Moderator: Dictators in Training
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Minrott wrote:About machine guns. People can't get liscenses to own machine guns. Because a license to own a machine gun is not required.
Minrott wrote:The only way Congress could (semi)legally control machine guns or other NFA regulated weapons is by using Interstate Commerce. Not by saying "this type of gun is illegal." So they taxed them. They put a cost prohibitive (at the time, 1934) tax of $200 per weapon on them. This is where the BATF came from. Treasury agents with time on their hands after prohibition started enforcing this obscure and generally unrecognized law. Eventually the agency was formed. The whole reason behind Waco is because those poor people were in posession of guns that required a $200 tax they had not payed. Not because the guns were against the law to own.
You can get a license to deal or manufacture NFA weapons, which is a Federal Firearms License coupled with a Special Occupational Tax #2 (manufacturer) or #3 (dealer). But any non-felon civilian living in a state that does not ban the weapon may own an NFA regulated weapon.
Minrott wrote:It would be interesting to note here that since 1934 only 1, one single crime has been committed with a legally owned machine gun, and that was committed by an off duty police officer, and no one was injured. Can Corvettes claim that track record of safety?
Finally, no, for the next two years I do not see a change in gun laws happening. That's why I'm going to be using this time wisely buy buying and storing what they DID ban in 1994, buy reloading as much ammunition as possible and preparing for the worst in '08. Because believe you me, Nancy Pelosi, Schumer and Feinstein are rabidly anti gun, and will force their hand with a Democratic president.
I was asked to explain my position and I believe I've done so coherently and politely. I never started this with the intention of changing anyones mind. Most people are either so engrained in their position, or completely uneducated on it that they refuse to look at evidence or facts, much less at what can be considered simply my opinion. However if I opened anyones eyes to simply see my side and why I believe what I do (because about 50% of the gun owning community believes what I do, the rest couldn't care less what happened as long as they get to keep their deer rifle) then I'm happy to have said my piece.
I believe in personal responsibility and liability. I believe in the rights gauranteed me, because they were gauranteed me with just as much reason as freedom of speech and assembly. I believe that any further infringment on these rights is a downhill slope to fascism, and that's why I'm as unbending in my beliefs as I appear to be.
Minrott wrote:
Tikker, you and Zanchief must be the minority in Canada then. I seem to remember how when your government spent some billions of dollars on a registration program that should have encompassed millions of privately owned guns, but only a few hundred thousand could be found.
Tikker wrote:more to the point, why would a regular citizen NEED a M16?
it's only purpose is to kill people. again, guns aren't defensive weapons, only offensive
and Minrott
why do people need weapons other than for hunting?
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
"Need" is an irrelevant consideration.
Minrott wrote:I've explained repeatedly my reasoning Tikker.
Since this seems to be a fairly intelligent discussion I'll play. Usually this topic goes right down the shitter.
First of all, Evermore, unless you live in a state that requires registration of firearms, and very few do, none of your guns are "registered." Registration of guns is illegal by the federal government. There are cases of the BATF going to gun stores and filing the NICS they have to keep by law, but by doing that they're committing an illegal act, no one seems to care though because they are a government agency.
Zanchief: My "fanatic" belief in gun ownership stems from the idea that governments in power will always, eventually become toletarian over time. It's just a nature of human history that those in power want more and eventually try to get it. The checks and balances of the American system slow this process down, but they do not stop it. The final check and balance of any governmental system is the citizens of the country, when they stand up and say, "No, enough is enough, we demand change and we are willing to fight for it."
In every, single case of toletarian regimes over recorded human history, the first step of the government in power was to remove small arms from the citizenship. Every single time. Whether it had been rifles, or muskets, or swords, the first step for total control is to disarm the populace of the military style weapons of the time period. Our revolutionary war started long before some tea was spilled over the port side of a schooner in Boston. It began when the British started confiscating muskets.
The entire reasoning behind the Second Amendment is to protect this citizens rights to keep and bear military small arms of the time period. It has nothing to do with hunting. It has nothing to do with target shooting or other recreation.
You state I disagree with "any reasonable control." This isn't true. I do believe in reasonable controls. Some things I consider reasonable and feasible are instant back ground checks. I don't have any problem with my gun dealer calling the FBI and running my SSN to find out that in fact no, I have not committed a felony and show no reason to believe that I would use the gun I intend to purchase in a crime. That's perfectly acceptable to me. However, outright bans on certain types of firearms have absolutely no effect on crime. I cannot abide by laws that make me a criminal for simply owning something, when I haven't committed any crime.
Guns are inanimate objects that require the will of a person to do bad or good. The banning of firearms is just another way of taking personal responsibility for actions out of the hands of people. The spoon made Rosey O'Donnel fat.
Lyion once made a comment on this discussion previously that what did I think, "we should allow people to have artillery pieces in their front lawn to fire off at the government every time they don't agree with what's happened?"
Not in that context. But if you look back at when the Bill of Rights were drafted, the revolutionary government was using privateers and regular civilians as their navy. These people were in posession of cannons and small (2inch) guns and the purpose of the law was to make such a thing legal. In the entire history of our country, the firearm industry has been driven by civilians dating back to this precident.
Nothing in the U.S. Army's small arms arsenal today came from government development. The M16 system of firearms was invented by Eugene Stoner and Armalite, civilians. The Beretta M9 by Beretta of Italy, a civilian company. The M249 SAW by FN Herstal, a civilian company. The M240B or MAG58 by FN Herstal. The M40A1 by Remington, the oldest civilian arms maker in the country.
To say that only the military or police should own/have certain kinds of firearms destroys this industry, destroys any advancement or competition. By saying that I, as an American citizen cannot own a military type rifle, you're saying that I cannot invent one, I can't develop one or start a business with the idea of landing military contracts. That's about as un-American of a thing as I can think of.
The bottom line is that I believe firearms are a necessary part of not just American culture, but a civil right that is not to be denied by governmental devices, and that when it is denied, it's a precursor to toletarian regimes.
If you're concerned with crime, then fight crime. If I were a criminal, or I was going to commit a crime in a fit of rage, I certainly wouldn't be concerned with whether or not the tool I was going to use in the comission of said crime was legal to own or not.
Drugs are illegal, but not to hard to get. Booze was illegal, but wasn't too hard to get. Bans on any substance or thing that people want to have never work, and only serve to create more criminals by the stroke of a pen.
I don't want a missle launcher or other "Destructive Devices." I want what my constitution gives me a gaurantee of, and that is the military small arms of the day.
Tikker wrote:what happened that you feel the need to have to defend yourself constantly?
why are you so distrustful of your democratically elected government that you feel the need to stand on guard?
Arlos wrote:Leuyen, the difference between ID for voting and ID for owning a gun are 2 fundamentally different things.
Voting is the fundamental underpinning of our society. It is THE cornerstone upon which our entire system of government is based. As such, access to it needs to be as free and as unfettered as possible, with no impediments whatsoever. Also, I feel that voter fraud, while existant, is a fairly negligible factor when compared to the overall number of votes cast.
The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
Minrott wrote:Tikker wrote:what happened that you feel the need to have to defend yourself constantly?
why are you so distrustful of your democratically elected government that you feel the need to stand on guard?
It's not that I feel the need to constantly stand guard for myself. I feel an inherent need to be allowed to do so when necessary. I'd rather have a gun and not need it than need it and not have it, so to speak.
Minrott wrote:Tikker wrote:what happened that you feel the need to have to defend yourself constantly?
why are you so distrustful of your democratically elected government that you feel the need to stand on guard?
It's not that I feel the need to constantly stand guard for myself. I feel an inherent need to be allowed to do so when necessary. I'd rather have a gun and not need it than need it and not have it, so to speak.
I'm distrustful of my democratically elected government for a number of reasons. First, I don't think anyone in their right mind should fully trust those with the power of government. History has shown repeatedly, dare I say in every case that when citizens let goverments become too powerful, it ends up poorly for the citizens. Second, I believe the US government has strayed too far from it's original path, ever since FDR, and Federal power has become too great. The more centralized the power, the easier it is for those in power to consolidate and force their will. Third, and most importantly, because of rogue, illegal agencys like the BATFE.
If my democratically elected government not only allows, but funds and stands behind the abhorrent actions committed by an agency like that, how can I not be somewhat afraid that that agency will become even more draconian in it's deeds, or that another, even worse agency is allowed to run wild?Arlos wrote:Leuyen, the difference between ID for voting and ID for owning a gun are 2 fundamentally different things.
Voting is the fundamental underpinning of our society. It is THE cornerstone upon which our entire system of government is based. As such, access to it needs to be as free and as unfettered as possible, with no impediments whatsoever. Also, I feel that voter fraud, while existant, is a fairly negligible factor when compared to the overall number of votes cast.
I would counter that an armed citizenry is the only thing protecting your right to vote Arlos, and without that, the underpinning of our society would be cast away in a few short decades.
It wasn't some crazy redneck who said:The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
That wasn't some stained NASCAR tshirt wearing jackass. That was one of our most important founding fathers.
While I don't believe we're to that point, or even close, I don't understand how it's so hard to fathom we might one day be and protecting our only gaurantee of check on government has just as much importance as voting rights.
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
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