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To: 2ndDivisionVet
No more than we need to own printing presses.
/johnny
To: 2ndDivisionVet
The American Revolution began when the British attempted to disarm the Colonists.
Seems fitting that it ends with the Colonists demanding to be disarmed.
Now go pay your taxes, your government is broke. :)
3 posted on
08/05/2012 2:29:49 PM PDT by
Tzimisce
(THIS SUCKS)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
All US Democratics should turn in their weapons NOW! (And that includes all of Zer0’s sons.)
4 posted on
08/05/2012 2:32:59 PM PDT by
Paladin2
To: 2ndDivisionVet
It’s The Bill of Rights, not the bill of needs.
5 posted on
08/05/2012 2:34:30 PM PDT by
Puppage
(You may disagree with what I have to say, but I shall defend to your death my right to say it)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Just one more socialist, lefty employed by the so-called 'conservative' Washington Times.
"I believe that the answer is a government mandate subjecting any individual wishing to buy a firearm to a thirty day waiting period before his or her weapon of choice can be taken home. During this time, local authorities could utilize federal, state, and of course their own resources to conduct an extremely thorough background check on the purchaser in question."
Joseph Cotto
6 posted on
08/05/2012 2:34:40 PM PDT by
KeyLargo
To: 2ndDivisionVet
My guns are already over registered. Why does the big government not register illegal aliens, criminals and murders but want to register my guns?
7 posted on
08/05/2012 2:35:35 PM PDT by
mountainlion
(I am voting for Sarah after getting screwed again by the DC Thugs.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
In short, is it too much to ask that only decent people own firearms, and even then for the right reasons? If only decent people owned firearms, none of us would need them at all.
8 posted on
08/05/2012 2:38:15 PM PDT by
Drew68
(I WILL vote to defeat Barack Hussein Obama!)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Sorry, Joe. Anyone who claims to “believe in the Second Amendment” out of one side of his mouth and call for government-mandated restrictions on everyone’s ability to obtain one out of the other is either a blatant hypocrite or too stupid to understand the meaning of the words “shall not be infringed.”
To: 2ndDivisionVet
“Do we really need to own guns?”
Ask the Jews of 1930’s Germany.
10 posted on
08/05/2012 2:40:52 PM PDT by
WKUHilltopper
(And yet...we continue to tolerate this crap...)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Unless and until we are governed by angels, and those angels will show the utmost respect to the enumerated powers of government, then sadly, we will need guns.
Unless and until we can trust anyone who comes to our front door with our loved ones and our possessions, then sadly we will need guns.
The news is full of governments and man who ran amok. At least here in the US, people can choose to have the means to defend themselves. How does this author propose to ensure my family’s safety in the world where only the authorities and Mexican drug thugs have guns, and where the authorities can give themselves a pass when they misuse their guns and where they are arming the drug thugs?
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Do we really need more incessant cerebral masturbation by ignorant, emoting bloggers and journalists?
Guns in the hands of citizens have far more benefit to the public at large than all the dimwit lefty writers in this country.
12 posted on
08/05/2012 2:43:43 PM PDT by
Jagdgewehr
(It will take blood)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Well he asks why do we need to own guns but does not bother to ask why do we need to register our guns.
He says he believes in the second amendment for self defense and legal hunting but still ask why do we need to own guns. .
The poor man is confused and does not seem to have thought the whole issue out.
I hope someone comments on his blog and straightens him out. But it wont be me.
13 posted on
08/05/2012 2:47:57 PM PDT by
Pontiac
(The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
It’s obvious that Mr. Cotto feels that gun owners & gun rights advocates “are simply not our kind of people.”
Elitist jerk!
14 posted on
08/05/2012 2:50:41 PM PDT by
elcid1970
(Nuke Mecca now. Death to Islam means freedom for all mankind. Deus vult!)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Now that most of the MSM wants gun control/registration why dosen’t the NRA, GOA and gun owners ask for press control, ie reporters registration?
The first requirement should be a two week background check by the FBI of said reporters!
I really don’t think our Founding Fathers could have foreseen the amount of damage and mayhem these modern Assault Computers can cause! Thousands of words per minute are not needed in the hands of the emotionally disabled.
16 posted on
08/05/2012 2:56:55 PM PDT by
GOYAKLA
(Recall/ Impeachment Day, November 6, 2012. FUBO, same for RINOs)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
I believe in the Second Amendment. I think every American citizen has the inalienable right to bear arms, chiefly for the purposes of self-defense and legal hunting. Uh, the Second Amendment mentions neither, you leftist asshole.
17 posted on
08/05/2012 3:03:13 PM PDT by
SIDENET
("If that's your best, your best won't do." -Dee Snider)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
...shall not be infringed.
18 posted on
08/05/2012 3:04:30 PM PDT by
EGPWS
(Trust in God, question everyone else)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
to the author of this article..
COME GET SOME...
yours truly,
Joe Fonebone
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Hey Joe.......COME AND TAKE IT, MF’r!!
20 posted on
08/05/2012 3:21:49 PM PDT by
MachIV
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Name one thing that is currently illegal to own that can’t be acquired by anyone willing to circumvent the law. The solutions these gun control morons always come up with to address mindless violence always seem to rely on placing restrictions on the people who are the least likely to cause the problem.
To: 2ndDivisionVet
What an idiot
Joseph Cotto is with this liberal garbage.
It's not about
"NEED".
It's about
"RIGHT"!
Joseph Cotto writes:
"I believe in the Second Amendment.
I think every American citizen has the inalienable right to bear arms,chiefly for the purposes of self-defense and legal hunting."
Nothing could be further from the truth of the reasons for the Second Amendment.
But reasoning
why doesn't matter.
The RIGHT to BEAR arms has been written in our founding Constitution.
Joseph Cotto writes:"What I proposed was quite simple;that a thirty day waiting period for firearm sales be mandated by the government."
Hey, let's have a "a thirty day waiting period for the publishing of LIBERAL comments".
This would save us the grief of their stupidity!
They could be analyzed for content and logic, and if they don't have any, the writer could be declared mentally incompetent
and sent to a mental institution for his/her own safety. < /sarcasm >
But seriously, let's read some real wisdom written in June 1994, from Mr.
Sheldon Richman.
He is senior editor at the Cato Institute, 1000 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, D.C. 20001.
The Right to Life Equals the Right to Possess Firearms
In the opinion of the pundits, the tide has turned on the gun-control issue.
After years of successful opposition to federal gun control by the National Rifle Association and others, the public is said to be ready for limits on gun ownership.
The most recent evidence is passage of the federal Brady Bill, requiring a five-day waiting period for the purchase of handguns, during which the would-be buyer's background could be checked by police.
Proponents of the waiting period readily concede that it will not curb crime;rather, they see it as a first step toward further control of handguns and rifles, misleadingly called "assault weapons."
President Clinton has said he wantsfederal registration and licensing of gun ownership
and a ban on such semiautomatic weapons.
The gun-control issue is so overgrown with brush that essentials get obscured.
Rather than exchanging endless statistical studies about what did or did not happen when this or that state liberalized or tightened its gun laws,we need to look afresh at the roots of this important matter and see what has too long been overlooked:gun control strikes at every individual's right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
In spelling out why this is so, I wish to acknowledge a debt to Jeffrey R. Snyder, an attorney in Washington, D.C.,
for making that elementary point in a landmark article, "A Nation of Cowards," in the Fall 1993 issue of Public Interest.
Sometimes overlooking the obvious is the simplest thing in the world.
When someone shows you what is right under your nose, that person deserves praise.
Jeffrey Snyder is in that position.
If you own your life, then you have the right to defend yourself against anyone who would deprive you of it.
I can't imagine anyone's taking issue with that statement.
And if you have the right of self-defense, it follows that you have the right to act (in ways, of course, that violate no other rights) to obtain means appropriate to that defense.
That brings us to firearms, particularly the handgun, which so many people would outlaw.
The handgun has been called the equalizer ("God made man, but Colonel Colt made him equal"), and for good reason.
It affords smaller, weaker people the chance to defend themselves against bigger, stronger people who threaten them.
Handguns offer the otherwise defenseless a convenient, practical, inexpensive method of safeguarding themselves and their families.
Banishing handguns even if the big and the strong were also denied them would leave the small and the weak defenseless.
The big and the strong aggressors have other tools of violence at their disposal;the small and the weak do not have other effective means of self-defense.
Thus, outlawing handguns is a denial of the right of self-defense and, perforce, the right to life.
It is absurd to claim to uphold those rights while denying the right to own handguns.
But that is not all.
Any restriction on handgun ownership including outlawing the carrying of handguns represents the same violation of the right to life.
That includes waiting periods, registration, right-to-carry licenses, and the rest.
But, many people will say, in a civilized society, we have delegated our right of self-defense to the government.
We don't need to carry guns.
Here is the crux.We cannot delegate our right of self-defense.
I am not talking about morality now.
In the most practical sense, it is impossible to delegate our right to self-defense or, for that matter, our responsibility to defend our families.
Why not?
Not even the most idealized vision of government has ever promised to protect each individual 24 hours a day.
The most it promises is a general deterrence through police patrols and apprehension of criminals.(Leave aside the fact that the government's record of delivering on its promises is abysmal.)
Simply put, the government leaves us unprotected nearly all the time.
In fact, government law-enforcement personnel have no legal obligation to protect you even if they see a crime in progress.
The upshot is thatanyone who believes he has turned his self-defense over to government
is living in a dream world.
Self-defense remains the right and responsibility of the individual.
That is an unalterable fact of life.
There is no choice in the matter.
Since government cannot and makes no attempt to protect citizens at all times,
even so-called moderate gun-control interferes with the right of self-defense.
Take the waiting period.Can the state guarantee that an applicant for a handgun will not be victimized during the five-day wait?
Of course not.
The state thus forces applicants to be vulnerable to aggression while it decidesif they are worthy of an indispensable method of self-defense.
What about registration and licensing?The licensing power, of course, entails the possibility of being turned down for a license.
Furthermore, registration and licensing have been used countless times in the past to carry out a wholesale confiscation of guns.
The Clinton proposal, therefore, would put all peaceful people at risk of having their means of self-defense taken away.
Other regulations similarly put innocent people in harm's way.
Virginia's new law limiting gun purchases to one per month interferes with the self-defense rights
of someone who wishes to buy guns for home and workplace.
Laws against carrying a handgun leave people vulnerable when they are on the street.
It is no accident that most crime occurs outside of people's homes.
Criminals know that one in two homes has a gun, but very few people are permitted to carry a gun.
Thus, they know it is safer to attack someone who is away from his home.(In England, where gun ownership is more severely restricted, more crime occurs in people's homes.
According to David Kopel, in Britain 59 percent of attempted burglaries occur in occupied homes;
in the United States, it's 13 percent.
But there are already too many guns in society, the proponents of control say:More guns would make society more violent.
Would it?
The issue is not a matter of numbers.
What counts is not how many guns, but who has them.
Today, the people who would use guns to violate rights have little trouble getting them,
while those who would use them to defend their rights have increasing trouble getting them.
That is an undeniable truth that refutes the gun controllers who say they want to reduce violent crime.
Someone who intends to rob people is not likely to respect gun laws.
Most guns used in crimes were not bought by the criminal at a gun store.
They were bought on the black market or stolen.
The bottom line is that gun control, regardless of the proponents' intentions, harasses defenders rights and barely touches rights violators.
Gun control is, in effect, a subsidy for criminals.
To be sure, gun accidents happen, and were there no guns, there would be no gun accidents.
But the number of gun accidents has been falling for years and represent a minuscule percentage of the some 66 million handguns Americans possess.
Meanwhile, according to researcher Gary Kleck, Americans use handguns (without necessarily firing) in self-defense 645,000 times each year,
and surveys of convicted criminals show an understandable desire to avoid armed victims.
A much-touted study purporting to showthat a handgun in the home greatly increases the odds that an innocent person will be killed
ignored all the cases in which merely brandishing the gun succeeded in protecting innocent people.
Terrible incidents such as the mass murder at Luby's Cafeteria in Killeen, Texas, and on the Long Island Railroad would be less likely if people were free to carry handguns.
Even if such an incident occurred, fewer people might be killed, because one of the armed bystanders would wound or kill the assailant.
That happens at least as frequently as the shooting of a group of unarmed victims, but it rarely is reported in the national news media.(Shortly after the Luby's incident, an armed citizen saved 20 Shoney's restaurant customers from armed robbers in Anniston, Alabama.)
The possibility of accident and the probability that some will use guns to kill themselves (which, after all, violates no one's rights)
are not good reasons to interfere with the right of self-defense.
The gun controllers think they can shut up their opponents by conjuring images of the Wild West.
But as much research shows, the frontier was not nearly as violent as the movies would have us believe.
It stands to reason:if most people are armed both with guns and the knowledge of how to use them,
violent crime is deterred.
In our time, we have seen just those results in Florida and Oregon after those states liberalized their license-to-carry laws.
"An armed society," wrote libertarian science-fiction writer Robert Heinlein, "is a polite society."
An armed people is a people who have taken a personal interest in keeping their society civil.
David Kopel reports that 81 percent of the "good Samaritans" who help victims of violent crime are gun owners.
The state has failed to protect us we should never have expected it to.
The time is now for us to take control of our own destiny.
So, you must learn,
NEVER TRUST A LIBERAL ... AND NEVER GIVE UP YOUR GUNS !
23 posted on
08/05/2012 3:58:39 PM PDT by
Yosemitest
(It's simple, fight or die!)
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