10/18/2008 6:10:37 PM
^ Assuming half of those folks would be willing to die for revolution strikes me as reaching.A tenth would be dubious but at least vaguely plausibly. One percent or below seems most likely.I don't mind keeping the possibly of violent overthrowing the government alive, but I wouldn't want to actually do it.
10/18/2008 11:50:58 PM
I seriously doubt we are ever going to have to violently overthrow the government, at least in the next hundred years or so.But if we did, we wouldn't have to fight the whole military to do so.
10/19/2008 2:14:14 AM
I think it's a lot more likely that we'll see a military overthrow of the government or at least a large portion of the military siding with the citizens revolting. If it ever comes to it, I imagine you'll see a lot more members of the military siding with revolutionaries or secessionist this time than in say, 1861 or 1776.Oh, and yes, private citizens should be allowed to purchase tanks and F-16 planes. The reason the 2nd amendment was passed was so, to quote Lenny from the Simpsons, "The King of England can't come and push you around." An armed citizenry is a deterrent to government Tyranny. On the flipside, the use of weapons should carry a harsh, harsh penalty.[Edited on October 19, 2008 at 2:23 AM. Reason : asdfasdf]
10/19/2008 2:17:48 AM
Yeah but there's still a point where you have to admit that the deterrent effect of a harsh punishment still doesn't offset the danger of allowing ownership of the weapon.
10/19/2008 2:27:03 AM
Ehhhh, I don't know. I think you also have to trust that the folks selling it have some sense as well. If you were a tank salesman I think you'd be justified in being very careful to whom you sold one of those things. Besides, don't you think you'd keep your eye on your neighbor if you knew he had a bunch of machine guns in his garage.I get what you're saying, I mean I'm sure that Adams, Franklin, and Jefferson didn't envision a weapon that could incinerate dozens with the pull of a trigger but I think they'd be willing to put their trust in the common man to have the sense not to use the fucker unless absolutely necessary.
10/19/2008 2:34:51 AM
I think there's a point where the risks generated by private ownership become so great that it begins to constitute a greater threat to liberty than a ban. Is this the case with 50 cals, 20 mm cannons, or even machine guns? Maybe, but I don't think it holds water- although I think other weaker arguments could be made in its lieu. Something that can wipe out 1000 or even 100,000 people in seconds? That sort of destructive power does remind me of something Adams said:
10/19/2008 2:51:01 AM
10/19/2008 2:56:09 AM
Because even if 99.9% of owners are responsible then putting the 4025 or so nukes currently in the US military's hands in private hands still costs you a couple electoral votes worth of people here and there. As shitty as I think our government is, it's proven itself capable of not accidently or intentionally nuking its own citizens. Where it not for that proven track record I'd probably agree that it would make an equivalently bad custodian of such deadly force. I guess there's some inherent self preservation mechanism in governments that can sometimes trump the 1 in 1000 or 1 in 10000 nut.[Edited on October 19, 2008 at 3:08 AM. Reason : ]
10/19/2008 3:01:29 AM
I'm not talking about distributing nukes to whoever wants them, but if somebody wants to buy an artillery gun I can see very little good reason to deny them that opportunity.There'd need to be a wholesale change to a lot of our laws and systems, but I'm all for private citizens having grenades and machine guns.
10/19/2008 3:10:23 AM
Eh, explosives can be nasty even when dealt with responsibly. Imagine if someone with no relatives or immediate contacts died with 50 sticks of dynamite in their basement.
10/19/2008 3:17:57 AM
http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=544976Nice symmetry going on in TWW tonight.
10/19/2008 3:19:17 AM
Heh yeah I found this article- http://calfire.blogspot.com/2008/03/news-quincy-fire-fifty-sticks-of.html Former resident died with 50 sticks of dynamite in his trailer. Estimate was that it could have had a serious toll up to a 1/2 mile radius. But yeah, there's plenty of things that I could see making room in the laws for private ownership. Maybe something like the concealed carry permits for things like machine guns. I'm not sure if the required regulation and oversight to make anything heavier than that swallowable would be something that could be handled competently though.[Edited on October 19, 2008 at 3:24 AM. Reason : ]
10/19/2008 3:22:40 AM
10/19/2008 1:08:44 PM
10/20/2008 2:22:23 AM
What the hell are you guys talking about. How many homegrown guerrilla fighters did Stalinist Russia, Maoist China, or any strong dictatorship in the world have? Like none.You don't have rebellions lasting forever when the government absolutely does not flinch in killing torturing you and killing your whole extended family before finally putting the bullet in your own brain. The idea that personal weapons would actually work against a true dictatorial takeover is absurd. And if you think about arguing with 'but that doesn't happen in a democracy', please to look at Venezuela.
10/20/2008 12:48:40 PM
^ I don't see anything like that happening in Venezuela.
10/20/2008 12:59:55 PM
Yes, because a previously democratic country doesn't have a state slowly centralizing power around one individual. My mistake.
10/20/2008 1:01:38 PM
Democracy hasn't ended in the country. Chavez won tons of elections.
10/20/2008 1:25:21 PM
10/20/2008 3:16:23 PM
^ our best hope would be members of the military seizing control of weaponry for the cause of the resistance. It'd be easy four our military with helicopters and smart bombs to wipe out pockets of resistance.I think a group of civilians could hold their own against infantry with rifles, and maybe even tanks, but not helicopters and bombing runs.
10/20/2008 3:23:23 PM
10/20/2008 4:09:45 PM
10/20/2008 7:28:30 PM
It would be an interesting world to live in, that's for sure.
10/20/2008 7:33:23 PM
^^ Good point- any popular insurgence in the US would almost have to be a true civil war since our military is not so different from our regular citizenry as to either be blindly loyal to a would be dictator nor a class separate and whole unto themselves. Any uprising or resistance popular enough among the populace to have a shot at being anything more than another Waco would almost certainly have a following within the military as well.
10/20/2008 8:56:40 PM