Go7enKs wrote:grumpysaddle wrote:I never said people who own guns own them "to kill." I said nobody other than law enforcement should have the power of a gun. If everyone had a gun to protect themselves it makes law enforcement a waste of tax payer money.
you keep mentioning this and it keeps irritating me. have you ever heard the quote, "power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely"? if law enforcement/military are the only ones, without a doubt, that have guns... what's to stop them from completely abusing their power?
This argument is lame. Only because a government agency has a power doesn't mean that the citizens should have it too to balance it. If this argument was always true you could say that average citizens should have the right to judge other citizens for their crimes or misbehavior, outside the existing legal channels. In other words, you would be approving "eye for an eye". In a democracy there are certain powers that are not and should not be given to the population. That's it, it is just the way it is. And it is like that because every government in a democracy is legitimated by having been elected by the people of that country, who, by voting, have yielded power to that government.
first of all... the united states is a republic. it's a common misconception that it is a democracy. if this were a democracy, united states citizens would be the ones passing all laws and government issues through things like town hall meetings, etc. refer to the quote below from The Federalist #10... Friday, November 23, 1787. Author: James Madison
"The United States is, indeed, a republic, not a democracy. Accurately defined, a democracy is a form of government in which the people decide policy matters directly--through town hall meetings or by voting on ballot initiatives and referendums. A republic, on the other hand, is a system in which the people choose representatives who, in turn, make policy decisions on their behalf. The Framers of the Constitution were altogether fearful of pure democracy. Everything they read and studied taught them that pure democracies "have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths."
next... i fail to see how my argument is "lame". the reason the right to bear arms is NUMBER 2 in the ol' constitution is for good reason. americans, after the revolution against britain, were fearful of governments with too much power. they overcame this through a war and didn't want anything like that to happen again. if the american's own government became too powerful and abusive, citizens had the means to be able to defend themselves against those abuses. there is nothing written in the constitution saying that the average citizen will be able to become judge and jury (actually citizens ARE juries of peers that inevitably decide one's fate through deliberation).
there will always be abuse of power by certain individuals. guns ARE power. while in an impossible utopian society, everyone getting rid of their weapons would be all fine and dandy. it's just not realistic. bad people are going to have weapons regardless of if they are legal or not. (whether those bad people end up being criminals or those in power), should good people also not have the morally just way of defending themselves with their own firearms?