WookieOnRitalin wrote:MrSparkle wrote:Almost Retired wrote:The "Militia Argument" has been considered and has been found to be descriptive preliminary language that does not restrict the right to bear arms in the language after the comma. The Founders had a greater command of the English language than most of our current citizens. Had they intended to limit gun ownership to militia membership they could have and would have specified that in plain language. The America of 1783 was spreading rapidly west, and settlers frequently encountered hostile native Americans (understandably hostile I might add). There were many Founders who did not favor a standing army. The westward pioneers were on their own unless they banded together with other western bound migrants. It would have been unthinkable in that era that each man would not have the right to own weapons for protection. The key to the whole Constitution is that we as human have certain rights that are endowed by our Creator...among them life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Government doesn't confer these rights to us. They are innate to us from the moment of our birth. The Bill of Rights spells out particular areas where the government cannot negate our fundamental rights. If we have the right to life and liberty then we must as a consequence of this also have the right to protect our own life. Thus the Second Amendment. Our right to bear arms shall not be infringed. And if we did not have this fundamental right then many of our other rights provided for in the Bill of Rights would have also been in jeopardy over the 240 years since the Constitution was written by men much smarter than ourselves.
The kids murdered in Highland Park and Uvalde sure had the right to life, liberty and a pursuit of happiness. By your statement, you suggest that innate from birth they should all been trained to use weapons and all should've been armed to protect themselves, since they have the right to protect their own life. Sounds like a bizarre dystopia. A gun is a tool for killing or threatening to kill someone. Problem is most gun instances are crimes, not self-defense. 2018: 484,800 gun-crimes, 70,040 self-defense. I would classify it as a criminal tool more than a defense tool. That'd be akin to stats showing that people use their cars to commit crimes about 7x as often as driving to work. Tools have different purposes, but they ultimately have one primary purpose in reality, and citizens' guns don't serve the purpose that the NRA seems hell bent on arguing - all empirical evidence suggests as much.
Westward pioneers were traveling beyond US territory, fighting natives on in lawless country. USA wasn't even officially exploring the West until the 1800s. You know that the right to bear arms had everything to do with the revolutionary nature of the founding of America, and it was a particular sticking point to preventing monarch-style oppression in the new country. Made a lot of sense back then.
Still makes sense in some ways, but we all know that this gun debate is about "gun control" not a "gun ban" - common sense updates to laws that were made in a different time period, by smart men who wrote the constitution in a way that was intended to be flexible and updated to modern times by the majority of the population. Currently as I look at USA polling, a majority of the population wants gun control laws for mentally ill, harder permits and licensing, and restricting military grade weapons and assault rifles to the general public.
Keep in mind that the majority of gun violence is committed by African Americans against....African Americans. A high number of them are young men as well (adding to the "child" statistics which I would call young adult).
So STILL one of the biggest problems with gun violence is that it disproportionately impacts poor, black communities. The problem is not the gun, but rather the cycle of violence within these communities (Read Fist, Stick, Knife, Gun by Geoffery Canada).
As to the bolded statement, I believe you can win a lot of hearts and minds on these issues and I believe state legislatures are catching up to this by passing laws to do so.
But here's a point for consideration. A large majority of the total gun violence is committed in urban centers where they already have pretty high levels of gun control. Again, the issue being that the majority of these homicides are being committed with handguns and not higher capacity weapons.
Poverty and segregation amplify nearly every social ill we have. Gun violence, environmental decline, healthcare access, housing...
That doesn't mean society on the whole isn't harmed by guns, climate change, a broken healthcare system and the housing shortage.
So yeah, by all means -- let's put serious resources toward addressing inequality. But the Black on Black violence or "what about Chicago?" stuff is largely a diversion.
P.S. Geoffrey Canada is an opportunist first and foremost. He's not a serious thinker on education, community violence or anything else, really.













