Saturday, September 14, 2013

Second Amendment Win

Tails of the Gun  

Why Second Amendment Supporters are Winning

Res Ipsa Loquitor

In The Atlantic, Molly Ball writes a thoughtful article about the recall elections in Colorado, and the effects of those elections on citizen disarmament efforts.  Titled  "The Death of Gun Control" it is a somber article with the clear assumption that those who push citizen disarmament are on the morally correct side:
 
  I only wish that this one election was really 'the death' of the gun control industry. This failed and discredited, ex-hippy dogma needs to die. It has no rational basis, and it's legacy is one of needless death and suffering by innocents prevented from defending their own lives, and those of others.

The gun control industry itself is funded and directed by a few elite billionaires like Bloomberg and Soros. It's staff is a bunch of highly paid lobbyists, lawyers and 'advocates' clustered around D.C. and various state capitals. ...  Spencer60
[...]
Spencer60's comments destroy Molly Ball's assumptions about citizen disarmament.  Anyone who seriously looks at the data comes away with the same conclusion: citizen disarmament has no rational basis if you accept its stated purposes.   A rational basis for it can only be found if you accept unfounded, unstated assumptions about reality that have not stood the test of real world implementation. Here are some of those assumptions:
  • The state is a beneficent entity that will never turn against its own citizens.
  • Guns in the hands of ordinary people result in higher crime rates, particularly homicide rates.
  • The only benefits that guns offer society can easily be achieved with high levels of regulation and control by the state, and significantly lower levels of gun ownership.
  • Defense of self and home by armed citizens is such a rare and unusual event that it is overwhelmed by the increased crime resulting from more gun ownership.
  • And, of course, the ultimate result of such assumptions:
  • Any regulation or law that reduces the number of guns outside the control of the state, or which makes it more burdensome for citizens to acquire, own or use guns (which amounts to the same thing) is a public good.
[Full Gun Watch Article- a good reead]

Several years ago I posted a ca 1900 article I found (but cannot now)  in a NRA mag.  It was about gun control legislation groupies.  It will never end.  The "eternal vigilance" thing is key.  click click


3 comments:

leelu said...

The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. Sadly, the price of eternal vigilance is eternal boredom. Somehow we have to stay on top of this stuff.

I believe that you can educate the heck out of each generation, making one as PC as possible, buy girls will still play with dolls, boys will make finger guns, some parents will get their panties in a wad, and others will go "Eh."

Juice said...

Anyone with half a brain understands self-defense against anyone or anything that threatens one's security or life. This is what Big Government gets. And that's why it is their political obstacle.

Anonymous said...

The state is a beneficent entity that will never turn against its own citizens.
Ask the Bonus Army about that. In 1932, thousands of WW1 veterans came to DC, camped on Anacostia flats, marched on the Capitol demanding to be paid their bonuses promised in law by Congress, now denied by President Hoover. Hoover sent troops, equipped with rifles and bayonets, tanks, and cavalry with sabers, led by Chief of staff MacArthur to disburse the vets. With gas and fixed bayonets, the Army drove the unarmed veterans out of town and against orders, crossed over into Maryland, drove the vets from their camp and burned it to the ground.
Two veterans were killed and many more were injured.
In 1936, 17 years after the doughboys came home from the war, Congress granted the bonuses, Roosevelt vetoed the act, and Congress overrode the veto to fullfill a long overdue promise.
Lt. Col. Gen. Tailgunner dick

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