Why would it matter? When they move to actually disarming, the people will shoot a few soldiers and the tyrannical government will be stopped.
I miss the old eyeroll smiley.
You realise that I wasn't claiming that the US government should say people need cars right? I was saying that as a matter of practicality more Americans "need" cars than guns, and that to use them the way they need to, those cars have to be licensed.
Plus if you say the government doesn't get to say you need certain things...well, the founders were your first government. They enacted your constitution into law under that authority. By your own logic then, they shouldn't get to say you "need" guns & your oh-so-holy second amendment shouldn't stand.
The founders, having just fought a desperate and bloody revolution to get out from under the thumb of an oppressive government, built the establishing documents of the government of this new country on the principal that a strong government cannot be trusted - and thus all the language in the constitution and in the bill of rights in particular do not talk about what the people are allowed, but what the government is NOT allowed.
That's a fundamentally different point of view than what many are used to thinking. They believe that the government "allows" them to do certain things because they are necessary to live and succeed, but all else is forbidden unless permission is granted. That is actually anathema to the very core concepts of what has made America work. Rather, the proper frame of reference is that you have no limits apart from where they impact the rights of another (the proverbial "Your right to swing your fist ends where my nose begins").
And the founders also did realize that times change, and they put in a mechanism to amend the constitution - one we've used 17 more times since the 10 amendments they immediately enacted.
The founders had seen first hand the methods and effects of actual tyranny first hand, which is why those first 10 amendments so often address particular abuses that Americans suffered under British rule. And they deemed an armed populace, able to resist, to be so important, it was the second on their list of things they wanted to make explicitly clear that the government was not allowed to undermine.
And if Americans decide that the times have changed enough for that to no longer be the case, there's a process already in place for repealing that amendment. But gun grabbers know that their views are not in the majority, which is why they pick away at it, bit by bit. Why they do end runs around the 2nd amendment via municipal or state laws that contravene the 2nd amendment, which are usually struck down if and when they reach the United States Supreme Court.
Now you're just being disingenuous. Either that, or you are misrepresenting what actual "Tyranny" is.
Or both.
--Patrick
Yes, he's absolutely taking the proverbial piss.
Updating or changing it isn't allowed though, because their writ is holy, divinely inspired and unchanging, to many people. It's like Quran exegesis.
Oh but it IS allowed as I just said - it's just those who want guns gone don't have anywhere near the numbers to enact their will, so they try to achieve their goals through unconstitutional means.
Perhaps what we need, then, is to have the government issue everyone a registered gun for a week, and then take them away?
I've brought it up before... but mandatory safety and handling training as part of the high school curriculum. A lot of the fear and misuse comes from a place of ignorance.