The bill of rights doesn't define rights for the state, it defines what the rights of the people are. Arms would be a weapon you can carry, same meaning in Shakespeare as it is today. It's possible the nuanced implications of keeping and bearing have changed over a couple of centuries I suppose.

My opinion....whether or not it's popular...is that there are good and sensible reasons to limit access to some types of weapons, but if we can do that without changing the second amendment beforehand then there's no purpose to having the constitution or any of its amendments. If we use a tax law or commerce regulation to skirt around the second amendment, then we could do the same thing with any of the others.



On 12/7/2015 12:41 PM, Patrick Leary wrote:

Yawn. The general population never made that boast until the NRA in the 1980s changed their tactics to spur slagging gun sales. They moved the conversation to patriotic themes, talk of freedom, and other pabulum gobbled up by folks. Contrary to popular “conservative” thinking, this is not settled law. In fact, even Scalia has been clear it’s quite open. Part of the issue is the meaning of “arms” and “keep” and “bear,” as well as the limits therein. But, even more important is how modern gun advocates neglect the entire first part of that amendment and pretend it does not exist at all, when rather, it is, in fact, the entire modifying context of the latter part of the sentence.

I quote;

"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

The NRA has done yeoman’s work pretending that part of the amendment does not exist. The “well regulated militia” is the subject, not guns. The rest of the sentence is the modifier. “People” in this case are represented by each state’s militia.

There is a significant opinion among many scholars that individual citizens have no right at all to a gun.

Secondly, no right is absolute. Government even grants itself the authority to regulate our inalienable rights (capital punishment, etc.). Amendments can also be altered, like the idiot 18^th , in the face of changing realities. The reality of then was a muzzle-loaded, single fire musket.

And, even if anyone wants to play elementary games and claim literalism, good luck with that, as that same text says nothing about ammunition, keeping and bearing LOADED arms.

Patrick

*From:*Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] *On Behalf Of *Jeff Broadwick - Lists
*Sent:* Monday, December 7, 2015 12:10 PM
*To:* af@afmug.com
*Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] WAY OT: Concealed Carry handguns - which to buy and why

Since when is a discussion of our legal, Constitutional rights "pathetic" Patrick? We are talking about a tool, like any other, that can be used to protect ourselves and others. WISPs are often out in remote places in the dead of night...or at inner city data centers. They are vulnerable. I know that one person on this list would likely not be here right now if he hadn't been able to show a gun to someone that was about to bash him with a baseball bat outside a data center.

Jeff Broadwick

ConVergence Technologies, Inc.

312-205-2519 Office

574-220-7826 Cell

jbroadw...@converge-tech.com <mailto:jbroadw...@converge-tech.com>


On Dec 7, 2015, at 11:58 AM, Patrick Leary <patrick.le...@telrad.com <mailto:patrick.le...@telrad.com>> wrote:

    I’ll just note this is a pathetic thread to have in any society
    that considers itself civil. Hell, even in the “wild west” the
    local law had people check their weapons into the sheriff when
    they came into town. In fact, formerly, states like Texas lead the
    country in banning open carry.

    “All the more surprising, then, that Texas was the first state to
    ban its citizens from carrying handguns, a restriction that
    remained on the books for 125 years.”
    
http://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/politics/texas/article/First-to-ban-open-carry-Texas-could-be-one-of-5974401.php

    And just read this scholarly article from 1999:

    *Gun Control and the Old West*
    By Ross Collins
    History News Service
    <http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/%7Ehns/index.html>, Summer 1999.

    The smoke has cleared, and we peer down at the victim: another gun
    control bill, shot full ‘o holes. Just like in the old horse
    operas: a hero again shoots to protect a precious freedom,
    America’s right to bear arms. For many who keep a romantic image
    of America’s past, gun control is like that, a battle steeped in
    American tradition. It calls us back to those legendary days of
    the Old West, when cowboys defended their honor and their horses
    by way of their Colts
    .
    In fact, most historians see the cowboys of the Old West as THE
    defining heroes of 20th-century America. He’s used to sell
    everything from soap to hats. He’s apparently also an ideal
    American for anti-gun control groups: gun shows and gun
    advertising promote from a distinctive Old West flavor.

    Today’s anti gun control forces count their strongest support
    among society’s leaders from the states that once formed part of
    the Old West.
    The actual Old West pioneers of historical fact viewed matters
    differently, however. They would certainly hail the campaign to
    protect an American right to bear arms, but the record puts them
    behind "moderate, common-sense measures" for gun control—the very
    kind that President Clinton has proposed.

    Pioneer publications show Old West leaders repeatedly arguing in
    favor of gun control. City leaders in the old cattle towns knew
    from experience what some Americans today don't want to believe: a
    town which allows easy access to guns invites trouble.
    What these cow town leaders saw intimately in their day-to-day
    association with guns is that more guns in more places caused not
    greater safety, but greater death in an already dangerous
    wilderness. By the 1880s many in the west were fed up with gun
    violence. Gun control, they contended, was absolutely essential,
    and the remedy advocated usually was usually no less than a total
    ban on pistol-packing.
    The editor of the Black Hills Daily Times of Dakota Territory in
    1884, called the idea of carrying firearms into the city a
    “dangerous practice,” not only to others, but to the packer
    himself. He emphasized his point with the headline, "Perforated by
    His Own Pistol."
    The editor of the Montana’s Yellowstone Journal acknowledged four
    years earlier that Americans have "the right to bear arms," but he
    contended that guns have to be regulated. As for cowboys carrying
    pistols, a dispatch from Laramie’s Northwest Stock Journal in
    1884, reported, "We see many cowboys fitting up for the spring and
    summer work. They all seem to think it absolutely necessary to
    have a revolver. Of all foolish notions this is the most absurd."

    Cowboy president Theodore Roosevelt recalled with approval that as
    a Dakota Territory ranch owner, his town, at the least, allowed
    "no shooting in the streets." The editor of that town's newspaper,
    The Bad Lands Cow Boy of Medora, demanded that gun control be even
    tighter than that, however. Like leaders in Miles City and many
    other cow towns, he wanted to see guns banned entirely within the
    city limits. A.T. Packard in August 1885 called "packing a gun" a
    "senseless custom," and noted about a month later that "As a
    protection, it is terribly useless.”

    Old West cattlemen themselves also saw the need for gun control.
    By 1882, a Texas cattle raising association had banned
    six-shooters from the cowboy's belt. "In almost every section of
    the West murders are on the increase, and cowmen are too often the
    principals in the encounters," concurred a dispatch from the Texas
    Live Stock Journal dated June 5, 1884. "The six-shooter loaded
    with deadly cartridges is a dangerous companion for any man,
    especially if he should unfortunately be primed with whiskey.
    Cattlemen should unite in aiding the enforcement of the law
    against carrying of deadly weapons."

    This echoes President Clinton’s reaction following the failure in
    Congress of the most recent gun control proposals: “The American
    people will not stand for this.” So far they have, however, as
    recalled by the record of defeated attempts to legislate control.
    As U.S. Rep. Martin Sabo (D.-Minn.) noted, “there’s broad public
    support for it, but he opponents are much more intense about it.”

    The Old West’s leaders who argued for gun control knew that a long
    time ago. Their arguments sound as contemporary at the end of this
    century as they were earnest at the end of the last. But despite
    them, few packers have been persuaded to put away their pistols,
    then or now.

    Copyright 2004 by Ross F. Collins
    <www.ndsu.edu/communication/collins
    <http://www.ndsu.edu/communication/collins>>

    Wayne LaPierre sure has done his job well. He’s made most of you
    fooled into thinking owning a gun is a patriotic act without you
    realizing you are just another tool for raking in the dough. He’s
    been so successful he’s converted gun ownership into a religious
    issue, to point that whether or not you own a gun is highly
    predictive of your being an evangelical Christian.

    
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/is-gun-ownership-christian/2013/01/25/c7afe7fe-6724-11e2-93e1-475791032daf_story.html

    Patrick

    *From:*Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] *On Behalf Of *Cameron Crum
    *Sent:* Monday, December 7, 2015 11:38 AM
    *To:* af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>
    *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] WAY OT: Concealed Carry handguns - which to
    buy and why

    I carry a Colt 45 Defender. It is relatively small for a 45. An
    NSA buddy of mine, who had been in several close range shootouts
    in his career asked me one time why I carry a 45. I told him that
    I'd never been in a firefight. I don't train in high pressure
    situations, and while I'm proficient at the range, I don't train
    for situations like he did or the cops do. If I am in a situation
    where I have to pull a gun, my adrenaline is going to be pumping
    like crazy, and I may be moving to cover or trying to stay out of
    the way of bullets myself. I may only hit what I'm shooting at
    once if I'm lucky. I want the once to count.

    On Mon, Dec 7, 2015 at 10:30 AM, That One Guy /sarcasm
    <thatoneguyst...@gmail.com <mailto:thatoneguyst...@gmail.com>> wrote:

        define legally

        If a bear shits in the woods, will tight shoes cause callouses?

        I dont know why any of you want these killing machines, the
        government has guns, and we pay them to protect us. Your gun,
        if you hand it to a bad guy, is 100% of the time going to be
        in the bad guys possession, and if that bad guy happens to be
        5, youve just given a child a handgun, are you saying we
        should arm children? Why are you trying to kill children,
        children are the future, teach them well and let them lead the
        way.

        Imperialist scum be furthering decline humanity. Mighty leader
        will devour you in fear.

        <image002.jpg>
        ​

        On Mon, Dec 7, 2015 at 10:17 AM, Chuck McCown <ch...@wbmfg.com
        <mailto:ch...@wbmfg.com>> wrote:

            Can you legally own hand grenades?

            *From:*Mathew Howard <mailto:mhoward...@gmail.com>

            *Sent:*Monday, December 07, 2015 9:15 AM

            *To:*af <mailto:af@afmug.com>

            *Subject:*Re: [AFMUG] WAY OT: Concealed Carry handguns -
            which to buy and why

            you do if you want to conceal it... :P

            On Mon, Dec 7, 2015 at 10:14 AM, Chuck McCown
            <ch...@wbmfg.com <mailto:ch...@wbmfg.com>> wrote:

                You don’t need a CC to carry a Springfield 30-06....

                *From:*Paul McCall <mailto:pa...@pdmnet.net>

                *Sent:*Monday, December 07, 2015 9:03 AM

                *To:*af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>

                *Subject:*[AFMUG] WAY OT: Concealed Carry handguns -
                which to buy and why

I am getting my CC permit (Florida) in a week or so. I took an absolutely excellent class from the main
                trainer at the Brevard county sheriff’s office.

                Now, I am looking for an excellent CC gun to use, as
                my long barrel Colt 38 is not a good fit for that.

                I am certain that this group probably has a LOT of
                expertise (and many opinions) on THE gun to use.

                J

                Paul McCall, Pres.

                PDMNet / Florida Broadband

                658 Old Dixie Highway

                Vero Beach, FL 32962

                772-564-6800 <tel:772-564-6800> office

                772-473-0352 <tel:772-473-0352> cell

                www.pdmnet.com <http://www.pdmnet.com/>

                pa...@pdmnet.net <mailto:pa...@pdmnet.net>



--
        If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see
        your team as part of yourself you have already failed as part
        of the team.




    
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