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Below Comments Relate to this Newslink:
Experts Debate Second Amendment’s Effects on Equality, Inequality in the United States
Submitted by:
Mark A. Taff
Website: http://www.marktaff.com
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Carol Anderson is the Charles Howard Candler professor of African American Studies at Emory University. Her latest book is “The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America.”
Anderson says when she looks at the Second Amendment, she focuses on how the fear of an uprising of enslaved people drove the creation of the amendment. “You had in the Virginia constitutional ratification amendment, Patrick Henry and George Mason arguing that the control of a militia that James Madison had put into the Constitution would leave slaveholders defenseless because you could not trust the federal government to organize the militia and send the militia down if there was a massive slave revolt,” she says. |
Comment by:
MarkHamTownsend
(8/19/2021)
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What a bunch of stier-scheisse. The second amendment was ratified because the British attempted to disarm the Colonists (among other assaults on liberty) and the Founders wanted to protect Americans' right to keep and bear arms so they could resist a tyrannical government.
No one is justifying slavery, it was a vile, horrible institution, but trying to argue it was used to justify the second amendment is unbelievably deceitful and completely unnecessary. |
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QUOTES
TO REMEMBER |
By calling attention to a well-regulated militia for the security of the Nation, and the right of each citizen to keep and bear arms, our Founding Fathers recognized the essentially civilian nature of our economy. Although it is extremely unlikely that the fears of governmental tyranny, which gave rise to the second amendment, will ever be a major danger to our Nation, the amendment still remains an important declaration of our basic military-civilian relationships, in which every citizen must be ready to participate in the defense of the country. For that reason I believe the second amendment will always be important. --JOHN F. KENNEDY |
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