tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4321534012888636142.post3760221278908939702..comments2023-03-25T05:29:07.819-07:00Comments on Scribbler's Scrawls: Latest and GreatestThe Scribblerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13759199694035145628noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4321534012888636142.post-56876216307930337902009-02-25T18:19:00.000-08:002009-02-25T18:19:00.000-08:00nice david. you sound older than you really are. ...nice david. you sound older than you really are. although, that may not be a good thing.<br><br>I understand why the second amendment was written, and I have no problem with the original intention. However, it is extremely complicated to translate this kind of intention into the modern context. Yes, we don't need to hunt, and there are no direct militaristic threats coming from Britain anymore. If anything, there is an economic-political threat rising from the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, and China). Yet this does not mean we should raise arms against them. As a world civilization, we have learned that force is never the best idea, especially when it is the first to be considered. That is why many view the Second as somewhat archaic (I am not a member of this group). If anything, my personal offense at the complete freedom to bear arms is the people. I cannot absolutely trust people to use arms against tyranny. I cannot trust them to stop themselves before they execute a crime of passion. One can say that you might as well ban cars, since they can be used in a crime of passion or idiocy (as I often see it) just as easily. However, cars were not made with the intention to kill; guns have always been made with that intention in mind.<br><br>i'm really really tired, so that's all i'll say for now.Jillhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04852640646621589508noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4321534012888636142.post-70812981800352441332009-02-28T12:14:00.000-08:002009-02-28T12:14:00.000-08:00I'm really not going to comment too heavily on...I'm really not going to comment too heavily on this because you know more, care more, and have different views than me and I don't want to get into an argument.<br>=]<br>I still love you though. =]<br>~c..your worst nightmare.http://www.blogger.com/profile/00198645157064773014noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4321534012888636142.post-74674320635781449912009-08-13T21:52:40.996-07:002009-08-13T21:52:40.996-07:00I think the 2nd Amendment is really about the righ...I think the 2nd Amendment is really about the right of the States to maintain a militia, and not necessarily about our individual right to each "bear arms." I think Jill is right that it is difficult to translate what the founding fathers intended. We do know that the Articles of Confederation worked miserably, and that the Bill of Rights was necessary to ensure the ratification of the Constitution. I know you feel strongly about this right, but it is a right that is so often abused that I am not overly appreciative of it myself. Also, we know that the Constitution has needed tinkering in the past (little things like accepting women & other races as equal citizens). As people are so passionate about this particular little amendment, my guess is that it is here to stay. But I do not feel safer knowing it.sparhawk14http://www.blogger.com/profile/15608167064272636461noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4321534012888636142.post-8276319898617996892009-08-13T22:14:37.788-07:002009-08-13T22:14:37.788-07:00There are myriad arguments as to why it is an indi...There are myriad arguments as to why it is an individual right, from linguistic down to ideological, as I covered briefly above. I would be happy to discuss those at a later date with you. I also wonder at the abuse of the right you see. There are hundreds of thousands of people who legally use and carry firearms. These people are safe, intelligent, and courteous. They are not going down the streets randomly shooting people. The people who abuse firearms are criminals. By the fact that they are criminals, they do not follow laws. They do not follow laws of any sort, and do not care what the law says they can and cannot do. <br><br>In terms of crimes of passion, most of those are domestic. I do not know the numbers, so I cannot say for sure, but I have very distinct doubts as to the number of them committed with firearms. Kitchen knives can be just as deadly, and are probably more accessible in a moment of fury anyway, but no one thinks to ban them. (Except England, look up "stab proof knives" sometime)<br><br>As for safety in an armed populace, the numbers consistently show, time and time again, that in areas such as Chicago and Washington DC, places which have had long-standing handgun bans, violent crime rates are astronomically higher. The bans merely disarm the victims. No one ever hears about violent crime in Vermont or Alaska, the only two states to have unrestricted carry, in that if you can legally own a firearm, you can legally carry said firearm. Statistically speaking, a population with the right to bear arms IS safer. For everyone.The Scribblerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13759199694035145628noreply@blogger.com