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c0da said:A post in Sunstone's thread about Gun Laws/Racism, in which somebody outlined their views on gun laws, pushed me to ask the question of all the forum members. Where do you stand on Gun Control?
Thanks in advance for any replies.
It's not just about handling the guns, themselves, it's about handling one's self.Comet said:I think that people who are educated in firearms should be allowed to own them. I've been around guns all my life. My dad started to teach me to shoot when I was 3. It is all in how it is approached and how responsible you are with your guns. Gun safety is something I'll teach my kids (if I ever get to have any!) and I will allow them to own firearms when I think they are mature enough to handle the responsibility they bring. I keep all my guns unloaded and locked up. I carry the only key to the lock-boxes and gun locks. I lock up the bullets away from the guns as well. There is nothing wrong with owning firearms for hunting, protection, or just for fun. It is all a matter of the people who own the guns....
I have the same reservations. I would like to see some sort of test to ensure safe handling and proficiency, because times have changed and we don't live in a hunting culture in most parts anymore. But it's also an ideal way for a tyrannical gov't to track down potential opponents, and I don't like that much either. I think the Founding Dads had a point in giving people the right to bear arms, and you pointed it out well above.Rejected said:To me gun control is a pretty complicated issue. The founders of this country set up the second amendment to protect our right to keep and bare arms. This wasn't to protect our right to hunt, or for sport shooting. This was to assure that the people had the means to protect themselves and their loved ones, and in the event of the government decaying into a destructive burden on the people then the people would have the means to reclaim their rights.
Enter the 20th century and we now have automatic weapons and the like. There is no reason other than for military purposes for a private citizen to own and use these weapons. They were designed for one thing.
To take a human life.
And as reprehensible as that always is, sometimes it is necessary.
"The tree of liberty must be watered from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants alike" - Thomas Jefferson.
It is the government who should live in fear of the people, not the other way around.
I dont like saying that we should require licensing to own firearms or that any sort of firearms should be banned, but at the same time I don't like the idea of just anyone running around with an automatic weapon.
Depending on where you go, you can plop down the cash and walk out with the gun. Admittedly, I have more of a problem with handguns than, say, your average hunting rifle.I don't own any guns, yet, so Im not sure what the protocol for approving or rejecting applicants is.
Precisely why I would prefer to leave well enough alone.It just seems to me that the requirement of a license is an easy way for Uncle Sam to pick who gets the guns and who doesn't. That way they don't have to worry about open revolt when the people finally get sick of the bulls*it because they will have taken away any viable threat.
It's the necessary purpose and function of the government to regulate citizen's behaviors relative to each other. To imply that this is somehow unnecessary, or not the government's place is foolish. Human beings have lived with government, and without it, and so far we have found that living with reasonable government is much preferred.NeoWayland said:I wanted to see how this thread would shape up.
I think it says a lot about the people here that 1) they can discuss this rationally without getting in each other's faces, and 2) some of you recognize that inherent danger in giving government the authority to decide who gets to have a gun.
Historically, that power over guns has been extended to deciding who gets to own property, vote, or even speak.
Inflict government on someone today, and don't be surprised if someone else inflicts it on you tomorrow.
I am a big believer in the free market, the voluntary exchange of goods and services. That is even more important with ideas. That is why it is so vital to talk things out without fighting whenever we can.
Libertarians go by something called the Nonaggression Principle. "Thou shalt not initiate force." In most cases, I think it is a great idea. The flip side is that once someone else starts the fight, you should defend yourself with everything at your disposal.
PureX said:It's the necessary purpose and function of the government to regulate citizen's behaviors relative to each other. To imply that this is somehow unnecessary, or not the government's place is foolish. Human beings have lived with government, and without it, and so far we have found that living with reasonable government is much preferred.
PureX said:I agree with you that we must have some method of changing or even eliminating the present structure of government if it should become tyrannical, but for one thing I don't believe that we have reached anything like that here in the U.S., nor are we about to. And if I'm wrong about that, I'm quite certain that the American military will never act against American citizens. So the argument for idiots being allowed to have guns based on the possibility of our needing to fight our own government is a very weak argument, indeed.
PureX said:I don't know what free markets have to do with any of this, but just as it's necessary for the government to regulate, say, property rights, it's also necessary for the government to regulate commerce. And for exactly the same reasons: that we have found and decided that anarchy is not the way we wish to live.
PureX said:The whole purpose of government in the United States is to protect us from each other, and from the threats of other nations. And we need protected economically just as we need protected physically, and with violent force if necessary.
PureX said:My point is that if a citizen want's the right to act as a policeman (use deadly force against "criminals"), then he/she should be trained like a policeman, and should be held accountable like a policeman. And if he/she can't make the grade, then they shouldn't be given the responsibility. We don't let children drive automobiles because they're too dangerous for children. And the same necessity for regulation is true of fire arms. Even moreso.
The thing I've found so surprising with the US, are the instances where the criminals have been better equipped than the police. There have been several instances (the documentary I was watching a couple of months ago outlined about half a dozen), where the police had to commandeer weapons from nearby gun stores in order to be able to deal with people considerably better armed than they were.Rejected said:I dont like saying that we should require licensing to own firearms or that any sort of firearms should be banned, but at the same time I don't like the idea of just anyone running around with an automatic weapon.