Zakharra wrote:I'm sure every Chief Justice on the US Supreme Court has a much better legal background in US law and the Constitution than you do.
So, lets see here then...
In a case where the determining factor is a matter of linguistics, you choose to ignore what someone who is a linguist says, who has worked professionally, even specifically worked with historical documents of the same era, in two languages, someone who has zero personal attachment to what the ruling actually is, in favour of a legal specialist that is about as likely to be 100% unbiased as the ocean is to be dry?
Yeah, great logic there.
Doesn´t matter how much law they know if they can´t read properly. Or more likely, doesn´t WANT to read properly.
Lets do it quick and simple shall we:
"
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state,
the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."
Now, please read that a few times. Then try reading just the blue text, and STOP at the end of that.
Unless you´re completely illiterate, you should notice that reading the blue text on its own does not provide a complete text.
And it is clearly written thusly very intentionally.
If all they wanted was to say that everyone has the right to keep and bear arms, that could easily have been written as semiseparate text, but as it is, the two parts can NOT be cut apart, as doing so kills context completely and makes the first part deficient and the second part linguistically questionable.
Which of course reinforces what should be bloody obvious, that the text is written as a complete whole, not to be cut apart and played with in suitably itty bitty small pieces that you can claim means whatever you wish.
Now then that we have established that little detail to anyone who didn´t flunk English for dummies, why don´t you tell me exactly how that context is supposed to be read to maintain legal separation between militia and people in the meaning of the text?
Answer is, you CANNOT. Not without butchering the language or being seriously dishonest.
Not to mention how to evade the contextual connection between militia and state in the text. That would take a ridiculous amount of verbal acrobatics as well. Or bias and/or dishonesty.
Oh yes, your constant insistence about how the reason for this right is for the population to limit the state...
It doesn´t say necessary for a free state (which would still be highly questionable to claim that it says what you claim it says but would at least give you a hint of possibility), it blatantly clearly says necessary for the SECURITY of a free state.
Meaning that your assertion in that regard doesn´t have any basis in reality.
Play with your guns as much as you want, have fun. Please just do it safely.
But don´t try to claim that the 2nd amendment or the intent of those who wrote it is what you gives you any right to play with your guns. Because that´s just rubbish.
Corruption and politics is currently the basis for that "right".
Zakharra wrote:Like it or not, and it's clear you don't like it since you argue so vehemently against it
Are you having trouble with basic comprehension?
1. I couldn´t care less how you do it in USA as long as you´re not complete idiots about it.
2. PERSONALLY, i´m somewhat against any restrictions not based on safety.
But of course, it´s easier for you to reject reality if you claim i´m opposed to guns no matter what. Which is a lie and i have repeatedly noted such. So maybe you should just stop repeating the lie?
Or does that leave you too much without arguments?
Zakharra wrote:the 2nd Amendment is an individual's right
Only if you´re inept at English.
Zakharra wrote:Restricting firearms as you and others wish,
Quit the lies. You have clearly failed basic comprehension, as i have definitely never said i want to restrict firearms.
Zakharra wrote:The British, at the time, were the legal government. They tried to disarm the citizens, who rebelled and fought back using [i]their own weapons[/u] and those captured from the British.
Nice creation myth. About as much truth in it as in other creation myths.
Zakharra wrote:Most of the soldiers who fought on the US side supplied their own muskets, or were ones they got from dead British, but for the most part, it was common ordinary citizens who fought the British under the Colonial officers, militia formed by ordinary citizens.
Ah yes, organised militias that trained at least somewhat properly, supported by their cities. Supplied and getting a BIG chunk of its weapons from Europe, especially heavy weapons.
While it´s not really true, i do find the saying "amateurs study strategy, professionals study logistics" rather a suitable counterpoint to your statement.
Zakharra wrote:The minute Men, now an organized army by any means
Exactly. "Well organised militia". Organised by the proto-state of USA. This is nowhere near "population with guns" that you keep yearning so for.
The minute men trained a lot to be effective.
And their leadership ranged from professional to pathetic. Often depending on how much training they had the chance to get in before ending up in action.
Zakharra wrote:but the local men in the area grabbing their hunting musket (there was little difference in use between a hunting weapon and war musket except maybe the war one might have a nub for a bayonet. Otherwise they were the same, useable for hunting or war and just as effective in either).
An army with nothing but muskets would have died quickly.
And a large portion of those men got their weapons from elsewhere. Claims of how large portion of personal firearms originated from their homes range from 10-ish to 60-ish%.
A third or a fourth is probably a realistic guesstimate.
Maybe you need to check where militias were formed, and just exactly how common it was among urban people to have guns useful for military purposes at home?
Sheesh, myths are very annoying. And USA have waaayyy too many.
Zakharra wrote:Bottom line is they were fighting against a corrupt government that wanted to disarm them.
Oh god...
1. Only reason the US revolution was successful was because the British were far more busy elsewhere.
2. The American colonies were exactly that, COLONIES. Effectively not your government at all. Which is why enough people could agree on opposing it.
3. The American colonies were much too far from the center of gravity(or government) for the British to prioritize it. The colonies were essentially expendable even if it took some time for that to be commonly realised.
4. Had the revolution been against a local government that actually had a critical stake in keeping control, it would have died embarassingly quickly.
Zakharra wrote:And the Founders ensured that the people would have the ability to defend themselves again if it happened, by either invaders or by their own government.
The founders wanted a staterun militia and no army unless i seriously missrecall.
Zakharra wrote:and I can confidently say that anyone that tried to invade the US would be in for one HELL of a headache. Hunting rifles make good sniper rifles and it would cost them a hell of a lot of casualties to take over the country.
You´re seriously delusional in this.
The point of contact will only become large enough for individual snipers to matter at all, when most of your country is already conquered.
Ok, lets be very simple about this, for comparison, the region i live in, warping the borders a bit results in the presence of about 50000 rifles. The local homeguard commander considers those "mostly irrelevant" and an "insignicant force" compared to his couple of thousand homeguard personnel.
People with guns are irrelevant. People with guns that also have military training MAY be relevant.
People with guns who are part of a military or para-military force that they have trained with and have the needed support, supply and heavy weapons, that´s when you start getting relevant.
Otherwise it´s just dead people who haven´t figured out they´re dead yet.
Zakharra wrote:And if our government tried to impose a dictatorship on its citizens? Civil war and you can't claim that the US military would side with the President.
With all the religious worship of authority figures in USA? *lol*
And GWB already effectively did impose such a thing for a while, and almost noone even said anything in opposition. Because hey, national security!
Do you seriously believe that ALL US military and civillians with weapons would AGREE on whether someone is "imposing a dictatorship"?
Do you really believe that anyone stupid enough to think they could actually do a "hostile take over" of the government and get away with it, could get the political support to get there?
Its tragically funny though that Obama gets called dictatorial when he keeps doing something GWB did.
Not that he might not be dictatorial, it´s just sad that people just ignore who came up with most of the ideas.
Zakharra wrote:Over all you have the view of a foreigner. To you, our laws and many rights look odd
"Oh my, those quaint foreigners don´t understand anything"... And heeellooo arrogance.
The fact that i actually have more rights here, that obviously doesn´t matter.
Zakharra wrote:and to you, there might not be any need for those right(s)
Helloooo? We just happen to have "those rights" here as well.
Zakharra wrote:I am not and never will be a European.
And may i say thank the gods for that.
Zakharra wrote:otherwise, please leave.
Up yours.
Freedom of speech you know. It goes both ways. Whether you want it or not.
I would strongly suggest you do not try to give people orders when your delusional and have no authority to do so.
Zakharra wrote:My main issue with Tenishinia is he seems to be saying that some rights like the 2nd are obsolete and outdated and should be removed
And again you prove that you are apparently unable to read and understand the written word.
Never said or wrote such a thing.
2nd amendment does not say what you claim it does, and it does not say what US law currently says it does(by extension), either you need to disconnect the laws from the amendment(and as they effectively govern different matters that shouldn´t be hard ), or modify laws if you insist on following the amendment as originally written.
I´ve also stated that parts of the US constitution is obsolete and outdated, mostly in regards to form of government and elections, because they simply don´t work well due to change in technology.
Inability to change is nearly always a clear sign of impending collapse.
Zakharra wrote:as well as the one on free speech(when its used against them)
You mean like you want to do? And your obsession about conspiracy theories with the EBIL DEMOCRATS as the horribly nasty guys are getting seriously ridiculous.
Sheesh, what are you, a teaparty nutjob?
Zakharra wrote:but it went on a lot longer than it would have if so much of the population hadn't been armed.
Impossible to say. And since the majority of weapons used were probably imported ones, probably not true.
Zakharra wrote:It also ties into the history of the growth of the Us where often it was the peoples responsibility to provide for a lot of their own protection, when the police or army outposts can be hours/days away, you have to have something to defend yourself on hand.
And this just shows off even more just how thoroughly indoctrinated you are with the big myth.
Because it wasn´t the outback that made the revolution, it was the east coast towns and cities. The places where police and army did exist.
Zakharra wrote:A disarmed populous is a weaker one.
Why don´t you take that up with Ghandi?