
This kinda sums up the public discussion, I think.
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About as much as a "This is a great place to have someone kill you" sign.jonesthecurl wrote:Um, just a question: how would the second one discourage someone intending to die?Phatscotty wrote:
In an historical context, it does, indeed, say individuals, "the people" have the right to bear arms. First, back then, "militia" was a group of citizen volunteers who brought their supplies with them. Further, it says, "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." It may be that their reasoning was because militia is necessary, but it also doesn't explicitly say, "keep arms while they're acting within the regulations of the militia itself."Night Strike wrote: There's nothing wrong with the way it's currently worded (except that it doesn't explicitly say individuals have the right to bear arms). The current problems are with the people who demand that the government ignore the Constitution and take away the right.

It is public knowledge that these people are cowards. The only reason this coward shot himself was because he heard the police.jonesthecurl wrote:Um, just a question: how would the second one discourage someone intending to die?Phatscotty wrote:
The Constitution provided for the formation of an army, so why would the same document do both? (The Bill of Rights was already planned at the same time the body of the document was being ratified.) And what does being a frontier country have to do with the right to self-protection? Are police in the modern day able to respond to a person in danger in a matter of seconds so that personal weapons aren't necessary?Juan_Bottom wrote:It specifically says "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."Night Strike wrote:There's nothing wrong with the way it's currently worded (except that it doesn't explicitly say individuals have the right to bear arms). The current problems are with the people who demand that the government ignore the Constitution and take away the right.Lootifer wrote:Quote to get a NS/PS answer.Lootifer wrote:Just a little thought experiment. How would you feel about the 2nd amendment being changed to this instead:Night Strike wrote:I'm saying that people should be allowed to have guns for self-protection. Whether that protection is due to assault from a citizen criminal or the government is relatively moot.Symmetry wrote: So, if I'm getting this right, you're saying that you want guns so that people can overthrow the democratically elected government by sheer firepower?
- You have a right to bear arms in respect to personal protection from criminal activity (you can word it however you like)
- Some allowance for sports and recreational use of firearms
- If the government is not a fair and democratic representation of the population, and that government seeks to remain in control through non-democratic process, then the control of the powers of national defense shall be passed over to the people; all defense force personal shall be free to use themselves and their relevant resources to overthrow the tyranical government.
And it was written for a time long ago when the United States had no army and was a frontier country.
Because the other 8 of the first 9 amendments were all applicable to the individual, so it's completely logical to understand that individual citizens also held the right to own guns and that such a right didn't belong only to government-sanctioned groups.Juan_Bottom wrote:There's a good case to be made here, from the perspective's of the battle of Lexington and Concord. Of course, the supreme court ruled that the right to own a gun has nothing to do with militia's or army's. I seriously question that the Supreme Court paid any mind to the historical context of the words written.
I know that, but that historical context and intent tend to mean little or nothing to the people who want to reinterpret everything the Constitution says. At least if it had specifically said "individuals", there would be one fewer area for people who want to take away rights to go after.stahrgazer wrote:In an historical context, it does, indeed, say individuals, "the people" have the right to bear arms. First, back then, "militia" was a group of citizen volunteers who brought their supplies with them. Further, it says, "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." It may be that their reasoning was because militia is necessary, but it also doesn't explicitly say, "keep arms while they're acting within the regulations of the militia itself."Night Strike wrote: There's nothing wrong with the way it's currently worded (except that it doesn't explicitly say individuals have the right to bear arms). The current problems are with the people who demand that the government ignore the Constitution and take away the right.
I don't believe the Constitution gives people the right to own guns!?Symmetry wrote:Interpretation of the constitution is a big part of law, indeed it's pretty much the job of judges, NS. For example, you are under the impression that the US constitution gives people the right to own guns. This is not mentioned in the constitution, or any of it's amendments. You're going with an interpretation of one of the amendments to the constitution.
Whether that;s a fair interpretation is up up for debate. I don't think it is, and despite your hyperbole, I don't think you do either.
Given that only you appear to understand the constitution, I'm not surprised that foreigners find your take on it baffling. Few people have the psychic link to the founding fathers and the authors of every amendment that you have, even within the US.Night Strike wrote:I don't believe the Constitution gives people the right to own guns!?Symmetry wrote:Interpretation of the constitution is a big part of law, indeed it's pretty much the job of judges, NS. For example, you are under the impression that the US constitution gives people the right to own guns. This is not mentioned in the constitution, or any of it's amendments. You're going with an interpretation of one of the amendments to the constitution.
Whether that;s a fair interpretation is up up for debate. I don't think it is, and despite your hyperbole, I don't think you do either.![]()
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It's amazing how people from other countries think they understand our Constitution. And it's not simply a modern day reinterpretation of what the amendment says/means.....it's also the original intent of the people who wrote and ratified the text. That should always hold more weight than what a modern judge who only studies case law (instead of Constitutional law) thinks.
No offense, but you need to find a definition of assault rifle other than "Juan Bottom says this is an assault rifle." I've looked at wikipedia and the language of the Assault Weapons Ban for my definitions. I hold those two sources more important than you.Juan_Bottom wrote:Also, Sym is correct, Assault Rifles are legal in the US.
tgd has Assault Rifles confluttered with Automatic Weapons, which is not the same thing, yet Automatic weapons are also legal with heavy restrictions. Typically you need permits and they have to be registered with local police. Most states wont let you have them anyway, but you can own machine guns in Carolina. The regulation actually goes back to the NFA 1938. But the bans ended in 2004, to my knowledge.
As the assault rifle used is still manufactured and available for sale in the US, this all seems rather redundant.thegreekdog wrote:No offense, but you need to find a definition of assault rifle other than "Juan Bottom says this is an assault rifle." I've looked at wikipedia and the language of the Assault Weapons Ban for my definitions. I hold those two sources more important than you.Juan_Bottom wrote:Also, Sym is correct, Assault Rifles are legal in the US.
tgd has Assault Rifles confluttered with Automatic Weapons, which is not the same thing, yet Automatic weapons are also legal with heavy restrictions. Typically you need permits and they have to be registered with local police. Most states wont let you have them anyway, but you can own machine guns in Carolina. The regulation actually goes back to the NFA 1938. But the bans ended in 2004, to my knowledge.
The rest of your post is also mostly incorrect. Automatic weapons are not legal except for those owned and registered prior to 1986. The bans up to 2004, which expired, were only for certain semi-automatic weapons (NOT assault rifles). And they were not for all semi-automatic weapons.
I will point you to the following post of mine, in this thread, which you must have read and ignored. Perhaps if you read it again...
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994084
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994199
Honestly you guys, this is not about whether I think guns should be legal or illegal. I honestly don't know enough about the statistics and the relative effect of gun bannings to understand whether banning guns will have a great effect. What this is about is getting the facts right on what guns are and are not assault rifles and are and are not banned currently (or were banned in the past). This is not something that is up for debate really. Symmetry noted that he would like to ban assault rifles. Well, they are banned (except for those registered prior to 1986). So, I asked him and I'll ask you Juan - what weapons would you like to ban? Would you like to bring back the Assault Weapons Ban, which arbitrarily banned certain semi-automatics and not others?
I've provided you with multiple pieces of evidence showing that assault rifles are not available for sale in the United States, including a federal law. I think the onus is now on you to show evidence that assault rifles are available for sale in the United States. Alternatively, you can provide evidence that your definition of assault rifle is correct (and mine is not).Symmetry wrote:As the assault rifle used is still manufactured and available for sale in the US, this all seems rather redundant.thegreekdog wrote:No offense, but you need to find a definition of assault rifle other than "Juan Bottom says this is an assault rifle." I've looked at wikipedia and the language of the Assault Weapons Ban for my definitions. I hold those two sources more important than you.Juan_Bottom wrote:Also, Sym is correct, Assault Rifles are legal in the US.
tgd has Assault Rifles confluttered with Automatic Weapons, which is not the same thing, yet Automatic weapons are also legal with heavy restrictions. Typically you need permits and they have to be registered with local police. Most states wont let you have them anyway, but you can own machine guns in Carolina. The regulation actually goes back to the NFA 1938. But the bans ended in 2004, to my knowledge.
The rest of your post is also mostly incorrect. Automatic weapons are not legal except for those owned and registered prior to 1986. The bans up to 2004, which expired, were only for certain semi-automatic weapons (NOT assault rifles). And they were not for all semi-automatic weapons.
I will point you to the following post of mine, in this thread, which you must have read and ignored. Perhaps if you read it again...
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994084
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994199
Honestly you guys, this is not about whether I think guns should be legal or illegal. I honestly don't know enough about the statistics and the relative effect of gun bannings to understand whether banning guns will have a great effect. What this is about is getting the facts right on what guns are and are not assault rifles and are and are not banned currently (or were banned in the past). This is not something that is up for debate really. Symmetry noted that he would like to ban assault rifles. Well, they are banned (except for those registered prior to 1986). So, I asked him and I'll ask you Juan - what weapons would you like to ban? Would you like to bring back the Assault Weapons Ban, which arbitrarily banned certain semi-automatics and not others?
And I've given you evidence for that already.thegreekdog wrote:I've provided you with multiple pieces of evidence showing that assault rifles are not available for sale in the United States, including a federal law. I think the onus is now on you to show evidence that assault rifles are available for sale in the United States. Alternatively, you can provide evidence that your definition of assault rifle is correct (and mine is not).Symmetry wrote:As the assault rifle used is still manufactured and available for sale in the US, this all seems rather redundant.thegreekdog wrote:No offense, but you need to find a definition of assault rifle other than "Juan Bottom says this is an assault rifle." I've looked at wikipedia and the language of the Assault Weapons Ban for my definitions. I hold those two sources more important than you.Juan_Bottom wrote:Also, Sym is correct, Assault Rifles are legal in the US.
tgd has Assault Rifles confluttered with Automatic Weapons, which is not the same thing, yet Automatic weapons are also legal with heavy restrictions. Typically you need permits and they have to be registered with local police. Most states wont let you have them anyway, but you can own machine guns in Carolina. The regulation actually goes back to the NFA 1938. But the bans ended in 2004, to my knowledge.
The rest of your post is also mostly incorrect. Automatic weapons are not legal except for those owned and registered prior to 1986. The bans up to 2004, which expired, were only for certain semi-automatic weapons (NOT assault rifles). And they were not for all semi-automatic weapons.
I will point you to the following post of mine, in this thread, which you must have read and ignored. Perhaps if you read it again...
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994084
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994199
Honestly you guys, this is not about whether I think guns should be legal or illegal. I honestly don't know enough about the statistics and the relative effect of gun bannings to understand whether banning guns will have a great effect. What this is about is getting the facts right on what guns are and are not assault rifles and are and are not banned currently (or were banned in the past). This is not something that is up for debate really. Symmetry noted that he would like to ban assault rifles. Well, they are banned (except for those registered prior to 1986). So, I asked him and I'll ask you Juan - what weapons would you like to ban? Would you like to bring back the Assault Weapons Ban, which arbitrarily banned certain semi-automatics and not others?
No, you provided me with a link to the website The Nation which shows that Wal-Marts sell various weapons, all of which are semi-automatic weapons which are, by definition, not assault rifles.Symmetry wrote:And I've given you evidence for that already.thegreekdog wrote:I've provided you with multiple pieces of evidence showing that assault rifles are not available for sale in the United States, including a federal law. I think the onus is now on you to show evidence that assault rifles are available for sale in the United States. Alternatively, you can provide evidence that your definition of assault rifle is correct (and mine is not).Symmetry wrote:As the assault rifle used is still manufactured and available for sale in the US, this all seems rather redundant.thegreekdog wrote:No offense, but you need to find a definition of assault rifle other than "Juan Bottom says this is an assault rifle." I've looked at wikipedia and the language of the Assault Weapons Ban for my definitions. I hold those two sources more important than you.Juan_Bottom wrote:Also, Sym is correct, Assault Rifles are legal in the US.
tgd has Assault Rifles confluttered with Automatic Weapons, which is not the same thing, yet Automatic weapons are also legal with heavy restrictions. Typically you need permits and they have to be registered with local police. Most states wont let you have them anyway, but you can own machine guns in Carolina. The regulation actually goes back to the NFA 1938. But the bans ended in 2004, to my knowledge.
The rest of your post is also mostly incorrect. Automatic weapons are not legal except for those owned and registered prior to 1986. The bans up to 2004, which expired, were only for certain semi-automatic weapons (NOT assault rifles). And they were not for all semi-automatic weapons.
I will point you to the following post of mine, in this thread, which you must have read and ignored. Perhaps if you read it again...
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994084
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994199
Honestly you guys, this is not about whether I think guns should be legal or illegal. I honestly don't know enough about the statistics and the relative effect of gun bannings to understand whether banning guns will have a great effect. What this is about is getting the facts right on what guns are and are not assault rifles and are and are not banned currently (or were banned in the past). This is not something that is up for debate really. Symmetry noted that he would like to ban assault rifles. Well, they are banned (except for those registered prior to 1986). So, I asked him and I'll ask you Juan - what weapons would you like to ban? Would you like to bring back the Assault Weapons Ban, which arbitrarily banned certain semi-automatics and not others?
The assault rifle used in the recent school shooting, we're referring to, right?thegreekdog wrote:No, you provided me with a link to the website The Nation which shows that Wal-Marts sell various weapons, all of which are semi-automatic weapons which are, by definition, not assault rifles.Symmetry wrote:And I've given you evidence for that already.thegreekdog wrote:I've provided you with multiple pieces of evidence showing that assault rifles are not available for sale in the United States, including a federal law. I think the onus is now on you to show evidence that assault rifles are available for sale in the United States. Alternatively, you can provide evidence that your definition of assault rifle is correct (and mine is not).Symmetry wrote:As the assault rifle used is still manufactured and available for sale in the US, this all seems rather redundant.thegreekdog wrote:No offense, but you need to find a definition of assault rifle other than "Juan Bottom says this is an assault rifle." I've looked at wikipedia and the language of the Assault Weapons Ban for my definitions. I hold those two sources more important than you.Juan_Bottom wrote:Also, Sym is correct, Assault Rifles are legal in the US.
tgd has Assault Rifles confluttered with Automatic Weapons, which is not the same thing, yet Automatic weapons are also legal with heavy restrictions. Typically you need permits and they have to be registered with local police. Most states wont let you have them anyway, but you can own machine guns in Carolina. The regulation actually goes back to the NFA 1938. But the bans ended in 2004, to my knowledge.
The rest of your post is also mostly incorrect. Automatic weapons are not legal except for those owned and registered prior to 1986. The bans up to 2004, which expired, were only for certain semi-automatic weapons (NOT assault rifles). And they were not for all semi-automatic weapons.
I will point you to the following post of mine, in this thread, which you must have read and ignored. Perhaps if you read it again...
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994084
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... 5#p3994199
Honestly you guys, this is not about whether I think guns should be legal or illegal. I honestly don't know enough about the statistics and the relative effect of gun bannings to understand whether banning guns will have a great effect. What this is about is getting the facts right on what guns are and are not assault rifles and are and are not banned currently (or were banned in the past). This is not something that is up for debate really. Symmetry noted that he would like to ban assault rifles. Well, they are banned (except for those registered prior to 1986). So, I asked him and I'll ask you Juan - what weapons would you like to ban? Would you like to bring back the Assault Weapons Ban, which arbitrarily banned certain semi-automatics and not others?
So, if that is your evidence (that Wal-Mart sells semi-automatic weapons), you must also provide evidence showing a different definition of the term "assault rifle" that defines that term as a weapon that is a semi-automatic weapon.
So no? No evidence?Symmetry wrote:The assault rifle used in the recent school shooting, we're referring to, right?
I wait with bated breath for your thoughts.The M4 Type Carbine is a firearm manufactured by Bushmaster Firearms International, modeled on the AR-15 platform.
OverviewThe M4 Type Carbine is a reproduction of the Colt M4 Carbine, but is usually only semi-automatic for legality within the U.S. civilian market. However, it can be ordered by military or law enforcement organizations with three-round burst or fully automatic capability.
Army of GOD wrote:I joined this game because it's so similar to Call of Duty.
Fixed that for you.CreepersWiener wrote:Bushmaster XM-15...SEMI-AUTOMATIC WEAPON... THEREFORE NOT ASSAULT RIFLE!
The Bushmaster AR-15, as I've provided evidence for.thegreekdog wrote:So no? No evidence?Symmetry wrote:The assault rifle used in the recent school shooting, we're referring to, right?
What is the name of the gun that you think was used in the Newtown killings?
According to my evidence, the gun used was the Bushmaster XM-15 rifle. That particular firearm is a semi-automatic weapon, and thus, by definition, not an assault rifle. The overview page for wiki states, specifically:
I wait with bated breath for your thoughts.The M4 Type Carbine is a firearm manufactured by Bushmaster Firearms International, modeled on the AR-15 platform.
OverviewThe M4 Type Carbine is a reproduction of the Colt M4 Carbine, but is usually only semi-automatic for legality within the U.S. civilian market. However, it can be ordered by military or law enforcement organizations with three-round burst or fully automatic capability.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/ ... 8F20121218Late on Monday, California Treasurer Bill Lockyer asked CalPERS and CalSTRS, the state's public pension funds and the largest in the United States, to account for their investments in gun manufacturers, and proposed that they sell their interest in any company that makes guns that are illegal under California's assault weapons ban.
California's ban includes the Bushmaster rifle
As I've demonstrated, the gun used in the Newtown killings was not an assault rifle (defined by me, pursuant to the evidence I've provided and for which you've provided no evidence to the contrary). It was a semi-automatic weapon.Symmetry wrote:The Bushmaster AR-15, as I've provided evidence for.thegreekdog wrote:So no? No evidence?Symmetry wrote:The assault rifle used in the recent school shooting, we're referring to, right?
What is the name of the gun that you think was used in the Newtown killings?
According to my evidence, the gun used was the Bushmaster XM-15 rifle. That particular firearm is a semi-automatic weapon, and thus, by definition, not an assault rifle. The overview page for wiki states, specifically:
I wait with bated breath for your thoughts.The M4 Type Carbine is a firearm manufactured by Bushmaster Firearms International, modeled on the AR-15 platform.
OverviewThe M4 Type Carbine is a reproduction of the Colt M4 Carbine, but is usually only semi-automatic for legality within the U.S. civilian market. However, it can be ordered by military or law enforcement organizations with three-round burst or fully automatic capability.
Connecticut school shooter used assault rifle, had many bullets
Perhaps reuters would be more trustrworthy:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/ ... 8F20121218Late on Monday, California Treasurer Bill Lockyer asked CalPERS and CalSTRS, the state's public pension funds and the largest in the United States, to account for their investments in gun manufacturers, and proposed that they sell their interest in any company that makes guns that are illegal under California's assault weapons ban.
California's ban includes the Bushmaster rifle
Hmm... it seems you've now changed the term from assault rifle to assault weapon.* Is there no limit to the depths you will go?Symmetry wrote:Look, I'm not sure what else, if anything that I can give. You've got evidence that it's an assault weapon, from a bunch of opinions- media, legal, and commercial.
i don't know what else i can provide. Tgd, your arguments of late seem to be summed up as a general "No". To all sources given, and to all posters who disagree.
Giving you what you ask for, source-wise, seems like it will only garner insults,
Army of GOD wrote:I joined this game because it's so similar to Call of Duty.
Given the amount of times I've done searches related to firearms and the websites I've been on, I'm expecting a call from the federal government shortly.CreepersWiener wrote:Clearly TGD must be labeled a terrorist and rounded up with the rest of the hicks.
i'm happy to go back to assault rifle, if that's preferable. I'm not sure that your posts flaming me for embarrassment quite work, but hey, I'm not attacking you personally, just asking what kind of evidence you're requesting that you won't ignore or insult.thegreekdog wrote:Hmm... it seems you've now changed the term from assault rifle to assault weapon.* Is there no limit to the depths you will go?Symmetry wrote:Look, I'm not sure what else, if anything that I can give. You've got evidence that it's an assault weapon, from a bunch of opinions- media, legal, and commercial.
i don't know what else i can provide. Tgd, your arguments of late seem to be summed up as a general "No". To all sources given, and to all posters who disagree.
Giving you what you ask for, source-wise, seems like it will only garner insults,
No, no there isn't - you again resort to ad hominems when you don't win the argument.
I would think you would have to ask yourself, "Self, since I can't find a definition of assault rifle that includes the term "semi-automatic" perhaps TGD is correct and I should acknowledge it." Apparently your ego does not permit you to think this way. And that is unfortunate because we could have had such a good discussion instead of this back and forth where you look silly. If my arguments of late (i.e. today) can be summed up by "no," it is merely because you refuse to acknowledge evidence and prefer, instead, to rely upon the LA Times or ad hominem attacks. I'm not sure what else I can do for you. You refuse to acknowledge evidence. You refuse to read other, more constructive discussions (I mean, seriously... where do you get this idea that my answer is "no" to all posters... it's only you sweetie pie and only in this thread).
I retain some small hope that you will begin to pay attention and save yourself from further embarrassment. I mean, at this point, your posts in this thread are equitable to Creepersweiner's post.
But, here is some more evidence. This from the U.S. federal government.
http://www.atf.gov/firearms/faq/nationa ... a-firearms
http://www.atf.gov/firearms/faq/nationa ... -guns.html
*Assault weapons are not banned and include, under the definition of that term, semi-automatic weapons.
I would urge you to report my posts if you believe I'm flaming you. That seems to be the best way to deal with these sorts of things.Symmetry wrote:i'm happy to go back to assault rifle, if that's preferable. I'm not sure that your posts flaming me for embarrassment quite work, but hey, I'm not attacking you personally, just asking what kind of evidence you're requesting that you won't ignore or insult.thegreekdog wrote:Hmm... it seems you've now changed the term from assault rifle to assault weapon.* Is there no limit to the depths you will go?Symmetry wrote:Look, I'm not sure what else, if anything that I can give. You've got evidence that it's an assault weapon, from a bunch of opinions- media, legal, and commercial.
i don't know what else i can provide. Tgd, your arguments of late seem to be summed up as a general "No". To all sources given, and to all posters who disagree.
Giving you what you ask for, source-wise, seems like it will only garner insults,
No, no there isn't - you again resort to ad hominems when you don't win the argument.
I would think you would have to ask yourself, "Self, since I can't find a definition of assault rifle that includes the term "semi-automatic" perhaps TGD is correct and I should acknowledge it." Apparently your ego does not permit you to think this way. And that is unfortunate because we could have had such a good discussion instead of this back and forth where you look silly. If my arguments of late (i.e. today) can be summed up by "no," it is merely because you refuse to acknowledge evidence and prefer, instead, to rely upon the LA Times or ad hominem attacks. I'm not sure what else I can do for you. You refuse to acknowledge evidence. You refuse to read other, more constructive discussions (I mean, seriously... where do you get this idea that my answer is "no" to all posters... it's only you sweetie pie and only in this thread).
I retain some small hope that you will begin to pay attention and save yourself from further embarrassment. I mean, at this point, your posts in this thread are equitable to Creepersweiner's post.
But, here is some more evidence. This from the U.S. federal government.
http://www.atf.gov/firearms/faq/nationa ... a-firearms
http://www.atf.gov/firearms/faq/nationa ... -guns.html
*Assault weapons are not banned and include, under the definition of that term, semi-automatic weapons.