bluebird
Well-known member
Dare I?
I think Americans should repeal it.
An article in the New York Times by Bret Stevens is a very compelling argument for doing away with it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/05/opinion/guns-second-amendment-nra.html
I think that sums it up pretty well with facts and no spin I can detect.
The last point is a good one. Do we need to arm ourselves against the government anymore? Could even a heavily armed large group of public citizens ever really win a war against military forces?
What is the point of The Second Amendment in this day and age?
Someone please let me know if I'm missing something here.
Ian
I think Americans should repeal it.
An article in the New York Times by Bret Stevens is a very compelling argument for doing away with it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/05/opinion/guns-second-amendment-nra.html
From a law-and-order standpoint, more guns means more murder. “States with higher rates of gun ownership had disproportionately large numbers of deaths from firearm-related homicides,” noted one exhaustive 2013 study in the American Journal of Public Health.
From a personal-safety standpoint, more guns means less safety. The F.B.I. counted a total of 268 “justifiable homicides” by private citizens involving firearms in 2015; that is, felons killed in the course of committing a felony. Yet that same year, there were 489 “unintentional firearms deaths” in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Between 77 and 141 of those killed were children.
From a national-security standpoint, the Amendment’s suggestion that a “well-regulated militia” is “necessary to the security of a free State,” is quaint. The Minutemen that will deter Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un are based in missile silos in Minot, N.D., not farmhouses in Lexington, Mass.
From a personal liberty standpoint, the idea that an armed citizenry is the ultimate check on the ambitions and encroachments of government power is curious. The Whiskey Rebellion of the 1790s, the New York draft riots of 1863, the coal miners’ rebellion of 1921, the Brink’s robbery of 1981 — does any serious conservative think of these as great moments in Second Amendment activism?
I think that sums it up pretty well with facts and no spin I can detect.
The last point is a good one. Do we need to arm ourselves against the government anymore? Could even a heavily armed large group of public citizens ever really win a war against military forces?
What is the point of The Second Amendment in this day and age?
Someone please let me know if I'm missing something here.
Ian