No
one hunts with a Ruger or a MAC-10. So what changed the NRA into this
toxic advocate for increasing availability of the killing-wand?
Manufacturing invaded this loose network of enthusiasts. Today, they
insure access by the unwashed-masses to the weapons of mass-murder
remains at an insane level. They have become a serious domestic
threat to the US by reinforcing this common, Constitutional
misconception. Their myth kills people, many suicidal. There is
nothing wrong with the idea that not everyone can be entrusted to
operate a car, let alone a Desert Eagle.
The
Second Amendment is very short
and difficult to understand. I had the privilege of a lawyer for a
father who argued before a state
supreme court. He helped me understand that the phrase, 'the
right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed,'
means
States
have
the
sovereign right
to
defend their
land by creating
a fighting-force, forged
from
the populace
without interference from the Federal Government.
So far, it doesn't appear any State's
right to create said Militia
has been infringed upon
in any way, shape, or form. The
National Guard expresses the State's right to a well-regulated
Militia. As far as I can see, that particular institution is under no
Constitutional threat.
My
father taught me: the idea that the Founders intended access to
military-style weapons by the Citizenry is ridiculous. Unless you're
an active member of (let me say this again) the State's
well-regulated Militia, the only thing the Founders had in mind was
the basic idea of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
(originally property, as in the right to own what you create). If you
needed to hunt in order to eat and make a living, by all means, use
the tool of the rifle. If you feel threatened, there are many
measures short of a semi-automatic. One has the right to privacy and
protection but one has no Constitutional Right to a Glock-19.
On
the other hand, no on has a Constitutional Right to a Ferrari either
but some of us have one because some of us can. So get over it. You,
mister or lady American, have no Constitutional Right to a device,
capable of launching a projectile beyond the speed of sound into any
unsuspecting, darling, little girl anymore than anyone has the right
to rip rubber in a fine machine. The Supreme Court has often got the
big issues wrong before it gets them right. My father's words are
clear: the myth of an individual’s Constitutional Right to bear
Arms will fade with passing generations.
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