mockturtle
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Well said, Seraphim!
Great post John. I certainly agree with all you said except one thing. If, God forbid, we ever had to do the unthinkable - overthrow a tyrannical, oppressive government our weapons would not be used against our own military (and I hope our military's arms would not be directed towards the citizens who it is there to defend). They would be used against the tyrant politicians who ignore and usurp the constitution. Look at the success that other insurgencies have had of late. They do this by guerilla tactics. IEDs, drones, cyber attacks, etc. There are strategies to defeat an enemy economically, by bringing down infrastructure so a large standing army could not be supported. It's much easier and cheaper to blow up a bridge, disable an aircraft, take out a powerplant, etc. than to build one. "He who can destroy a thing controls a thing." Paul Maudib, Dune .John_Camping said:My thoughts all IMO only:
1. The second amendment is clearly about defending ourselves as a community from the government not each other, it has evolved into an individual right.
2. I think the fundamental right represented in the modern second amendment is to possess and maintain all reasonable and necessary means of defending ourselves, each other, and our freedoms.
3. I don't think the second amendment has to mean "fire" arms. While they are still sometimes necessary to self defense, and may always be, I hope the day comes when lethal means aren't necessary to that end.
4. If you want to prepare yourself to overthrow an oppressive government forget your guns, an armed uprising against the modern US military is a non-starter. Train your hacking skills and drone skills.
5. The second amendment doesn't defend nor is it necessary to our liberties, it is a result of them. We defend our liberties, not by hoarding bullets but by being informed, voting, paying attention to all threats to our freedoms, and understanding that freedom's price isn't paid by soldiers, it's paid by all American's, civilian and military alike. Why the NRA and people who are vehement about defending ourselves from an oppressive government rage about magazine sizes but don't seem to see the threat in things like the TSA, Patriot Act, or abuses like the ones uncovered by Edward Snowden is beyond me.
Honestly after having watched this country's behavior since 9/11 I think we are failing as a country to defend our freedoms and the NRA is more about political power and big toys that go boom than about defending our freedom.
mockturtle said:If you drove onto my lawn [if I had one] by accident, you might just pay for damages. But if you did it with malicious intent, that's a different story. A neighbor could accidentally let his drone fly into 'my' airspace or he could be deliberately spying. I think I should be able to shoot it down or capture it, like a spy plane that lands in behind enemy lines.
GotSmart said:At what point does looking become spying?
John_Camping said:Firearms are very recent in human history, ranged weapons aren't. Our choice of ranged weapons has evolved over time. There is no reason to think firearms are anything more than a passing fad. We are getting hung up in cultural warfare about SPECS that won't matter anymore than the distinction between muzzle and breech loading weapons does to today's second amendment fights.
I don't know if we need the right to stacks of 100 round clips in a bunker to survive post apocalyptic warfare. But I have seen video of a bunch of machine gun enthusiasts firing at a drone that was just performing evasive maneuvers. It would have been a blood bath if that drone was firing back. Imagine a remote warehouse of soldiers that grew up playing video games each controlling a squad of semi-autonomous drones. I'm far more concerned with making sure it's one where we don't have to fight our government for the principles of freedom we surrendered while getting bogged done in a fight over one weapon.
My own continued thoughts on my own post is that we are getting bogged down in fighting over the rights and weapons of the past century while blindly surrendering vital rights in the digital age.
LeeRevell said:How do you derive "missile launchers" from small arms? First you need a refresher on weapons terminology. Then reread the Second Amendment. Read what it SAYS, not what you wish it said. it is quite simple.
GotSmart said:[font=Verdana, 'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif]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.[/font]
The original draft read this way.
The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed; a well armed and well regulated militia being the best security of a free country but no person religiously scrupulous of bearing arms shall be compelled to render military service in person.
GotSmart said:Is a drone covered in the 2nd amendment I wonder?
sushidog said:Great post John. I certainly agree with all you said except one thing. If, God forbid, we ever had to do the unthinkable - overthrow a tyrannical, oppressive government our weapons would not be used against our own military (and I hope our military's arms would not be directed towards the citizens who it is there to defend). They would be used against the tyrant politicians who ignore and usurp the constitution.
John_Camping said:I wrote the above post then my connection conked before I could send. The direction the conversation has gone since then is interesting. My own continued thoughts on my own post is that we are getting bogged down in fighting over the rights and weapons of the past century while blindly surrendering vital rights in the digital age.
The government has more legal rights to monitor and track us than we do to monitor our own government. Someone mentioned license plates on drones. License plates on cars are a privacy nightmare that most people don't even know about, thanks to modern OCR technology. The comment about using guerilla tactics in asymmetrical warfare was insightful, however I don't think it makes the gun debate anymore central to the future of our freedoms(or the future of the 2nd amendment). As the comment itself points out insurrection does not require robust gun rights. It does however require robust privacy and anti-surveillance capabilities.
Sorry if I'm wandering around I'm just piecing thoughts together and thinking much faster than I'm typing. I stop here for this post, pick apart at will.
The Civil War was not an attempt to overthrow the government, it was an attempt to secede from it, and escape federal restrictions over state policy. It had nothing to do with an oppressive, tyrannical government. Southern states just didn't want the federal government sticking it's nose in their businesses.John_Camping said:I'd like to fish back and derive "missile launchers" from small arms. Reading what it says...
With or without, the original draft it is clear the intent was for the citizenry to maintain some battlefield capability against an organized military. Back then I can't think of a single weapon private individuals didn't have that the military did(enlighten me?). Guns? check Bladed weapons? check Horses? check Ships? check I had thought cannon, then remembered private ships back then were often equipped with... cannon to defend against pirates. We maintained some degree of battlefield parity with slowly decaying experience parity until the invention of machine guns, tanks, fighter jets, ect.
If the original intent of the second amendment is the ability of the citizenry to band together and oppose an army hostile or domestic, does it not stand to reason that the second amendment does include at a minimum reasonable weaponry to counter modern military hardware? Why don't I have a second amendment right to keep a tank in my garage, just in case?
How about code to hack or take down computer networks? Or more crucially, is a firmware restriction against a 3d printer making gun parts a 2nd amendment violation? How about strong encryption, is that a 2nd amendment right? It's a digital weapon, but you can't use a gun to fight an electron.
Regardless of how we feel about the outcome or causes of the civil war, Americans already felt they had to do the unthinkable and overthrow a tyrannical, oppressive government and they did fight their own military. It is possible the military would side with the people, it's possible they would side with the tyrant politicians(aka their chain of command), it's possible the military would be split. Yes, the Egyptians threw out a dictator without facing soldiers in battle. Not to diminish the deaths on the ground, but the Egyptian revolution was information warfare. It was fought in the battle over the flow of information and won as activists found ways around government attempts to silence their message and disrupt their communications. Which only exemplifies the second amendment implications of digital rights.
ps. Wow, that was long...
Seraphim said:I don't think there's any concern about any significant parts of the population engaging in armed conflict against the government, and if it did occur, they would not stand a chance.
Seraphim said:Armed conflict against the government over perceived rights seems like an exercise in futility and/or ignorance, IMO.
Seraphim said:Even robust privacy and anti-surveillance capabilities, in the long run, will have no effect. The government has more resources for tracking "us" than we do "them". Such is life.
Seraphim said:The Civil War was not an attempt to overthrow the government, it was an attempt to secede from it, and escape federal restrictions over state policy.
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