12-31-2007, 10:07 PM | #1 | ||
Tyrannus Rex
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 616
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Brady Campaign to America's Hunters: "All your rifles are belong to us"
Now I already basically knew this ever since the Brady people started talking about "deadly sniper weapons" during the D.C. shootings, despite the fact the rifle used was a standard semi-automatic .223 (the .223 has considerably less range and energy, and thus wounding power, than a basic .30'06 deer rifle), and that few, if any shots were takin from more than 100 yards away (I read somewhere that most of the victims were shot from within 50 yards, but I didn't bother saving it and haven't gotten around to finding it yet, but I'll try when I have more time). However, they've finally came right out and said it:
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Now there are a number of blatantly disgenius statements and at least a few complete lies, such as the claim that the rifle used by the Omaha shooter would have been banned under the blatantly unconstitutional and utterly useless (besides jacking up the prices of magazines holding more than 10 rounds) 1994 AWB, the shooter's rifle (a semi-automatic Ak-47 lookalike) lacked a bayonet lug, threaded barrel, and collaspable stock, so it would have been perfectly allowable under the ban. However, one thing stands out, because it reveals their true goal (there's a very good reason gun rights supporters often refer to them as the "Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Ownership", and it isn't just the circumstantial evidence that they support every gun ban (and I mean ban, not 'reasonable regulation') they come across, or their inability to accept a simple fact that the 2nd Amendment clearly enumerates an individual, not collective right (what with it having "the right of the People" in it and the whole being in the Bill of Rights thing). If you don't bother keeping up with this stuff (and you really should, all our rights are important, not just the ones that happen to in vogue at the time), you probably missed it, so I'll repeat it. Quote:
The second part I requoted, although not nearly as telling as the first, is still quite insidious, although I believe its foolishness should be obvious enough to any who bother looking (here's a hint; do you buy more than one roll of toliet paper at a time? You do?! Monster! You're going to go TP the neighborhood! Aren't you! FIEND!). PS Holy crap I can't believe I managed 3 pages in word on this! (although I guess quoting the entire article helped with that) *wow, 3 pages in Word is kinda short once the forum formatting hits it.... PPS Did I miss anything good while I was gone? Did Fifth finally snap and ban-massacre the forum? Also, this does not mean I will be returning to regular posting (you can all sigh in relief now), apparently my university hates you all, so their firewall blocks the nuklear power domain, and I'll be going back in a couple weeks. But until then, you shall all suffer under the lash of (arguably) the most conservative member of NPF, muahahahah. On a related note, every time you don't vote for Fred Thompson, God kills a hippie, and a Communist.
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"The Second Amendment is about ensuring the rights of the citizen to be armed, despite [not at] the whims of government or State bureaucracy" "Let us speak courteously, deal fairly, and keep ourselves armed and ready." -Theodore Roosevelt: San Francisco CA, May 13, 1903 "We are all citizens, not a one among us is a serf, and we damn well better remember it" Last edited by Sesshoumaru; 12-31-2007 at 10:13 PM. |
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12-31-2007, 10:26 PM | #2 | |
Totally Spamming Potions
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Rep. of Ireland. SUBJECT TO TERMS AND CONDITIONS
Posts: 756
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Sorry but it seems to me that your whole arguement points to the fact that the killings were done with significantly less dangerous weapons than the ones in the article to achive the same deadly result. And that the police are underequiped to deal with such a threat.
Also on this second Amendment malarkey, Not to sound like an ignorant foreigner now but I don't think your founding Fathers meant "Yeah you can use guns cos, ya know, shootin' shits fun," I think it was more on the lines of you can have weapons in your home to defend yourself against foreign invaders which may threaten this new land."
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12-31-2007, 10:50 PM | #3 | ||
Tyrannus Rex
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 616
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I think you missed the point entirely...also, please don't pretend to know what you're talking about when it comes to the Bill of Rights, as you clearly don't, nor do you really have a need to (since you don't live under their enumerated protections of liberty)...unless you want to debate them.
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*I beleive it was implied quite strongly, but in case anyone was wondering, yes, the right to defend that life is an intrinsic part of that right; the right of collective defense is a result of the right of individual defense, NOT the other way around. Quote:
*Also, the Bill of Rights is not negoiatable, not one part, if you piss on any one of the myriad rights of free men, you piss on them all. *Gah I forgot to address the most important part of your post. The point I was making is that no matter how much they talk of "resonable regulation" these homunculi have proven, again and again, that in their eyes no amount of "reasonable regualation" short of an outright stripping away of the rights of a free citizenry can satisfy them.
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"The Second Amendment is about ensuring the rights of the citizen to be armed, despite [not at] the whims of government or State bureaucracy" "Let us speak courteously, deal fairly, and keep ourselves armed and ready." -Theodore Roosevelt: San Francisco CA, May 13, 1903 "We are all citizens, not a one among us is a serf, and we damn well better remember it" Last edited by Sesshoumaru; 12-31-2007 at 11:02 PM. |
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12-31-2007, 11:05 PM | #4 |
The Straightest Shota
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: It's a secret to everybody.
Posts: 17,789
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Discussion rules: http://www.nuklearforums.com/showthread.php?t=26354
You've broken like three of them in your last post, Sessh. Continue to break them and you won't be continuing to discuss things in this section of the forum.
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12-31-2007, 11:06 PM | #5 |
Administrator
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Sesshomaru, FYI, keep the insults out of your post or keep out of the discussion forum.
Don't make me dig through your post and quote them, 'cause I'd probably end up banning you. Dammit ninja'd by Krylo.
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"FENRIS IS AN ASSHOLE" - shiney
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12-31-2007, 11:24 PM | #6 | |
Argus Agony
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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. Meaning that the right to bear arms is intended for national security purposes to the end that a public militia can be formed to defend it, as at the time such a militia was all the US had to defend itself. By this interpretation, it would be completely reasonable to prohibit the use of guns for any purpose other than defending against invading forces. There's nothing in there about being allowed to even use them for hunting. Not that I advocate any such legislation, but I'm just pointing out the boundaries of the Second Amendment's jurisdiction. The Government has full authority to ban the ownership of any type of firearm it wants as long as it doesn't ban them all, and can say what you can and cannot use firearms for outside of defending the sovereignty of the United States. That is, if you're looking at the amendment from a truly strict constructionist standpoint.
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01-01-2008, 12:11 AM | #7 |
Tyrannus Rex
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 616
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*Gah, I keep forgetting the intention I had when I started this thread. I don't really want to start another gun rights/second amendment debate, but rather focus on the extreme mendacity thats been demostrated by many of the leaders of the anti-gun organizations. The orginal point I was trying to make was that they have, for 30 years, been claiming their only interested in 'reasonable' gun control, and not in 'sporting weapons' (which itself is quite odd considering that virtually all 'sporting' guns are direct descendents of military weapons that were then superceded, people keep forgetting that most bolt action hunting rifles are quite similar to the infantry rifles used up until shortly before WWII, even the chambering of 30'06, still the most popular deer cartridge, and the semi-automatic rifles are not at all unlike the kind used in WWII and up until shortly before the Korean Conflict; and a growing number of hunters are using rifles utilizing detachable box magazines; not to mention the growing sport of competition shooting with "military" style semiautomatics such as AR-15 varients), all the while they have NEVER opposed ANY outright ban on private firearms ownership, and instead have steadfastly supported them (see the current D.C. gun ban case for vindication of this charge). First they were only for banning (note, not "reasonable regulation") of 'evil handguns,' then when public support for that failed to materalize, they moved to 'saturday night specials', then 'assault rifles,' then when it became more widely known that rifles of ANY type were used in less than 1 percent of violent crime, they moved on to 'assault weapons' (the current 'evil gun of the month'), often using terms such as "high powered" (despite the already mentioned power gap between 'assault rifle' chamberings, which are weaker b/c their based on full auto rifles used by the military, and full auto firing is hard to control even with a reduced power chambering; and the more powerful chamberings used in hunting), or 'concealable' (well duh! the whole point of a weak handgun instead of a long gun is that its smaller, easier to carry, and thus, more easy to conceal; although a sawed off long gun is both far more deadly, and almost as easy to conceal, and the fact that its a serious felony to own an unregistered short barrel long gun hasn't stopped criminals from using them). And each step along the way mere facts have been little barrier to them; which wouldn't be much of a problem, except that they continuously get away with blatant misrepresentations, distortions, and outright lies; and I'm getting tired of a band of knaves and liars setting the tone to a debate over the essence of liberty itself, and even more tired of a complecent media, and populace (while your ignorance may simply be a result that you haven't bothered with the issue, it is no excuse for letting them get way with) ignoring it, even when they are caught red handed; and in many cases actively helping them in their campaign of lies, and I'd like to change that. And one thing that liars and distorters can't live with it is objective discussion of the issues they twist and turn into unregnizable abominations and farces; whenever people truly devote themselves to examining the truth of a thing, the lies surrounding it tend to shrivle up and die (but ONLY when one can see past the distortions to begin with).
If, after examining this issue without the lies and distortions that have been piled on it; you still don't agree my view of gun control, well, at least it's your view, and not the view that some lying scumbag has spent 30 years of medacity to make sure you accept uncritically (I'll still think you're wrong though; but I'd rather argue with someone who actually knows what their talking about, whether than someone who simply bleets* when told to). /preachy rant thingy...damn that spiraled a bit further than intended *reference to 'sheeple', which is used to describe the brainwashed "gunz r teh evilz," although I don't think we have too many of those around here, most of you guys seem like the type that would get pretty pissed off about someone deliberatly lying to you, and the illusion of credibility these organizations have built up has been used a vehical to keep people like you on on their side, they don't want to risk that some of you might change your minds if you were shown the whole picture, and not just the horrbly mangled parts they hand out. So if the first amendment had been prefaced with "the right of an informed and educated electorate being necessary to a free state" then only voting pamphlets would be kosher? You're putting far too much emphasis on the explanatory clause, and shifting focus away from the very specific "the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed" You also have to keep in mind that in modern parlence, 'well regulated' refers to gov't control, but in colonial times, it meant something akin to "trained and equiped" and "keep and bear" would translate to "own and carry". Of course, this all ignores the tenth amendment, that stipulated that the fact that any rights were not specifically enumerated, NOT 'given' or 'granted' (meaning the revocation of any of the Bill of Rights would have no effect on the rights of the people, as all it did was spell out specific ones that they wanted to have special mention) could not be used to claim that they did not exist. Unless, of course, you were to argue that even a man's life is not his. You also have to keep in mind WHY the people have the right to defend themselves from tyranny and foreign invaders (which I touched upon breifly). Another point you didn't address: "The security of a free State," this does not refer exclusively to "barbarians at the gates" as you seem to regard it as. The depradations of "knaves and murderers" are as much as a threat as foreign invaders; you also completely dismiss the very well documented fear of domestic tyranny, which is an important reason why the militia was regarded as more desirable than a standing army. Do you really think that men who had just fought a war to secure the rights of free men (against the standing army of their previous rulers, no less), one of which was the right to personal arms for the defense of self, family, community, and country (in that order, by the way) would consider the rise of standing army to be an argument for the disolution of that right? And, since it is so important, I must mention it in closing, the right to own firearms is not 'just a second amendment thing,' it is an intergral part of the dearest right of all; the right to be secure in your own life (i.e. "not be murdered" to put it sloppily) is meaningless without the right to defend that life (i.e. fight back against a violent aggressor, i.e. the right to self defense), which is meaningless without the right to own and be armed with the tools to effect that defense.
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"The Second Amendment is about ensuring the rights of the citizen to be armed, despite [not at] the whims of government or State bureaucracy" "Let us speak courteously, deal fairly, and keep ourselves armed and ready." -Theodore Roosevelt: San Francisco CA, May 13, 1903 "We are all citizens, not a one among us is a serf, and we damn well better remember it" Last edited by Sesshoumaru; 01-01-2008 at 01:25 AM. |
01-01-2008, 01:08 AM | #8 |
Argus Agony
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Actually, the explanatory clause is quite clearly the key here, as it defines the boundaries to which the right given in the amendment can and cannot be infringed. It very specifically states that the right to bear arms is intended for the maintenance of a regulated militia. That is all it says in the Constitution.
Now, while I can't say I agree with your interpretation of the Tenth Amendment (except to point out that you are actually citing the Ninth), the amendment itself does bring up an interesting point. You see, the Tenth Amendment states that the Federal Government has no authority to force the states to do anything that itself isn't expressly stated in the Constitution itself. Yes, the Federal Government can pass any and all laws it wants (providing they go unchallenged to the Supreme Court), but no state agency has any obligation to abide by them if they don't want. This is, however, counteracted by what is referred to as the "Commerce Clause" (Article I, Section 8, Clause 3 of the US Constitution), which dictates that the Federal Government can regulate anything that involves or can potentially involve interstate commerce. It's actually bullshit that the Feds use whenever they really want to keep control over something under the law, but it has worked to strike down the California state law allowing the growing of marijuana for medicinal purposes. By this logic, the Federal Government could impose a ban on any firearms they liked and defend it in court by saying that, since guns can be transported from state to state, it falls within their jurisdiction to force the states to uphold the ban. All very silly stuff, but similar maneuvers have worked before. Also, there's no specifically stated right to living securely stated in the Constitution. The Declaration of Independence does, of course, mention the rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness", but that document has no official bearing on the laws of the United States to my knowledge.
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01-01-2008, 02:07 AM | #9 | |
Oi went ta Orksford, Oi did.
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 1,911
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Quite honestly I have opinions on the subject but not enough knowledge. However, I don't believe there's enough reason either way to say having a semi automatic gun designed for killing other people, which is what an assault rifle is, should be available at all.
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01-01-2008, 02:23 PM | #10 | |||||||
Tyrannus Rex
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 616
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Hmmm, rememeber people, if its late and your tired, you should probably double check stuff that you make central to an argument.
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Of course, all this is totally apart from what I wanted to do, expose people like the Brady leadership as the disgenius, lying knaves that they are. So... Quote:
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"The Second Amendment is about ensuring the rights of the citizen to be armed, despite [not at] the whims of government or State bureaucracy" "Let us speak courteously, deal fairly, and keep ourselves armed and ready." -Theodore Roosevelt: San Francisco CA, May 13, 1903 "We are all citizens, not a one among us is a serf, and we damn well better remember it" |
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