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  • #61
    Originally posted by Rufus T. Firefly

    Discipline makes people behave; regulations govern behavior. I'm not sure there's as strong a distinction here as you're implying. Nevertheless, by this logic, madatory training and licensing of gun owners -- just like car owners -- would have been within the scope of the founder's intent -- regulating by disciplining. That's where this thread started.
    It's made even more of a muddle because what are we to make of an explanatory clause anyway? There is no regulation there, only an expression of intent. Seeing as how the entire premise of having States control of the vast majority of the military power of the U.S. was circumvented long ago it has even less usefullness today than it did long ago when there were still organized militias that could be well regulated. The actually useful bits of the Amendment which again limit government powers vis a vis the people is still workable, and thus here we are.

    Originally posted by Rufus T. Firefly
    As for the Revolution, though, the militias did NOT do okay without heavy regulation. Washington complained endlessly about their indolence, insubordination, and extremely high rate of desertion. The regular army did okay, but the militias needed greater regulation, in BOTH senses of the word, and Washington fairly pleaded for it.
    Their failures stemmed mostly from lack of discipline IMO, and not from lack of regulations. A soldier who remains at his station for fear of the legal repurcussions of desertion is only marginally better than the one who deserts right off. At least you don't have to feed the immediate coward, nor do you place undue faith in his ability to do his duty when you really need him. Ottoman levies were well regulated, but once they began to break they would tend to flee the field en masse to avoid not only the enemy, but the repercussions of their cowarice from their own leaders. What they lacked was discipline, ie the ability to stand their ground in the face of extreme hardship in the service of a higher goal, whether that was unit cohesion, pride, nationalism etc. An army that serves because of fear is a lot weaker than one that is motivated by something greater than themselves.
    He's got the Midas touch.
    But he touched it too much!
    Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!

    Comment


    • #62
      Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat

      No full auto, but single/3 round burst OK
      Same as above
      Nope
      Yep
      Yep
      Depends on size/yield
      Nope
      Already that list would permit people could have their paramilitary activities to "keep their homes safe." Well, I suppose I'd better stay outside the States if you can soon walk around with a few nades in your bag or have a simple SMG in your violin case. I can't see how one can be proud for all that, but maybe MtG finds guns and fire arms "fun", so that he needs a few to protect himself.

      Come on, people! You're not supposed to be lurking at home with an arsenal of weapons, right?
      "Kids, don't listen to uncle Solver unless you want your parents to spank you." - Solver

      Comment


      • #63
        Bah. I bet y'all picked now to start another one of these because y'all know I'm too busy to get involved.

        Wraith
        "Gun control? It's the best thing you can do for crooks and gangsters. I want you to have nothing. If I'm a bad guy, I'm always gonna have a gun. Safety locks? You will pull the trigger with a lock on, and I'll pull the trigger. We'll see who wins."
        -- Sammy "the Bull" Gravano

        Comment


        • #64
          I suppose I don't need to bring up [i]Bowling for Columbine[i] anymore?

          I think it's the fear that makes Americans want their guns so badly in the first place.

          How often have any of you been in a situation involving firearms? How many of you have been burgled, had a gun pointed at you etc. at home or in your neighbourhood? When's the last time anyone was shot anywhere near where you work or live? And if that isn't zero, how many of those times was it a "real" criminal, rather than, say, your neighbour who had a little too much to drink and pulled his gun on you, or something?
          Civilization II: maps, guides, links, scenarios, patches and utilities (+ Civ2Tech and CivEngineer)

          Comment


          • #65
            q:
            Automatic sub-machine-guns (mp5, uzi, mac10, etc)
            Automatic rifles (M16, Colt M4a1, ak47, etc)
            Automatic machine guns (M60, M249 Para)
            Explosives (grenades, rockets, etc)
            Man Portable Nuclear Weapons
            Forbidding those is logical and understandable, if it also includes the exception of light use by the police and armed forcesand armed forces
            urgh.NSFW

            Comment


            • #66
              here are some things to consider


              Shotguns are widely believed to be very lethal, and at close range this is certainly true because the multiple projectiles cause multiple wound tracks over a small area – often resulting in one large hole. However, the pellets must be large enough so that each one has sufficient kinetic energy to penetrate to vital areas. Basically, bird shot (7 1/2, for example) can only be guaranteed to be lethal to a range of about 5 yards, beyond 10 yards, or so, the wounds may look severe, but be relatively superficial due to the lack of penetration of individual pellets. Large buckshot pellets will be lethal at considerable range, but practical accuracy, and excessive spread, will limit their effective range to around 40 to 60 yards, depending upon choke and individual weapon characteristics. Those who choose to cut down their shotgun barrel diminish lethality considerably, because they may reduce the overall kinetic energy delivered by a given cartridge by as much as 50%.
              Figure 1 shows a human arm which was injured by a 12 gage shotgun at just 10 yards. The shot size was #6, and the shotgun barrel had been sawn down (length not known, but probably around 14"). Note that pellets are spread over a large area (cartridge contained almost 400) and that they had insufficient energy to penetrate much below the surface of the skin - the silver pellets are visible

              Madman shoots 35 in Stockton schoolyard; 30 of those hit survive. That
              would have been the appropriate headline. Why did the media dwell almost
              exclusively on the five that did not survive?
              A military type AK-47 rifle was used. Full-metal-jacketed military type
              bullets were used. That 86% of those children recovered from their wounds comes
              as no surprise to those who understand this particular bullet's wounding
              potential
              . Those familiar with the international laws governing warfare
              recognize that the military full-metal-jacketed bullet is specifically designed
              to limit tissue disruption -- to wound rather than to kill. Purportedly
              mandated for "humanitarian" reasons by the Hague Peace Conference of 1899, this
              type of bullet actually proves to be more effective for most warfare. It
              removes not only the one hit from the ranks of the combatants, but also those
              needed to care for him.
              Full-metal-jacketed bullets
              are prohibited for hunting; they are too likely
              to wound rather than kill. Most full-metal-jacketed AK-47 bullets do not deform
              significantly on striking the body, unless they strike bone. They
              characteristically travel point-forward until they penetrate 9 to 10 inches of
              tissue (if a bullet yaws, turning sideways during its tissue path, it causes
              increased disruption). This means that most AK-47 shots will pass through the
              body causing no greater damage that produced by handgun bullets. The limi
              ted
              tissue disruption produced by this weapon in the Stockton schoolyard is
              consistent with well documented data from Vietnam (the Wound Data and Munitions
              Effectiveness Team collected approximately 700 cases of AK-47 hits), as well as
              with controlled research studies from various wound ballistics laboratories.
              To put the 17 January 1989 Stockton incident in context, it must be
              compared with past shootings:
              1. Only four of the eleven shot at the ESL Co. in Sunnyvale, CA, on 16
              February 1988,
              survived. The weapon was a 12 gauge shotgun.
              2. Only eleven of the thirty-two shot in the MacDonalds (24 July 1984, San
              Ysidro, CA) survived. Of the three weapons used, the deadliest weapon by far
              was a pump-action 12 gauge shotgun.
              The overwhelming majority of the media coverage of the Stockton shooting
              has consisted of misstatements, exaggerations and inappropriate comparisons.
              It is ironic, in this country where firearms have played such a prominent
              historic role, that the general kn
              owledge of weapon effects has become so
              distorted. Cinema and TV accounts of shootings constantly distort and
              exaggerate bullet effect. When shot, people do not get knocked backwards by the
              bullet; nor do they become instantly incapacitated, as usually depicted.
              False expectations resulting from these misleading performances have
              confused crime scene investigators, law enforcement and military trainers, and
              our courts of law. Exaggerations of weapon effects in the post Vietnam era even
              affect
              ed wound treatment adversely. It is just within the past year, that these
              errors in military treatment doctrine have been corrected ("Emergency War
              Surgery - NATO Handbook", Washington, DC, GPO, 1988).
              Television accounts showing assault rifles exploding watermelons, newspaper
              descriptions comparing their effects to "a grenade exploding in the abdomen,"
              and describing organs being destroyed and bones pulverized by apparently magic
              "shock waves" from these "high-velocity" bullets must cause the t
              hinking
              individual to ask: If these rifles really cause such effects, how is it possible
              that thirty children (actually 29 children and one teacher) hit in that Stockton
              schoolyard survived?
              The effects of the media frenzy have been to produce at least a four-fold
              increase in the number of AK-47's in California. This immense demand has drawn
              stocks of these weapons from all over the USA and abroad. If producers of these
              weapons had advertised their effects as portrayed by the media, they would
              be
              liable to prosecution under our truth in advertising laws. When the same
              misinformation is presented by the "free press" it is apparently perfectly
              legal.
              These are the facts. Why have you not seen them in the reports of this
              incident? Ask the media. Ask them also about accountability and
              responsibility. Corrections have been offered, in writing, to the "New York
              Times", the "San Francisco Examiner", and the "Oakland Tribune", with no
              response. Phone conversations with media sources m
              ade clear their preference
              for the more dramatic misconceptions and exaggerations over verified scientific
              facts.
              Everyone with a political axe to grind that can be even remotely related to
              the Stockton schoolyard shooting is coming out of the woodwork for their share
              of the free publicity ride on the media-produced emotional frenzy roller-
              coaster. It's really sad, if not downright disrespectful, to see the deaths of
              those children used to produce the lynch-mob/three-ring-circus atmosphere ext
              ant
              recently in the California State Legislature.
              The lack of any comprehensive data on gunshot wounds (incidence related to
              weapon type, bullet type, outcome, etc.) has long been a serious handicap in
              considering how to approach the gun problem. The situation has now been
              compounded by unprecedented media zeal. Zeal mixed with misinformation is a
              prescription for disaster. The exaggerations used to whip up their emotional
              frenzy have, at the same time, deprived the public of the established
              facts
              about weapon effects.
              Gunshot wounds pose a serious problem. Any sensible solution demands sober
              consideration of valid data on wound frequency, severity, circumstances, and
              treatment. Considering the many thousands of shootings in our urban areas each
              year, competent collection of these data on a national basis could, in a short
              time, define the problem realistically and objectively. Both sides of the gun
              control argument should replace confrontation with cooperation by jointly
              sponso
              ring a National Gunshot Wound Study. Valid, objective data might then
              replace uninformed exaggeration and hysteria as a guide to action.
              The assault rifle fiasco brings to light a far more basic problem: Who is
              to protect the public from a zealous media whose "cause" takes them beyond bias
              to falsehood and fabrication?

              Comment


              • #67
                Wow, I'm sure glad only 5 of those kids died. I guess the madman should have practised more, that way maybe he could have aimed for the head. Maybe he would have been more effective with a samurai sword.

                Comment


                • #68
                  It reminds me of Alan Partridge who said " what people forget about the Titanic is that before the iceberg there were thousands of miles of trouble free pleasurable sailing"
                  Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind- bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.
                  Douglas Adams (Influential author)

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    "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."

                    I see the first part of that sentence as a qualifying term. It is no longer necessary today and I see no justification for blocking practical legislation regulating firearms. High powered weapons are unnecessary, automatic or semi-automatic weapons are unnecessary and what the f*** is the deal with people blocking identity checks? What possible argument could they do this under.

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      It is no longer necessary today and I see no justification for blocking practical legislation regulating firearms.
                      Pass an amendment and I'll stop (some) of my *****ing.

                      You can argue necessity all day long, but until you pass an amendment, Constitutionally, you will still be incorrect.

                      Further, the use of the word "people" is obviously not a collective right - it refers to individual rights, in the same way it does every other time it is used in the Constitution.
                      Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DaveDaDouche
                      Read my seldom updated blog where I talk to myself: http://davedadouche.blogspot.com/

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                      • #71
                        David, is your stance on the legality of weapons ideological, or based upon what's defined in the constitution?

                        I mean, if the 2nd Amendment was worded so that licensing and gun control programs were mentioned, would you still feel that people have a right to own any type of weapon?
                        To us, it is the BEAST.

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          DF, if the first statement is a justication then an amendment doesn't have to be passed because with the absence of that justification...

                          Pass an amendment and I'll stop (some) of my *****ing.


                          Why would I want to stop any of your *****ing DF(though I doubt it would stop any of it)? You can ***** to your hearts content.

                          Comment


                          • #73
                            Sava,

                            I mean, if the 2nd Amendment was worded so that licensing and gun control programs were mentioned, would you still feel that people have a right to own any type of weapon?
                            Yes.

                            gsmoove,

                            DF, if the first statement is a justication then an amendment doesn't have to be passed because with the absence of that justification...
                            You mean the "well-regulated militia part"? Well, first of all, that's not the main clause of the sentence. Further, the word "people", as an individual rights usage of the word, still exists in the amendment. Next, even IF guns were only allowed to militia members, the militia is still codified in US law.

                            No matter how you look at it, you need an amendment to restrict firearms.
                            Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DaveDaDouche
                            Read my seldom updated blog where I talk to myself: http://davedadouche.blogspot.com/

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state

                              What I meant was the above statement is offered as a given in the beginning of the statement. In the absence of the given...

                              I didn't mean that guns should only be allowed for militia members, but in the absence of the need for militias, the uninfringed right of the 'people' to bear arms is in question.

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                Discalimer (sort of): I didn't read all the posts, but I want to put my two cents in.


                                Before I was allowed to even fire a gun my father made me take a 2 day, 8 hours/day gun safety course, which is required for a hunting license. I was about 8 at the time.

                                I went hunting once, fired the gun twice at a moving target, missed both times, and never went hunting again.

                                I am proud supporter of the NRA. Yet, I feel that requiring a person to obtain a liscense to own a gun, and that the requirements for the liscense include a gun safety course is a good idea. I also see no reason to have to ammend the 2nd ammendment for this, as it does not hinder the persons right to have a weapon.

                                However, it seems to me that most cases where a gun "accidentily" kills some one, it is not in the hands of the person who purchased the weapon. It is their carelessness in storing the weapon that is a greater threat than the knowledge of safety possessed by the owner.

                                It is not required that the person who purchases the weapon to store the weapon properly so that no one else may fire it.

                                I have no idea how to handle this situation, but in my safety class the mentioned nothing on how to properly store the weapon, and, my dad was smart enough to store them well except for a revolver he keeps in his nightstand, bullets right next to it. He did, however, train all his kids and his spouse to handle a weapon and of the dangers.
                                Monkey!!!

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