irishpat183
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And why shouldn't states be able to establish a religion?
Thing is...citizens have no use, and cannot afford, nor would know how to operate, a nuclear weapon. Besides, you'd be taking yourself out in the process.
Let's stick to firearms.
Irishpat is just scared they'll make super soakers illegal... how's he ever gonna get a woman wet again???...
bada tish.
Oh damn, you don't really believe that states should be able to establish religions to you?!
...
Oh damn, you don't really believe that states should be able to establish religions to you?!
Do you think that citizens should be able to have any weapon? AR-15, I assume you say yes. Nuclear weapons, I assume you say no. Where's the grey area? Tanks, submarines, and jets?
The reason that amendment made perfect sense is that one person could barely fire a round a minute. Today, if all arms are on the table, you could destroy whole cities in theory. It doesn't take much to kill hundreds of people with the right training. If nothing else, cognizance of the advancements in military technology makes it impossible not to at least reevaluate the purpose and future of that amendment.
This thread is not about $5 milkshakes.
Just throwing in my two cents on a few things that've come up recently in this thread:
people fought from '39 until '08 about whether the right to bear arms was individual or collective (e.g. militia), even though Miller was fairly clear that the guns had to be "reasonably related" or something like that to the maintenance of a militia. After 5 years, that debate is far from over, in my opinion. Should get interesting if the supreme court becomes less conservative as justices move in and out...
also, I personally prefer to view things from a more pragmatic stance: I don't think anyone has any real use for a high-capacity magazine, except for killing people. I'm personally willing to sacrifice some slight enjoyment in my target shooting, or convenience in hunting (realistically, whens the last time you shot ten times at one animal) in order to make it slightly more difficult for crazies to kill people. My personal stance on that.
Lastly, I don't think an analogy between guns and hard liquor is valid, Irishnation. Especially handguns and assault rifles.
Hard Liquor has an intended purpose- human consumption for enjoyment and (allegedly) nutritional purposes. It has a side effect- sometimes people do stupid things and kill other people.
Handguns and assault rifles have an intended purpose- killing people. In my opinion, there's no real "sporting" purpose for either of those weapons. You can buy it for the purpose of defense, but the reason it's effective at defending you is because of its designed purpose- causing death as efficiently as possible. Neurotoxins are the only other example I can think of designed to cause death. What's the difference between neurotoxins, which are some of the most highly regulated substance on earth, and guns?
Just throwing in my two cents on a few things that've come up recently in this thread:
people fought from '39 until '08 about whether the right to bear arms was individual or collective (e.g. militia), even though Miller was fairly clear that the guns had to be "reasonably related" or something like that to the maintenance of a militia. After 5 years, that debate is far from over, in my opinion. Should get interesting if the supreme court becomes less conservative as justices move in and out...
also, I personally prefer to view things from a more pragmatic stance: I don't think anyone has any real use for a high-capacity magazine, except for killing people. I'm personally willing to sacrifice some slight enjoyment in my target shooting, or convenience in hunting (realistically, whens the last time you shot ten times at one animal) in order to make it slightly more difficult for crazies to kill people. My personal stance on that.
Lastly, I don't think an analogy between guns and hard liquor is valid, Irishnation. Especially handguns and assault rifles.
Hard Liquor has an intended purpose- human consumption for enjoyment and (allegedly) nutritional purposes. It has a side effect- sometimes people do stupid things and kill other people.
Handguns and assault rifles have an intended purpose- killing people. In my opinion, there's no real "sporting" purpose for either of those weapons. You can buy it for the purpose of defense, but the reason it's effective at defending you is because of its designed purpose- causing death as efficiently as possible. Neurotoxins are the only other example I can think of designed to cause death. What's the difference between neurotoxins, which are some of the most highly regulated substance on earth, and guns?
If you give the gun control advocates an inch they will take a mile. You limit magazines to 10 rounds they will push for 7, 5, 3, then 1.
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Guys can we stay on the topic of Gun control, every single response just deflects to another argument with absurd slippery slope implications.
What is acceptable gun control?
Will gun control work?
Who will be affected/advantaged?
Guiding questions. Lets see if we can agree if anything should be done by government, then identify what.
If someone doesn't mind answering my question it would help answer the "what is acceptable gun control?" question. Both are constitutional rights. (The first and second) If "times have changed" argument is used and "we have firearms the forefathers never dreamed of" then we also have communication nobody ever dreamed of. If that is your basis on changing laws without heeding the second amendment than are you ok with the same thing being done with your first amendment? This may help those who don't care about guns put the constitution part of it in context.