Into the Night
Verified User
Where does it say that in the 2nd Amendment?
It doesn't.
Where does it say that in the 2nd Amendment?
OK so now you're going to argue that the military's job isn't to defend the country because they couldn't stop 19 guys armed with boxcutters on 9/11, and couldn't be expected to stop them either?
So if we couldn't expect the Military to protect us on 9/11, how can we expect them to protect us at all?
did you ever actually take a civics class? understand how the military works? where their orders come from? how they can't just operate on their own but need civilian leaders to tell them what to do????
right where it defines 'shall not be infringed' to mean 'reasonable regulations'..............
would you approve of a military coup that ousts civilian officials and takes over to better protect the country????
That's what I don't get. It says "shall not be infringed" and yet we still infringe on people's right to own arms.
There is no such definition in the Constitution of the United States. 'Shall not be infinged' means just that. NO law limiting or banning of any weapon.
With 32 years experience in law enforcement, the only real felon I saw on January 6 was the person in the Capitol who shot an unarmed woman.
I do know the law, I did not ask what the law IS, I asked "should". Those are two different things, no wonder you are so misinformed, you have poor reading comprehension.
I am confused by Jarot's ignorance of the law.....
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/can-someone-possess-gun-after-criminal-conviction.html
You're lying again, dear.
If I may be so bold, but it springs from the majority of the population being more afraid of their fellow americans than it does the healthy fear of government overreach. Therefore, no right is absolute, All rights can be regulated, and if necessary, removed because you are more dangerous to our sensitivities than mass murder by government
in the mainstream world, government agents do no wrong, and on the off chance that they do, they can just give out some money to the family and all is well
No. He should, however, be held responsible for the injuries and damages he caused.So if a person wrecks his car recklessly, ending in injures and damages, should his right to drive and own a car be removed?
1. That is lie #14
2. That is also a lie, #15
3. Also a lie #16
just what do you think marines do
ait, I thought you only respected guys in fox holes. national guard don't sit in foxholes for the most part
There is an argument for downsizing but for every guy in a foxhole you need several support personell so you are ignorant here.
Funny how you pick 20 years instead of the last 100.
Being responsible for the costs of injuries and damages is not losing a right.The difference being?
Makes no difference. The right of self defense is inherent. Even felons have that right. A felon IS, however, responsible for what he has done.Here's other point to ponder.
Many ex-felons, some of them celebrities, have never used a gun in a commission of a felony or even owned one. And they are still denied the right to own guns. Why? I am sure Americans trust Tim Allen.
As a Libertarian and lover of the constitution as an absolute, once those 'ex-felons' are back in society, they should have every right that everyone else has. If they can't be trusted in public with a weapon, they shouldn't be in public.
Never said that, but what you saw at the Capital was neither a well organized or tactically sound effort. That said, groups such as the Oath Keepers are not numerous enough to actually do anything than to commit acts of terror, and that will not bring recruits to their cause, whatever that is. The fact of the matter is most Vets saw the attack on the Capital as a treasonous act, I sure did, especially by those that served, so do not think for a second that Vets as a whole would ever support an insurrection. You took an Oath to this Nation, it does not end when you get out if you truly have Honor.
That said, if we truly had a Government and Leader that was an enemy to Democracy, the Constitution, and the Republic I would stand right there with you as would huge numbers of Vets and other Americans, that day is not here, no matter what some want to claim. Keep a cool head and remember your Oath.
Maybe if you had ever served in the military then you'd know more history and the chain of command.