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 9:50 am

strangegrey wrote:
Since 78 wrote:Just found this on Yahoo, didn't check the stats:

Vermont... no gun laws lowest crime rate in US. Anyone can concealed carry, with no permit.

DC...strictest gun laws in US. Virtually no ownership yet HIGHEST crime rates in US. That goes for NY, California, NJ (Newark and Camden are war zones, yet NJ has strict gun laws.)


It's probably fairly acurate. You can walk into a gas station in Burlington, Vermont (or any other city in VT) with a somewhat concealed, holstered hand gun. In fact, I've seen a customer in a gas station with a holstered 38. He wasn't a cop.

There's one thing that the liberals don't want you to conceptualize....would-be criminals don't like the possibility that someone's going to return fire. Simple as that.



SF-Dano wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:we no longer need an absolute right to bear arms</b> to protect ourselves from our own government or an invading imperial power.

.


Totally disagree with this statement. In fact, this is one of the main reasons we still need the right to bear arms. When "our" government finally denies law abiding citizens to own guns, that is when "our" government will find it very easy to become dictatorial. In many ways, the US government is already no longer "our" government. At least as far as heeding the majority of the people's wants and desires pertaining to issues both foreign and domestic. :x


Agree with you Dano, whoeheartedly. Thomas Jefferson said the safest and surest way to enslave the people is to disarm them. The fact of the matter is that the second amendment interpreted correctly, is a way to ensure that the government stays honest. The 'militia' was a people's army, during revolutionary times. We also had an 'american' army during the revolution. The militia was not part of that. The concept here, is that a militia is not the 'national guard' as nancy pelosi or harry reid would try to have you believe....the modern day equivalent of the 'militia' is your tom's, dick's and harry's across america protecting themselves, their families and their liberty.


Someone that doesn't believe in the second amendment, is not a patriot. I would go on further as to say that someone who wants to argue it's validity in today's day and age or worse, subvert it (like our friend above who picks and choses his/her stats from liberal university book reports) is guilty of high treason.


Your historical facts are askew here. And if these inform your opinion regarding the right to bear arms, then perhaps you should re-evaluate.

Fact:

1.) Today's national guard is far more organized than the colonial militias ever were. In the revolution, the Continental Army superceded the militias from various colonies. Washington inherited many of these militia members and he himself remarked that they were drunken, slovenly, underarmed, and prone to desertion. They were undisciplined and unruly. Washington had to whip them into shape, which is remarkable because he had to keep them from passing out drunk and to maintain their equipment properly (i.e. not to barbecue meat on their bayonettes). Check out 1776 by David McCullogh.

2.) Jefferson saw through the sham of "virtual representation." He understood that the American colonists, were basically voiceless subjects of the British crown. Therefore, any laws or taxes passed upon the colonies were without the consent of the governed. The right to bear arms would later be included in the Bill of Rights, because some of the founding fathers (the Republicans) feared that the new republic (based on the Constitution) would fail and thus the people would again be subjected to a tyranny.

3.) The Constitution has worked for over 200 years. In terms of voting rights and personal freedoms, we are far more free today than perhaps even the founding fathers could have imagined. Poor white males (i.e. without property) could not vote in most states until the 1820s, Blacks could not vote until 1870 and women until 1920. Public school education is a right for all. The civil rights act of 1963 precludes discrimination on the basis of race, gender, creed, etc.

4.) We don't need armed individuals to defend us from foreign powers, either. We have a professional army made up our own citizens from all the states in the Union.

The report above shows the very real problem faced in Washington, DC. It is based on comprehensive statistical evidence, not liberal opinions. To just dismiss it out of hand shows irrational bias.

Lastly, let's not forget that the recent ruling by the Supreme Court (which is a conservative court now) struck down the handgun measure that was voted on and approved by the citizens of Washington, D.C. whom I am sure do not have to be convinced with reems of statistics. Their experiences living in the community shows just how out of control the handgun situation is. Least needing to be convinced are those that have lost relatives or friends due to gun violence.

It is almost contradictory to be supporting the right to bear arms, while opposing states' rights (OK, technically Washington D.C. is not a state, but its citizens deserve to have the same rights as other citizens in the fifty states, and besides this case is just a test case...Chicago's handgun restrictions are soon to be overturned). Jefferson saw states' rights, more than anything else, as the bulwark against a tyranny by our national government.

A rule by the majority is the bedrock of a democracy. If the people of a state, or U.S. territory, vote to restrict, but not deny guns altogether, then that should be their right. If you believe that the right to own guns is absolute, then let's do away with licensing requirements altogether and return to lawlessness, not unlike the wild west. By strictly interpreting the Constitution, the court is denying of the right of a democratic electorate to say that some guns are just not OK. If we had adhered strictly to the founding father's definition of a republican citizen, then only propertied, white males would enjoy full rights and freedoms granted under the Constitution and Bill of Rights. I for one would not want to live in a world like that, just like I wouldn't want to live in Washington, D.C. since the reversal of the handgun ban.
Last edited by Calbear94 on Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:59 am, edited 2 times in total.
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby S2M » Tue Jul 01, 2008 9:56 am

99% of these people in the NRA are hunters, OR gun collectors...the founding fathers weren't infallible. Nice to see these twits hanging on to an antiquated 'right'.

Nice argument though- keep falling back on that age-old argument that the people need to stockpile weapons to protect themselves from their own government.....

And I'll even grant you huntings guns, and certain handguns. But these semi-automatic/automatic weapons? If you are hunting with these, my friend, you aren't much of a hunter, nor a very smart collector.
User avatar
S2M
MP3
 
Posts: 11981
Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2008 4:43 am
Location: In a bevy of whimsy

Postby slucero » Tue Jul 01, 2008 9:59 am

and its why state militias... are sworn to their "Commander in Chief"... the state Governor (not the Ppresident)... and why the president has to gain "permission" from the state governor to mobilize state militia for Federal deployment.


.. look at Nazi Germany in the late 30's... one of the 1st things Hitler did after nationalizing everything was TAKE AWAY GUNS from the people.... today the government is talking nationalized health care, nationalized oil industry... get a fucking CLUE man...


... we lose out freedoms in tiny, imperceptible steps...


and btw.. the U.S. is a REPUBLIC.. not a "democracy"... never has been, the word "democracy" is not in the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights or the Constitution.... and there's a reason for that.
Last edited by slucero on Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:05 am, edited 2 times in total.

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.


~Albert Einstein
User avatar
slucero
Compact Disc
 
Posts: 5444
Joined: Thu Dec 21, 2006 1:17 pm

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:00 am

To anyone who is against further gun restrictions on a state to state basis:

Would your opinion change if you or a member of your family became a victim of gun violence? Do you believe that having a gun locked in a drawer actually keeps you safe? Does it keep you safe in the workplace, which is increasingly prone to violence by disgruntled ex-employees? Does it keep your kids safe in the schools and neighborhoods? Are you feeling assured that guns are out of the reach of children in other families' homes and that those children are educated and loved enough to know that it is not right to hurt others?

Honestly, where is the deterrence that makes all of these risks worth it? Don't most burglars try to break in when noone is home? In cases, where the family is home, wouldn't an alarm and baseball bat give the homeowner the advantage in the darkness of their own home? And, what about road rage?
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby slucero » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:04 am

Calbear94 wrote:To anyone who is against further gun restrictions on a state to state basis:

Would your opinion change if you or a member of your family became a victim of gun violence? Do you believe that having a gun locked in a drawer actually keeps you safe? Does it keep you safe in the workplace, which is increasingly prone to violence by disgruntled ex-employees? Does it keep your kids safe in the schools and neighborhoods? Are you feeling assured that guns are out of the reach of children in other families' homes and that those children are educated and loved enough to know that it is not right to hurt others?

Honestly, where is the deterrence that makes all of these risks worth it? Don't most burglars try to break in when noone is home? In cases, where the family is home, wouldn't an alarm and baseball bat give the homeowner the advantage in the darkness of their own home? And, what about road rage?



A government will not attack its own people if they are armed to defend themselves....

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.


~Albert Einstein
User avatar
slucero
Compact Disc
 
Posts: 5444
Joined: Thu Dec 21, 2006 1:17 pm

Postby S2M » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:05 am

Calbear94 wrote:To anyone who is against further gun restrictions on a state to state basis:

Would your opinion change if you or a member of your family became a victim of gun violence? Do you believe that having a gun locked in a drawer actually keeps you safe? Does it keep you safe in the workplace, which is increasingly prone to violence by disgruntled ex-employees? Does it keep your kids safe in the schools and neighborhoods? Are you feeling assured that guns are out of the reach of children in other families' homes and that those children are educated and loved enough to know that it is not right to hurt others?

Honestly, where is the deterrence that makes all of these risks worth it? Don't most burglars try to break in when noone is home? In cases, where the family is home, wouldn't an alarm and baseball bat give the homeowner the advantage in the darkness of their own home? And, what about road rage?



And to add to what CAlbear has said:

It is common knowledge that owners leave the ammo separate from the actual hangun, rifle whatever - when their are kids in the house. So, that being said: What is one to do if surprised by a burgler? 'Ummm...excuse me, sir, will you please wait to burgle me until I go in the lockbox and get my ammo, so I may load my gun that is in a different place altogether?'

PLEASE!
User avatar
S2M
MP3
 
Posts: 11981
Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2008 4:43 am
Location: In a bevy of whimsy

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:06 am

RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:When asserting the second amendment "right to bear arms" let's not forget that the Constitution was <b>meant to be flexible</b> (hence the ability to be amended). This is a good thing indeed.

What exactly does the Supreme Court have to do with "amend"ing anything?
Amendments are done through a process that goes through the people. What the Supreme Court continues to do is going around the people and the Constitution. Your whole argument is based on a falsehood. Nice try though. :roll:


The Supreme Court's ruling was based on a strict interpretation of the Second Amendment...that the right to bear arms shall not be infringed. What I was, perhaps not so obviously, arguing is that we should not just strictly interpret the Constitution when it suits us individually. The context in which the language of the Constitution and Bill of Rights has changed dramatically in 200 years. There wouldn't even be a Bill of Rights in the first place if the Constitution had been considered unalterable or inflexible...in short unamendable.
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby slucero » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:11 am

StocktontoMalone wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:To anyone who is against further gun restrictions on a state to state basis:

Would your opinion change if you or a member of your family became a victim of gun violence? Do you believe that having a gun locked in a drawer actually keeps you safe? Does it keep you safe in the workplace, which is increasingly prone to violence by disgruntled ex-employees? Does it keep your kids safe in the schools and neighborhoods? Are you feeling assured that guns are out of the reach of children in other families' homes and that those children are educated and loved enough to know that it is not right to hurt others?

Honestly, where is the deterrence that makes all of these risks worth it? Don't most burglars try to break in when noone is home? In cases, where the family is home, wouldn't an alarm and baseball bat give the homeowner the advantage in the darkness of their own home? And, what about road rage?



And to add to what CAlbear has said:

It is common knowledge that owners leave the ammo separate from the actual hangun, rifle whatever - when their are kids in the house. So, that being said: What is one to do if surprised by a burgler? 'Ummm...excuse me, sir, will you please wait to burgle me until I go in the lockbox and get my ammo, so I may load my gun that is in a different place altogether?'

PLEASE!



hmmm... weak argument man.....

burglers.... prefer to "burgle" when no one is home... so a burgler who happens upon a occupied dwelling is most likely to bail... so he can burgle another day...

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.


~Albert Einstein
User avatar
slucero
Compact Disc
 
Posts: 5444
Joined: Thu Dec 21, 2006 1:17 pm

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:12 am

slucero wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:To anyone who is against further gun restrictions on a state to state basis:

Would your opinion change if you or a member of your family became a victim of gun violence? Do you believe that having a gun locked in a drawer actually keeps you safe? Does it keep you safe in the workplace, which is increasingly prone to violence by disgruntled ex-employees? Does it keep your kids safe in the schools and neighborhoods? Are you feeling assured that guns are out of the reach of children in other families' homes and that those children are educated and loved enough to know that it is not right to hurt others?

Honestly, where is the deterrence that makes all of these risks worth it? Don't most burglars try to break in when noone is home? In cases, where the family is home, wouldn't an alarm and baseball bat give the homeowner the advantage in the darkness of their own home? And, what about road rage?



A government will not attack its own people if they are armed to defend themselves....


We have a strong government which has survived all sorts of adversities. We have representation and are not governed by a mother country 3000 miles away. We have had only one Civil War, in which our government invaded the South to keep the Union together and not let it divide over slavery. I can't imagine our government attacking any part of our country over any issue less severe than slavery was. In my opinion, this is sheer paranoia.
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby RedWingFan » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:13 am

Calbear94 wrote:
RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:When asserting the second amendment "right to bear arms" let's not forget that the Constitution was <b>meant to be flexible</b> (hence the ability to be amended). This is a good thing indeed.

What exactly does the Supreme Court have to do with "amend"ing anything?
Amendments are done through a process that goes through the people. What the Supreme Court continues to do is going around the people and the Constitution. Your whole argument is based on a falsehood. Nice try though. :roll:


The Supreme Court's ruling was based on a strict interpretation of the Second Amendment...that the right to bear arms shall not be infringed. What I was, perhaps not so obviously, arguing is that we should not just strictly interpret the Constitution when it suits us individually. The context in which the language of the Constitution and Bill of Rights has changed dramatically in 200 years. There wouldn't even be a Bill of Rights in the first place if the Constitution had been considered unalterable or inflexible...in short unamendable.

Your whole "interpreting" argument is insulting. The Constitution is not "living and breathing" outside of the amendment process. The fact that the 2nd amendment was upheld based solely on how Justice Kennedy was feeling that particular morning is chilling. The Constitution is what it is. It was declared by our founders for my forefathers, myself and my kids. If you or anyone else has an issue with it. GO THROUGH THE AMENDMENT PROCESS!!!
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
User avatar
RedWingFan
Digital Audio Tape
 
Posts: 7868
Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:37 pm
Location: The Peoples Republic of Michigan

Postby S2M » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:13 am

slucero wrote:
StocktontoMalone wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:To anyone who is against further gun restrictions on a state to state basis:

Would your opinion change if you or a member of your family became a victim of gun violence? Do you believe that having a gun locked in a drawer actually keeps you safe? Does it keep you safe in the workplace, which is increasingly prone to violence by disgruntled ex-employees? Does it keep your kids safe in the schools and neighborhoods? Are you feeling assured that guns are out of the reach of children in other families' homes and that those children are educated and loved enough to know that it is not right to hurt others?

Honestly, where is the deterrence that makes all of these risks worth it? Don't most burglars try to break in when noone is home? In cases, where the family is home, wouldn't an alarm and baseball bat give the homeowner the advantage in the darkness of their own home? And, what about road rage?



And to add to what CAlbear has said:

It is common knowledge that owners leave the ammo separate from the actual hangun, rifle whatever - when their are kids in the house. So, that being said: What is one to do if surprised by a burgler? 'Ummm...excuse me, sir, will you please wait to burgle me until I go in the lockbox and get my ammo, so I may load my gun that is in a different place altogether?'

PLEASE!



hmmm... weak argument man.....

burglers.... prefer to "burgle" when no one is home... so a burgler who happens upon a occupied dwelling is most likely to bail... so he can burgle another day...


Ok, well, You walked right into it....If most burglers burgle when no one is home - why do owners need guns to protect somrthing they are not home to protect? Hmmmm? :wink:
User avatar
S2M
MP3
 
Posts: 11981
Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2008 4:43 am
Location: In a bevy of whimsy

Postby slucero » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:14 am

the gun control group is losing their fight....

Image

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.


~Albert Einstein
User avatar
slucero
Compact Disc
 
Posts: 5444
Joined: Thu Dec 21, 2006 1:17 pm

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:15 am

slucero wrote:hmmm... weak argument man.....

burglers.... prefer to "burgle" when no one is home... so a burgler who happens upon a occupied dwelling is most likely to bail... so he can burgle another day...


I agree, so why are guns needed in the home for self-defense, especially since extreme measures would be needed in every household to ensure that absolutely no child could get their hand on the family's gun(s)?
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby RedWingFan » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:24 am

Calbear94 wrote:
slucero wrote:hmmm... weak argument man.....

burglers.... prefer to "burgle" when no one is home... so a burgler who happens upon a occupied dwelling is most likely to bail... so he can burgle another day...


I agree, so why are guns needed in the home for self-defense, especially since extreme measures would be needed in every household to ensure that absolutely no child could get their hand on the family's gun(s)?

I don't know ask Sean Taylor how defending his home with a machete worked out for him. :roll:
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
User avatar
RedWingFan
Digital Audio Tape
 
Posts: 7868
Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:37 pm
Location: The Peoples Republic of Michigan

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:33 am

RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:
RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:When asserting the second amendment "right to bear arms" let's not forget that the Constitution was <b>meant to be flexible</b> (hence the ability to be amended). This is a good thing indeed.

What exactly does the Supreme Court have to do with "amend"ing anything?
Amendments are done through a process that goes through the people. What the Supreme Court continues to do is going around the people and the Constitution. Your whole argument is based on a falsehood. Nice try though. :roll:


The Supreme Court's ruling was based on a strict interpretation of the Second Amendment...that the right to bear arms shall not be infringed. What I was, perhaps not so obviously, arguing is that we should not just strictly interpret the Constitution when it suits us individually. The context in which the language of the Constitution and Bill of Rights has changed dramatically in 200 years. There wouldn't even be a Bill of Rights in the first place if the Constitution had been considered unalterable or inflexible...in short unamendable.

Your whole "interpreting" argument is insulting. The Constitution is not "living and breathing" outside of the amendment process. The fact that the 2nd amendment was upheld based solely on how Justice Kennedy was feeling that particular morning is chilling. The Constitution is what it is. It was declared by our founders for my forefathers, myself and my kids. If you or anyone else has an issue with it. GO THROUGH THE AMENDMENT PROCESS!!!


If you take the Second Amendment verbatim, then it would appear that one would have to be a member of a militia. Surely, not every American today is going to sign up for one year of militia service duty! I believe the founding fathers would be horrified to know how guns are being used today.
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:37 am

RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:
slucero wrote:hmmm... weak argument man.....

burglers.... prefer to "burgle" when no one is home... so a burgler who happens upon a occupied dwelling is most likely to bail... so he can burgle another day...


I agree, so why are guns needed in the home for self-defense, especially since extreme measures would be needed in every household to ensure that absolutely no child could get their hand on the family's gun(s)?

I don't know ask Sean Taylor how defending his home with a machete worked out for him. :roll:


Let's ask the Colombine families how they feel on this issue? Better yet, let ask the thousands of inner cities families about the disastrous effect that handgun ownership has had on them and their communities?
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Re: OT-Nugent comments right to bear arms

Postby BobbyinTN » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:41 am

strangegrey wrote:
BobbyinTN wrote:I own a gun...



Based on your subsequent statements, I highly doubt that! :roll: Oh, I get it....water gun, right?

BobbyinTN wrote: but no control in America is beyond stupid.


Why is that? Support your lame ass comments...


BobbyinTN wrote:Ted Nugent is a fuckin' nut. He really shouldn't be around guns or sharp objects.


I'm sure he's a safer, more level headed gun owner than you would ever be. Crawl back into your hole...with your imaginary gun....and play dead.






Image
User avatar
BobbyinTN
Cassette Tape
 
Posts: 1431
Joined: Fri Jun 29, 2007 2:12 am

Postby RedWingFan » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:43 am

Calbear94 wrote:
RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:
slucero wrote:hmmm... weak argument man.....

burglers.... prefer to "burgle" when no one is home... so a burgler who happens upon a occupied dwelling is most likely to bail... so he can burgle another day...


I agree, so why are guns needed in the home for self-defense, especially since extreme measures would be needed in every household to ensure that absolutely no child could get their hand on the family's gun(s)?

I don't know ask Sean Taylor how defending his home with a machete worked out for him. :roll:


Let's ask the Colombine families how they feel on this issue? Better yet, let ask the thousands of inner cities families about the disastrous effect that handgun ownership has had on them and their communities?

How did we go from "so why are guns needed in the home for self-defense" to Columbine? I'll tell you how. Because you can't defend your lame initial argument!
Anyway wasn't Columbine a "gunfree" zone? The innocents slaughtered there were armed only with pencils and those 2 losers new it!
How much inner city crime is committed by legal gun owners?????
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
User avatar
RedWingFan
Digital Audio Tape
 
Posts: 7868
Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:37 pm
Location: The Peoples Republic of Michigan

Postby RedWingFan » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:47 am

Calbear94 wrote:Let's ask the Colombine families how they feel on this issue?

Better yet, ask the families if they wish their loved ones had been carrying a gun and CCW permit on that day?
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
User avatar
RedWingFan
Digital Audio Tape
 
Posts: 7868
Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:37 pm
Location: The Peoples Republic of Michigan

Postby BobbyinTN » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:49 am

Calbear94 wrote:
strangegrey wrote:
Since 78 wrote:Just found this on Yahoo, didn't check the stats:

Vermont... no gun laws lowest crime rate in US. Anyone can concealed carry, with no permit.

DC...strictest gun laws in US. Virtually no ownership yet HIGHEST crime rates in US. That goes for NY, California, NJ (Newark and Camden are war zones, yet NJ has strict gun laws.)


It's probably fairly acurate. You can walk into a gas station in Burlington, Vermont (or any other city in VT) with a somewhat concealed, holstered hand gun. In fact, I've seen a customer in a gas station with a holstered 38. He wasn't a cop.

There's one thing that the liberals don't want you to conceptualize....would-be criminals don't like the possibility that someone's going to return fire. Simple as that.



SF-Dano wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:we no longer need an absolute right to bear arms</b> to protect ourselves from our own government or an invading imperial power.

.


Totally disagree with this statement. In fact, this is one of the main reasons we still need the right to bear arms. When "our" government finally denies law abiding citizens to own guns, that is when "our" government will find it very easy to become dictatorial. In many ways, the US government is already no longer "our" government. At least as far as heeding the majority of the people's wants and desires pertaining to issues both foreign and domestic. :x


Agree with you Dano, whoeheartedly. Thomas Jefferson said the safest and surest way to enslave the people is to disarm them. The fact of the matter is that the second amendment interpreted correctly, is a way to ensure that the government stays honest. The 'militia' was a people's army, during revolutionary times. We also had an 'american' army during the revolution. The militia was not part of that. The concept here, is that a militia is not the 'national guard' as nancy pelosi or harry reid would try to have you believe....the modern day equivalent of the 'militia' is your tom's, dick's and harry's across america protecting themselves, their families and their liberty.


Someone that doesn't believe in the second amendment, is not a patriot. I would go on further as to say that someone who wants to argue it's validity in today's day and age or worse, subvert it (like our friend above who picks and choses his/her stats from liberal university book reports) is guilty of high treason.


Your historical facts are askew here. And if these inform your opinion regarding the right to bear arms, then perhaps you should re-evaluate.

Fact:

1.) Today's national guard is far more organized than the colonial militias ever were. In the revolution, the Continental Army superceded the militias from various colonies. Washington inherent many of these militia members and himself remarked that they were drunken, slovenly, underarmed, and prone to desertion. They were undisciplined and unruly. Washington had to whip them into shape, which is remarkable because he had to keep them from passing out drunk and to maintain their equipment properly (i.e. not to barbecue meat on their bayonettes). Check out 1776 by David McCullogh.

2.) Jefferson saw through the sham of "virtual representation." He understood that the American colonists, were basically voiceless subjects of the British crown. Therefore, any laws or taxes passed upon the colonies were without the consent of the governed. The right to bear arms would later be included in the Bill of Rights, because some of the founding fathers (the Republicans) feared that the new republic (based on the Constitution) would fail and thus the people would again be subjected to a tyranny.

3.) The Constitution has worked for over 200 years. In terms of voting rights and personal freedoms, we are far more free today than perhaps even the founding fathers could have imagined. Poor white males (i.e. without property) could not vote in most states until the 1820s, Blacks could not vote until 1870 and women until 1920. Public school education is a right for all. The civil rights act of 1963 precludes discrimination on the basis of race, gender, creed, etc.

4.) We don't need armed individuals to defend us from foreign powers, either. We have a professional army made up our own citizens from all the states in the Union.

The report above shows the very real problem faced in Washington, DC. It is based on comprehensive statistical evidence, not liberal opinions. To just dismiss it out of hand shows irrational bias.

Lastly, let's not forget that the recent ruling by the Supreme Court (which is a conservative court now) struck down the handgun measure that was voted on and approved by the citizens of Washington, D.C. whom I am sure do not have to be convinced with reems of statistics. Their experiences living in the community shows just how out of control the handgun situation is. Least needing to be convinced are those that have lost relatives or friends due to gun violence.

It is almost contradictory to be supporting the right to bear arms, while opposing states' rights (OK, technically Washington D.C. is not a state, but its citizens deserve to have the same rights as other citizens in the fifty states, and besides this case is just a test case...Chicago's handgun restrictions are soon to be overturned). Jefferson saw states' rights, more than anything else, as the bulwark against a tyranny by our national government.

A rule by the majority is the bedrock of a democracy. If the people of a state, or U.S. territory, vote to restrict, but not deny guns altogether, then that should be their right. If you believe that the right to own guns is absolute, then let's do away with licensing requirements altogether and return to lawlessness, not unlike the wild west. By strictly interpreting the Constitution, the court is denying of the right of a democratic electorate to say that some guns are just not OK. If we had adhered strictly to the founding father's definition of a republican citizen, then only propertied, white males would enjoy full rights and freedoms granted under the Constitution and Bill of Rights. I for one would not want to live in a world like that, just like I wouldn't want to live in Washington, D.C. since the reversal of the handgun ban.






Image
User avatar
BobbyinTN
Cassette Tape
 
Posts: 1431
Joined: Fri Jun 29, 2007 2:12 am

Postby BobbyinTN » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:50 am

Yes, this is a man you want to listen to and follow.


Image
User avatar
BobbyinTN
Cassette Tape
 
Posts: 1431
Joined: Fri Jun 29, 2007 2:12 am

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:56 am

RedWingFan wrote:Your whole "interpreting" argument is insulting. The Constitution is not "living and breathing" outside of the amendment process. The fact that the 2nd amendment was upheld based solely on how Justice Kennedy was feeling that particular morning is chilling. The Constitution is what it is. It was declared by our founders for my forefathers, myself and my kids. If you or anyone else has an issue with it. GO THROUGH THE AMENDMENT PROCESS!!!


This is all well and good, but don't forget the following about the Constitution:

1.) It created a "federal" system in which the national goverment and states governments share power. Any power not specifically granted to the national government remains under the authority of state governments (i.e. the people of the individual states).

2.) The elastic clause in the Constitution states that Congress shall have the power "to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution...powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States." This clause, known as the elastic clause, was the point of much contention between those who favored a loose reading of the Constitution and those who favored a strict reading. And because the Second Amendment predicates the right to bear arms upon the need for "a well-regulated, militia," Congress has rightly exerted its authority in passing a number of federal gun statutes.

For this same reason, the same vague language of the Second Amendment should have been interpreted by the Supreme Court to allow the individual states to pass certain restrictions on gun ownership because gun ownership questions not related to militia service should fall under state authority since it is not directly covered within the Constitution.
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:58 am

RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:Let's ask the Colombine families how they feel on this issue?

Better yet, ask the families if they wish their loved ones had been carrying a gun and CCW permit on that day?


Are you suggesting that we arm all school-children so they can defend themselves at school? Can you imagine the outcome many playground disputes?
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

Postby Allied Forces » Tue Jul 01, 2008 11:05 am

Most crimes involving guns are commited by people who aren't carrying them legally. I have no problem with law abiding citizens owning guns for sport or for self defense. Drugs are the real problem in the United States. Legalize drugs and see how gun violence drops substantially.
Last edited by Allied Forces on Tue Jul 01, 2008 11:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
Never brag about your conquests to virtual strangers.
User avatar
Allied Forces
45 RPM
 
Posts: 252
Joined: Sat Jan 26, 2008 12:42 am

Postby RedWingFan » Tue Jul 01, 2008 11:05 am

Calbear94 wrote:
RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:Let's ask the Colombine families how they feel on this issue?

Better yet, ask the families if they wish their loved ones had been carrying a gun and CCW permit on that day?


Are you suggesting that we arm all school-children so they can defend themselves at school? Can you imagine the outcome many playground disputes?

I'm saying if my high school senior was attending a school with the threats Klebold and Harris were making. I very well may have sent some heat with him.
First you try to divert "guns to protect your home" to Colombine, now you're trying to divert Colombine to playgrounds. Still lame. :roll:
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
User avatar
RedWingFan
Digital Audio Tape
 
Posts: 7868
Joined: Mon Jul 17, 2006 5:37 pm
Location: The Peoples Republic of Michigan

Postby Calbear94 » Tue Jul 01, 2008 11:09 am

RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:
RedWingFan wrote:
Calbear94 wrote:
slucero wrote:hmmm... weak argument man.....

burglers.... prefer to "burgle" when no one is home... so a burgler who happens upon a occupied dwelling is most likely to bail... so he can burgle another day...


I agree, so why are guns needed in the home for self-defense, especially since extreme measures would be needed in every household to ensure that absolutely no child could get their hand on the family's gun(s)?

I don't know ask Sean Taylor how defending his home with a machete worked out for him. :roll:


Let's ask the Colombine families how they feel on this issue? Better yet, let ask the thousands of inner cities families about the disastrous effect that handgun ownership has had on them and their communities?

How did we go from "so why are guns needed in the home for self-defense" to Columbine? I'll tell you how. Because you can't defend your lame initial argument!
Anyway wasn't Columbine a "gunfree" zone? The innocents slaughtered there were armed only with pencils and those 2 losers new it!
How much inner city crime is committed by legal gun owners?????


Apparently in the D.C. area one of 7 guns recovered in a crime were purchased legally by "straw purchasers." Straw purchasers are those who allowed others take possession of their guns. These are only the guns that were recovered. How many were never recovered?

I have defended my arguments. You don't have to agree but don't criticize me for not trying. Gun violence at school was in my initial post. Kids can get into locked drawers and cabinets and are astute in finding parents' hiding places. I am not willing to trust every gun-owning member of my community to keep their guns locked up in a gun safe. All it takes is one child with emotional issues or a score to settle and access to a gun to create a disaster.
User avatar
Calbear94
45 RPM
 
Posts: 311
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2003 10:19 am

PreviousNext

Return to Journey

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests