First
let me preface my remarks by stating that I am not a 'gun guy'. I do
not hunt. I do not target shoot. I do not collect guns. I do not belong
to the NRA. I do not live in a 'rough' part of town. I own no guns,
nor have I ever needed to have one. The last time I fired a shot in
anger was in 1968.
That being said, there are many people today, (myself included), who
have a deep, (and a legitimate), distrust of the government.
They believe that it is in the nature of governments to accumulate and
to concentrate more and more power over people's lives. More power leads
to more control.
It has always been so. As Lord Acton so famously stated, "Power
corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." Meaning that those
who are given power over others will use that power.
Even if the government is not specifically intending to do so, it is the nature of large governments that this occurs.
Now the government may espouse their desire to help the citizenry, but
when individuals disagree with what the government determines is in
their best interest, then those in power use coersion. Sometimes subtle
sometimes not so subtle.
This concentration of power and increasing coersion can be gradual (like
slowly turning up the heat on a lobster in a pot), or sudden (like
dropping him into boiling water).
One need only be a casual student of history to see the process at work again and again and again.
The Second Amendment is *our* guarantee that this loss of individual
freedom and increasing control of our lives cannot be done with
impunity.
One need only look at what is occurring in Syria today or in Mexico, or
any of a dozen other locations around the globe to see examples of what
happens when the government controls the people and when the people are
defenseless to resist.
Now you may feel that this distrust is not warranted, or that it verges
on paranoia. Many might agree with you. However many more, would not.
The Founding Fathers believed fervently that ordinary citizens needed to
be protected from an oppressive government. If they had not, then there
would not have been a Second Amendment in the first instance.
They were *very* distrustful of the concentration of power into the
hands of the few. They set up safeguards against it by diluting that
power into different branches and different levels. They tried to define
precisely just who could do what, and what things
they could not do. They added further protections in the Bill of Rights.
The Founding Fathers, I am certain, would be aghast at the degree to
which the government controls the lives of Americans today. Indeed, they
went into rebellion over transgressions less onerous than what we today
have allowed to be imposed upon us.
Read the Declaration of Independence. Look at the reasons that are
enumerated there. They speak of an oppressive government seeking to
impose it's will upon the citizenry.
The Second Amendment was NEVER about what type of arms citizens might
own or about what the technological developments of the future might
bring. It was not about hunting. It was not about home defense. It was
not about target shooting. It was about the ability
of citizens to oppose and resist the oppression of a tyrannical
government.
There are those Americans that honestly feel that this point of view is
not applicable to the 21st century; that such concerns are the things of
history. They label those like myself, as 'gun nuts' or as paranoid,
even dangerous.
If you are one that believes that this distrust is stuff out of a dusty
history book, and has no relevance in the 21st century, then I urge you
again to to look around more carefully.
Those of us that support the Second Amendment feel that it's relevance is as valid now as it was when it was first penned.
The HiV of Western Culture
4 years ago
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