I am also disturbed by this article:
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2013/0...n-schools/
Officers handcuffing students for not wearing a belt? Yikes! I like belts as a fashion but even I forget to put it on one of of ten of the times.
Now not only does the USA still have states where teachers paddle elementary and high school students, sometimes with paddles that have holes for less wind resistance, but we now also have states where stupid-ass security guards hand cuff students for violating the dress code.
We don't have to outlaw guns, we just need better control of who can own one. One thing we could do is make it so gun owners have to show proof they have proper safes in storing their guns. We can also make it so there are laws that do a better job discouraging parents from sharing their gun-safes code/key-location. Psychological evaluations, perhaps? That might come off as fascist to some folks but I'm sure the gun industry would quickly help pay the psychologists for prospective gun-owners.
Speaking of fascism, the gun-control left certainly needs to get a reality check just as much as the gun-nut right. I heard one story where a boy in school chewed his pop tart into the shape of a gun, and was then suspended for it. In the story the NRA then gave him a life-time membership. You'll have to google the story yourself, I don't care if it is true or not because I've seen such imbecility on gun-phobic teachers when I was a kid. When I was in first grade I once just pointed my finger at something and said "bang" and my 1st grade teacher practically had a heart attack.
Puh, yeah, okay lady, you can read to my class a story about Noah's Arc, a story about genocide, yet I can't go "bang" to an imaginary inanimate object.
I took a gun safety class and I myself am thinking about applying for a firearms license, so I don't believe I am bias when I suggest more gun-control. Verification of safes, harsher penalties for not following the gun-safes laws, psychological evaluations, and these are just suggestions to go on top of my own state's gun-control laws.
There is, however, the
Grandfather Clause. Where new laws can't affect guns bought before the new laws were passed. I understand how this can come off as dogmatic, but it is this same dogmatism that forced the USA to admit it had no right to do what it did to Japanese Americans during WWII.
Hobbes was much more on the mark than
Locke was when it came to the nature of man. To this day, many Americans are very bigoted, and we need a constitution with god-like powers that says they can't just go locking up, killing, whatever, of anyone who they think is going to Hell.
As for the "right to bear arms" in the Second Amendment:
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.
"A well regulated Militia" - not exactly necessary in this day and age. Nuclear bombs always come to mind with this one, but if another nation really wanted to occupy America without creating nuclear waste they could just burn all our crops from their air force's airplanes, causing us all to starve to death. Thankfully we have a military superpower with a very high tech air force to prevent such an invasion. So not only do we have a standing military that makes the militia minutemen that drove out the British obsolete, but if goodness forbid that military were defeated, a militia would be useless - for an enemy military could either just eradicate us along with the land in nuclear bombs, or starve us all out from an aeronautical invasion. Maybe a gun-nut has a fantasy of taking out his machine gun and shooting an enemy airplane, however many modern airplanes and drones can fly so high they are indistinguishable from birds seen from the ground.
But the USA's founders didn't just believe militias were for keeping out invaders, to an extent they believed militias were necessary in preventing the government from taking away freedoms. Of course, when it comes to things like the mass-racism that once plagued America, things start to get, iffy, when you have a constitution that prevents the government from taking away citizen's freedom, and protecting the freedoms of people from other people because people are naturally bigoted and want to persecute others, so there is suppose to be a militia that prevents the government from persecuting its citizens, yet those same citizens want to persecute other citizens, things just get a little, iffy. But millions of Americans hate my guts because of my beliefs and sexuality, so as of yet I still have my rights - as of yet. We can debate if the harm done from gun-rights outweighs the benefits of Constitutional freedoms like freedom of speech and freedom of expression all we want, just remember to stick to the facts. I know the slippery-slope is a logical fallacy, but if the second amendment is removed, will others be removed?
John Hagee is a televangelist that makes millions off of ignorant Americans, he's publicly states all American atheists need to leave the USA, and before Obama, President Bush said he supported the "
Sodomy laws" before they were declared non-constitutional, would people like that jump at the opportunity to make the "silent majority" undo the freedoms awarded to us in the minorities? If the 2nd Amendment is stripped, will the 1st Amendment "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" be replaced with the
1st commandment "Thou shall have no other gods before (YHWH)"? Because I work with a so-called Christian who has told me he certainly wants that to happen.
Digressing from problems someone might have with the American Constitution, I'd like to bring up another slippery-slope everybody keeps hearing about - if guns go, what else will go to? When I took my gun-safety class the NRA guy made me roll my eyes with that, saying if "liberals" succeed in outlawing guns, then soon they'll go to knives, then sticks. That, however, works both ways. I don't know how much money it cost to build an atomic bomb, but if making one were a freedom it certainly is possible that they'll be made in private. If making a nuclear bomb were legally possible, and let us say the price would be five to ten million dollars, then certainly the KKK or Neo-Nazi groups could collectively make one in a matter of time, and then, well Wikipedia has a page on "
The Turner Diaries" where you can read what their intentions would be without having to pay for the book. Of course, nuclear arms aren't "arms" the founding fathers were talking about, and of course, most modern guns aren't either. The revolver my grandfather owned is the Star Trek Enterprise compared to the muskets the American founders used.
So, I'll give it a rest. I don't give a damn if a liberal calls me a penis size-compensating monster for being interested in applying for a gun license, and I don't give a damn if a conservative calls me a commie for believing in gun-control.