Posted on 07/28/2014 3:46:08 AM PDT by right-wing agnostic
I think you probably shouldn’t have a gun if you aren’t smart enough to see what’s wrong with your argument.
Exceptions could be carved out for violent offenders or repeat offenders.
But in the case you posted, the convicted felon not only possessed the weapon, he unlawfully discharged it. Not only did he violate the Federal prohibition against possession, he violated state and local ordinances against discharge of a weapon.
Not a compelling case for leniency.
Though well-meaning, you managed to gut your own argument. We live in a time when every single one of us can be adjudged a felon for virtually any reason. The Left has managed to pack the books with so many ridiculous laws...the same strategy used by the Nazis in the ‘30’s...that the government can find a reason to lock any of us away for years. Your own example of D’Sousa is an excellent case in point.
Did the felon complete the terms of his sentence? If so then ALL his rights should be restored.
If he is not to be restored as a full citizen after serving his sentence then he should have been executed for the crime (or banished from this country entirely).
We do not have two classes of citizens in thic country. Either you are a citizen with all the same rights or you are not.
Since you asked, I sincerely hope you don’t own a gun—I doubt you are smart enough to operate it.
You got to love that phrase right there.
The felon did not possess the gun as in own it, it belonged to his brother. He was asked to get his brother’s gun by the wife of his brother, all to stop a fight that could have resulted in the owner of the gun’s death, because he had previously had 2 heart attacks.
I agree with your first idea that non-violent offenders should have their voting rights restored and 2nd amendment rights restored. In this case common sense is thrown out the window and justice was not served because he was stopping what could have been a fight to the death. He shot into the air or ground it is stated, no harm no foul comes to my mind.
This is just another case of the law being used to the farthest degree to convict a man of something common sense would tell you was necessary and served to protect someone else. Think of returning vets not allowed to have a weapon after consulting a headshrinker for problems caused by defending this country. Seems to me to be the same shit different situation.
The constitution says, “shall not be infringed” not except when the humidity is high or some overzealous prosecutor or cop wants to put a notch in their resume. Cutting the tags off your mattress is a felony, I do believe, though I have no idea why it would be, and the idea that altering a piece of furniture you own strikes me as one more legal trap. Actually it might be easier to list the things that are not illegal than all the things that are. Wasn’t there a book written recently called, “Three Felonies a Day”? It probably could have been called, “Farting on an Elevator Can Put You Away”. Kind of gets ridiculous, don’t it?
See ... all you have to tell is one lie, or snitch a piece of candy from your neighbor's house as you go out the door ... and if you induce argument .. ?
All it takes is one
But are you REALLY a liar and a thief ?
When did such disenfranchisement become law?
Does anyone know?
Have all convicts lose all of their 2A rights ( and many of the related preceding natural rights)from day one or did some legislation passed by the fedgov make that so?
I hope someone on this forum researches this question and enlightens us all.
(hint- may be a certain act passed in 1968).
Simple answer: there is no exception within the 2nd authorizing the prohibition of arms by felons. The only way to change that is by amending the Constitution. Thus, by a plain reading, there exist no Constitutional authority to prohibit the felon class from keeping and bearing arms - no matter the emotional appeal of it.
If a criminal is determined to still be a danger to society they should not be released back out into society.
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Show me the part of the Constitution that says felons can be denied ANY right. You cannot. Standing on American soil we have inalienable rights. God gave us these rights, only God can take them away. Even if you do not feel safe around guns.
Prior to that time, you could go away for 10 years for murder (or whatever), get out, plunk down $79.95 and walk out of Western Auto or Sears with an AK47
If you can’t be trusted in polite society with the means to defend yourself if attacked,
you shouldn’t have been released into polite society.
A lot of states allow convicted felons to petition to have their rights restored after they've served the complete sentence. It allows a judge to determine if the individual is still a threat. Maybe it's not a perfect solution, but it's better than banning someone for life because they forged a check when they were 20 years old.
Before 1968, a felon or anyone could buy a handgun with no questions asked.
The crime rate back then was very low. Then came the 1968 Gun Control Law.
We can thank Oswald and Sirhan Sirhan for that, along with a very anti-gun media.
You have either paid for your crime, or you haven't. There should be no second class to be held to different standards.
If a person cannot be trusted to regain all rights upon completion of all time, probation and parole, then why are they trusted to be on the streets at all? There are some who should never breathe free air again, but many who have righted themselves, and become productive members of society who are denied the most basic fundamental right of self-defense.
1. The answer to the lead question is the legal doctrine of “competing harms”: there is a legal defense to committing a crime when _not_ committing that crime _will_ result in greater harm under the circumstances.
2. This scenario does _not_ satisfy the “competing harms” requirement. The fight underway was solely a matter between two antagonists who, AFAIK, voluntarily engaged in “unlawful combat” and while violent did not, AFAIK, show a lethal risk (a nuanced evaluation which only those present could decide). The fact that the shot fired was a “warning” shows the actor/felon in question believed the situation was NOT lethal, and thus itself becomes the crime of discharging a lethal weapon without due cause. (There exists a long list of grave injuries & deaths from “warning shots”.)
Ergo the felon, unable to articulate any viable concern of actual “greater harm” (neither combatant was at apparent risk of being beaten to death in otherwise voluntary illegal combat), is not excused from the crime of “felon in possession of a lethal weapon”.
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