blackshoe, on 2013-January-25, 11:58, said:
Uh huh.
”A free people ought to be armed.” ~George Washington
”To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them…” ~Richard Henry Lee
”The right of self-defense is the first law of nature; in most governments it has been the study of rulers to confine this right within the narrowest possible limits. … and [when] the right of the people to keep and bear arms is, under any color or pretext whatsoever, prohibited, liberty, if not already annihilated, is on the brink of destruction.” ~St. George Tucker
”[The Constitution preserves] the advantage of being armed which Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation (where) the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms.” ~James Madison
”Firearms are second only to the Constitution in importance; they are the peoples’ liberty’s teeth.” ~George Washington
”One loves to possess arms, though they hope never to have occasion for them.” ~Thomas Jefferson
”The best we can hope for concerning the people at large is that they be properly armed.” ~Alexander Hamilton
”The world is filled with violence. Because criminals carry guns, we decent law-abiding citizens should also have guns. Otherwise they will win and the decent people will lose.” ~James Earl Jones
”Laws that forbid the carrying of arms… disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes… Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man.” ~Thomas Jefferson (quoting Cesare Beccaria)
”If gun laws in fact worked, the sponsors of this type of legislation should have no difficulty drawing upon long lists of examples of crime rates reduced by such legislation. That they cannot do so after a century and a half of trying — that they must sweep under the rug the southern attempts at gun control in the 1870-1910 period, the northeastern attempts in the 1920-1939 period, the attempts at both Federal and State levels in 1965-1976 — establishes the repeated, complete and inevitable failure of gun laws to control serious crime.” ~Senator Orrin Hatch
The historical references should be viewed within the context in which they were made.
The social and political realities of the world have changed. For example, there were very few formal police forces in colonial or immediately post colonial America. New York, for example, didn't have a police force until the mid 19th century.
Self-help and self-protection were far more important then than now.
In addition, even the most obstinate observer might have to recognize that the early US leaders of what was an armed insurrection might not have been completely objective in their views
But more to the point: what may have been reasonable in one set of circumstances may not be reasonable in another set. Which is why anyone who feels the need to resort to statements from people who lived hundreds of years ago, in fundamentally different circumstances, reveals the limits of his or her intellectual abilities.
Intelligent people recognize that when circumstances change, our attitudes may need to change as well.
As for more recent conservatives, the fact that they say things doesn't make what they say valid. Appeals to authority, whether that authority be ancient or current, again reveal a profound intellectual weakness. An argument stands and falls on its logic and its relation to observable facts. Its validity is not demonstrated by simply quoting people saying it is valid.
The James Earl Jones statement, for example, is a ridiculously illogical argument. The bad guys, with guns, don't 'win', and aren't stopped from winning only by making sure the good guys have guns. Most people in Western Europe or Japan or Australia or New Zealand, for example, don't have guns and the 'bad guys' do a lot less harm there, per capita, than they do in the US. Indeed, if we want to draw inferences between the 'good guys' having guns and the prevalence of murders, the evidence suggests that the only valid inference is that the more guns the good guys have, the more people are murdered.
It is, of course, more complex than that. The Swiss have a high rate of gun ownership, tho I believe somewhat regulated and less to do with handguns than the US, and they have a low crime rate. But, you like simple arguments (as to all libertarians and most conservatives) because that way you can avoid dealing with messy reality.
There are cultural and historical reasons for the Swiss approach. There are cultural and historical reasons for the US approach. But the whole of the evidence suggests that restricting access to firearms saves lives. Lives can also be saved, even with widespread guns availability, if adequate restrictions are imposed upon the type of gun, and the use of it. A rule that one cannot, without a permit, take one's gun out of one's home, and that it must have a locking mechanism and safe storage such that kids can't get hold of it, would greatly reduce accidental and outside of the home rage incidents.
These are undenial realities, against which all you can come up with is the relatively rare instance in which a rational criminal would choose not to mug someone out of fear that that someone has a gun, or the even more remote chance that a perfectly law-abiding citizen will face a home invasion that could have been prevented by having a loaded firearm always within reach (of kids, angry spouse, distraught visitor, etc).
I don't expect you to respond substantively to this post, just as you have failed to respond to the other posts I made in this thread. People like you refuse to deal with objective reality; preferring to live in your bubble world in which your beliefs have the force of fact.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari