You are an incredible piece of work. lol
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Pug wrote:
Well, then what is your opinion of decreasing/increasing the chance of unrest? Unrest being defined as forming a angry mob. Decreasing/increasing being defined as frequency. You seem to be dancing on a thin line.
It's got nothing to do with frequency...I just said that. The magnitude of the problem is the only difference.
Right, exactly, but the question actually was about whether home ownership versus no ownership is worth the tradeoff, so I attempted to ask the question again. From what I gather, you are saying an individual incident would be more severe, but I'm asking to compare the two over time, aka # incidents x severity = points.
For example, there's one incident and 100 people die, versus 1000 incidents and 101 people die.
FM wrote:
I am not saying the future will favor my interpretation. I am saying it could. There is nothing in history to suggest the interpretation is beyond question, which implies the future is open to all sorts of possibilities. Even to say that the there will not be a gross breach of any amendment, even one so explicit as the First, is to be particularly naive. The issue here is the Second Amendment seems to be particularly unclear in comparison, and I can see the possibility of it being reinterpreted even in an otherwise reasonable society.
Stop asking me for fucking examples. All I am trying to prove is that there is room for misinterpretation. The burden of proof is on you to provide reasoning (case work or logical train of thought) that proves otherwise.
It's like you're asking me to provide historical proof that there will be flying cars in the future. I can't prove that there will be - but I am only trying to show that it is a possibility anyways. If you're trying to discount even the possibility then the significant burden of proof lies on you.
Well, crap. It might happen. Awesome. I think that is a very strong argument.
I'm telling you, in several different ways that you aren't interpreting it correctly at all. Sure, if you entirely ignore the intent of the law, then you can come up with a different law altogether. Interpreting the law is not limited to the 20 or so words on paper...it includes case law, aka every document ever written about every trial surrounding the 2nd amendment...plus any writs from the supreme court who are quite fond of pulling the founding fathers' notes to figure out the intent. You can't ignore this, as it's actually MORE important than the 2nd amendment itself. It's the interpretation. So I'm telling you THAT is where you should be looking. "Case law is dumb". Well, guess what? Don't become a lawyer, cuz case law means everything.
I've told you the law is about the right to self defense. The nation, the state, and yes, your own home. This was the intent of the folks who wrote the law. And it's been tested and supported over a long period of time. So the current interpretation DOES NOT favor your interpretation. Why? Because there's a little more to it that reading a sentence.
So yeah, I'm going to ask for you to back up your opinion, because "It might happen sometime in the future" and "Your argument is illogical" doesn't support your argument. Why? Because NOTHING THAT I'VE COME ACROSS CURRENTLY AGREES WITH YOUR OPINION. And I think "it might happen in the future", is unlikely. But besides this is all moot anyway - because you need to read something besides just one sentence.
FM wrote:
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
The general populace is not a well regulated militia. To allow individuals to own guns doesn’t ensure “the security of a free State”; not now and arguably not when the Bill of Rights was formed. An armed, semi-civilian contingent could be necessary and effective in the maintenance of the security of relatively small areas of a nation, but there is still quite the logical leap to go from arming a militia and arming individual citizens.
That is exactly my specific reasoning. To which you replied: "My interpretation is that the police are the militia." So...I'm really looking for where the faulty logic is here in what I said the first time.
Okay, but you see, this rebutts the wrong topic. My quote was talking about whether I should have to run off and dig up 225+ years of cases to refute your assumption that case law is dumb, and that "Agreeing with case law but being unable to bring the specific points of case law that support the current interpretation is to consciously advocate ignorance." Ummm...yeah. I'm perpetuating ignorance, and so is everyone who has supported gun ownership...for 225 years...and we're wrong and ignorant...because it MIGHT revert in the future. So that's where I was coming from.
FM wrote:
That is THE worst metaphor you could have possibly come up with...there is no empirical evidence in judicial interpretation.
Here's the rub, again...just in case...I find your anal interpretation of the 2nd amendment incorrect because you aren't expanding your search beyond the document itself. I've told you why. I've told you what's in there. You've argument is that semantically the 2nd amendment is wrong. I'm telling you its not. I gave you an example - the police. You didn't like that one. But...it is. I gave you other examples. You ain't listening.
So to illustrate: Oprah is fat. I shouldn't have to prove it to you by fucking her. (you challenged me to beat the last one)
FM wrote:
My point was not a narrow interpretation or a broad interpretation, I was saying that clearly the Supreme Court has decided that the Bill of Rights does not ensure those rights to obvious excess, shouting "Fire!" in a packed theater, etc. That is well and good. But what is deemed excess is still a relative value. A sawed-off is deemed excessive - I don't see the line as being particularly sharp between owning something like that and owning a handgun.
Well, there's laws against sawed offs and machine guns for a reason, based on your reasoning here. So clearly there's something out there defining what's excessive...
FM wrote:
Self-defense isn't mentioned at all in the amendment. How can it possibly be a primary point?
Guess where I'm going to point you again for the answer?
FM wrote:
ahaha you said clear black and white.
I mean dude, Dred Scott Decision. Would that same ruling be made today based on that precedence? Because at least one case certainly was. Trends do not always follow.
How about we switch gears?
What WOULD have to happen to eliminate the 2nd amendment?