4/25/2007 12:58:29 PM
4/25/2007 1:15:38 PM
Wait, when has military training ever been mandatory?
4/25/2007 1:20:04 PM
^ditto
4/25/2007 1:21:54 PM
^^ In the 50s and 60s there was limited mandatory military service. Likewise there was the local militias during the revolutionary timeframe, though they were as much drinking clubs as anything else.
4/25/2007 1:27:40 PM
Except that, if he meant what you did, such programs would have existed. They did not.
4/25/2007 1:35:04 PM
we should get this thread bttt'd/message_topic.aspx?topic=425444&page=11
4/25/2007 1:36:16 PM
Keep in mind, TULIPlovr, that each of those quotes were from men who lived over 200 years ago, and are quite out of context today, given such extreme advances in weaponry, travel, communication, etc. since then
4/25/2007 1:41:00 PM
4/25/2007 1:44:52 PM
4/25/2007 1:46:36 PM
4/25/2007 1:50:22 PM
4/25/2007 1:52:16 PM
4/25/2007 2:06:56 PM
i think this whole topic depends on your definition of militia
4/25/2007 2:32:42 PM
4/25/2007 3:01:37 PM
4/25/2007 3:28:16 PM
4/25/2007 3:33:49 PM
4/25/2007 4:00:50 PM
A militia in those days was basically every able body man in the local area who could fight. It was not something organized by the government, instead it was something loosely organized very locally to help protect the local community. In order for militias to exist every man needs to have the right to possess a firearm. It's pretty clear, the founding fathers wanted the populace to be armed so that the government they created would never become a tyrannical state. If people don't like the Second Amendment then change the constitution, don't try to interpret it to fit personal beliefs.
4/25/2007 4:03:09 PM
it is my observation that the 2nd Amendment does two things. It declares that a well regulated militia is necessary for the security of a free state. It declares that "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed" because with infringment of the right to keep and bear arms the first declartion would not be possible.The first statement can only be achieved with the second statement in effect. This isn't a requirement that all people "keeping and bearing arms" be apart of the milita, or having anything to do with the milita. This is a fairly short amendment and in a case of what I think is trying to be simple and straight forward in that time and age with their wording, has led to a broad interpretation of it in this day and age.What is open to interpretation because it isn't strictly outlined, ( and all things not outlined in the Constitution fall to the States and not the Federal government ) is how a milita is regulated and what kind of regulation is needed to make it "well regulated".
4/25/2007 4:18:09 PM
I guess that is what I'm getting at. I'm not proposing that this should happen, but the idea has been stuck in my head for a few days now and I'm bouncing it around. If the intent is clear that the founders meant it as a means of resisting tyrrany (and I believe it is) then a loosely organized collage of gun-owners with no cohesion stand no chance of resisting anything.
4/25/2007 4:21:23 PM
4/25/2007 4:43:34 PM
4/25/2007 4:54:07 PM
Not really. There are dozens of different groups, each shooting for a different purpose ( ), plus all the random pissed-off individuals.And even so, the more organized the resistance, potentially the better...but the key figure is having that percentage of those willing to fight back, not necessarily how organized they are. Either way, 5-10% of fight-to-the-death folks can keep even a superpower relatively at bay.
4/25/2007 5:09:19 PM
4/25/2007 5:19:37 PM
More organized than you think, though only in limited geographic areas, not nationally.
4/25/2007 5:22:41 PM
its a good thing we have gunsthat way we can fight off the dirty Mexicans who try to take back their land
4/25/2007 5:26:36 PM
4/26/2007 2:46:09 AM
Politicians learned their lesson from Prohibition. Now, rather than make something, that many people want, out and out illegal...the more effective method is to gradually whittle away at the legality of owning and using the target item. Cigarettes are a good example. It's obvious the gov't wants to outlaw butts, but politicians have gradually over the years boxed the industry into a corner. First with banning advertising, then making it illegal in more and more places to smoke, the gov't will soon make them basically illegal without passing a law.This same fate awaits gun ownership if we are not diligent and fight back the smaller steps gov't will try to take to ban ownership.
4/26/2007 9:19:18 AM
I've advocated making a short (perhaps week long) gun handling and safety class part of high school curriculum.
4/26/2007 10:11:56 AM