Re: Gun "rights"
TB2K,
Interesting article. Liked it a lot as it makes a fairly logical argument. Unfortunately, every law which limits your "rights" in any way could be considered unconstitutional. I'm not averse to the anarchist philosophy mind you, but if you want to make the "right to bear arms" a natural right, you need to make heroin, cocaine, marijuanna, prostitution, and suicide, natural rights too. Plus a slew of others.
Again, I'm OK with that argument. I'm also OK with some restrictions on those "rights", for the sake of public safety. Some laws limit rights, some protect them, and what the founding fathers felt was appropriate in the 1790's might not be appropriate today. But, guns in the hands of private citizens is not what keeps our government in check today any more than fertilizer is what killed in Oklahoma. It's the people who keep the government in check. Not with guns or bombs. With utilization of the first amendment, education, debate, etc.
What I've learned from this thread is that some states have far too many useless gun laws. These useless or inane gun laws, possibly passed by the "gun fearing city dwellers" have pissed off the people who they adversely affect. I'd ditch them all for some that might actually do <font color=red>some</font color=red> good. Not saying what I've proposed is perfect, it's simply what I feel is reasonable. If you actually read the entire thread /w3tcompact/icons/crazy.gif, you notice I've never attacked the second amendment, or used it's language as the basis of my arguments.
Wingnut,
I told one of my nurses today that she needs to go buy a shotgun. Her plan to protect herself if anyone breaks into her home, involves the loaded pistol under her pillow. She's worked out where she'll stand, and where the intruder will have to go to get into the house etc. Unfortunately, if she misses her target, the bullet is going into the neighbors house. Now the odds of anyone breaking in to her home and causing this to happen are so small, that I'm not really concerned for the neighbors from a practical point of view. But she's an example of some of the people in urban areas who buy guns. I took her case, and the lifetime hunter in rural West Virginia into account when I argued what I felt was reasonable. I appreciate that many people felt it was not reasonable. But my nurse is not as rare as you think. She's not even the only nurse I have working for me, with a pistol in their room, to whom I've suggested the dog and shotgun to. So I take some offense, very minimal mind you, to being grouped with the gun haters. You're dealing with a guy who almost bought a Colt 10mm just because it's a cool caliber and I thought they'd stop making them with everything going to 9mm. Decided it cost to much ported and equiped how I wanted it for target shooting. Since I have no need for a gun, didn't buy one. I don't, however, dislike guns.
I think I'm fairly tollerant of just about anything that isn't intrinsically destructive or harmful. The only thing I really have a hard time with in life is stupidity. If I saw less of it in my daily encounters, I probably wouldn't feel a safety course in guns and ammo was necessary or useful. Wish that were the case!!
So should be legalize prostitution and marijuanna. (please G-d, let this change the subject so I can stop writing a dissertation each night/w3tcompact/icons/tongue.gif).
Todd