I reject that thoroughly. Rights are inherent to being human beings, and for those of faith, they are so because they are endowed to us by the Maker. He never gave anybody the right to own slaves like cattle. He permitted certain things, when He did, because of the hardness of our hearts; and since Christ, He hasn't once instructed us that He's endowed us with the right to own people like cattle. It sounds more like you think that we only have permission right now to keep and bear arms, like how slave owners back in the day had permission to own people like cattle. There was never any right to own people like cattle, the law didn't reflect a civil or human right to own people like cattle. You apparently think that rights are negotiable things, decided upon by lawyers and lawmakers.
One that took a Constitutional Amendment to rid ourselves of.
Something I said early on was that you're arguing for amending the Constitution to repeal the Second Amendment, and you denied that, but that impression to me remains. You mentioning this reminds me again.
In point of fact though, almost no one is advancing the notion that the right to bear arms is unabridged, which means the rest of it is about where the line should be drawn and why.
You deny that wrt the civil right to keep and bear arms, that "arms" refers to standard issue military weaponry, and apparently also you deny that it refers to partly disabled/semiauto-only "miltary-style civilian facsimiles" of those arms. You're not arguing abridgment/infringement, you're arguing against the right itself.
What was true in the founders days is no longer true. We don't need militias, having a standing army. And the nature of the weapons we produce can produce so much more harm to other members of the society comparatively that the field of consideration cannot reasonably be said to be the same.
Case in point. Of course the Supreme Court recently examined this issue, including the points you've proffered here. They decided against you. You're arguing against the existence of the right itself.
I think we should take a hard look at all the other countries that do a remarkably better job of curbing gun violence and mass shootings and make laws reflecting that sober examination.
And I agree with this, but you dodged my actual comment to you.
Then you need to consider why you believe that, because I'm a gun owner
'Means nothing, when you won't divulge which weapons you actually possess. Are you arguing that guns you own should be illegal, or not? You see how I don't have to even own guns to argue my point, but you need to provide this information if you're going to keep using it as evidence. We don't know how much skin you've got in this game that you're playing.
and one who hasn't proposed the eradication of gun ownership by any stretch of the imagination.
You keep saying that as if it's equivalent to believing in the RKBA as authoritatively interpreted by the Supreme Court, when the fact is that you disagree with that interpretation, so you not proposing "eradication of gun ownership by any stretch of the imagination" is a distraction, and a misleading one.
I can't be a criminal without a law and no law will pass restricting any gun without programs for collection and, I'd proffer, reasonable compensation. And, of course, collectable guns could be rendered ineffective as weapons, avoiding the problem for those who possess them for that reason.
Another dodge, you didn't answer my question.
See, you just put another caveat. Your right depends on what you do with it. It isn't free of restrictions. And as with your liberty it is subject to restriction.
I have no right to commit a malum in se crime, as I've maintained. You're calling that a restriction, which still doesn't advance your position, because possessing a standard issue military long gun, or even a bunch of them, is not a malum in se crime anyway, and neither is carrying them. You're trying to argue that my rights are intrinsically bounded by malum prohibitum crimes, and that in no way holds any water, since, by analogy, how could someone justly forfeit their right to life over a malum prohibitum crime? That's rather extreme of you to propose.
Even the fundamental right to be is subject to examination in light of behavior. And sometimes when the compact is threatened you can be forcibly placed in a position where your life might be forfeit in defense of others and the compact itself.
I think the quote is "Give me liberty, or give me death," not, "Give me the compact or give me death." But this does reveal a little bit more about where you're coming from, that you'd word it in this way.
They have, narrowly. They once disagreed with my position on owning people too. So this isn't really about that or we can just print the decision and move on, which would suit many, doubtless, but that's life for you. Abortion is the law of the land too.
'Looks like an apple and orange cart just overturned in the street here. There's never been any right to own people, laws permitting abortion fail to recognize, affirm, and protect the right to life, and the civil right to keep and bear arms is intrinsic to being a human being.
No Confederate believed that, Nihilo.
Of course not, Town. That just goes to the point I was making. It was the federalists, chiefly President Lincoln, who in waging that otherwise hostile war against a non-belligerent peaceful neighbor, believed that the Constitution has no valid exit door or escape clause or possibility.
They withdrew from the Union, believing they were entitled to in defense of a right to own people and to expand that right into new territories.
And the United States invaded them, only validly, morally, and legally, under the federalists' position that the Constitution is irrevocable.
No, the topic is whether or not we find preventable massacres preferable to the alteration of an arbitrary line in the sand in relation to what a person can reasonably use for hunting
Hunting is way off topic.
and [reasonable use] in self-defense.
You're not reasonable about this, and every military on earth disagrees with you, and agrees with me, because they outfit their lowest ranks with weapons that you are hellbent against any private citizen ever possessing, or carrying, and they outfit them so, because these weapons are judged by all of them as reasonable for use in self defense, and in defense of the common.
Again, the weapons and the scale of lethality they present today don't remotely reflect what was reasonable and possible when the initial ideas were framed for protection under a differing set of needs and pragmatic considerations.
And just as again, the Supreme Court considered all this and made their ruling in the light of it. You disagree with them.
It's time to stop acting as though this right wasn't a thing it demonstrably is, abridged, then get on with the reasonable job of making sure we make a more intelligent choice relating to that line.
Nobody has a right to commit malum in se crimes. You call that abridgment of a right, I just don't include that in any right.