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The
Below Comments Relate to this Newslink:
An inalienable right to bear arms in the States: the enduring mystique of the Second Amendment
Submitted by:
Bruce W. Krafft
Website: http://www.keepandbeararms.com/
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... "Like the documentary journalist Iain Overton, author of this book, I was taught to shoot and maintain a gun as a boy. As an adult I joined a campaign to monitor, curb and limit the arms trade. I taught my children good gun protocols and how to shoot. There is an undeniable pleasure in shooting."
"When I moved to Texas I immediately bought a black powder Navy Colt with which to practise the cowboy spins, rolls and shifts I had learned as a boy. The thing Bible-belt Baptists, Bedouin tribesmen, Brazilian drug-barons and Boer farmers have in common is a love of guns. Guns are in our DNA. Yet statistics prove that, wherever they proliferate, murder and suicide rise and children are killed. ..." ... |
Comment by:
Millwright66
(4/28/2015)
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Truth be told our second amendment isn't germane to this argument. Our "inalienable right" of self defense dates back to the Magna Carta and beyond. There's no "mistique" to to a recognized "right" preceding the advent of firearms in public hands. Our second amendment doesn't describe or delimit "arms" a citizen can bear. At least one patriot used a sword to good effect during our revolution. But, then so did those charged with quelling the rebellion.
Which begs the question why shouldn't current american patriots - i.e. "the militia" (see George Mason) - have unfettered access to similar arms/ammunition/equipment as any light infantry squad in our army ? |
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QUOTES
TO REMEMBER |
There are other things so clearly out of the power of Congress, that the bare recital of them is sufficient, I mean the "...rights of bearing arms for defence, or for killing game..." These things seem to have been inserted among their objections, merely to induce the ignorant to believe that Congress would have a power over such objects and to infer from their being refused a place in the Constitution, their intention to exercise that power to the oppression of the people. —ALEXANDER WHITE (1787) |
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