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The Supreme Court May Finally Do Something Right!
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationwo...8.story?page=1
I'm happy that they will be ruling in favor of individual rights over government powers for a change (as they are supposed to do), though I take umbrage at the claim that the government has the authority to place "reasonable restrictions" on those rights. No governmental restriction of our rights is reasonable. The only valid limitation on our rights is the equal rights of others. The people have an unlimited right to have any weapon they can honestly acquire, in any number, with any type of ammunition. Merely owning a gun or a million guns does nothing to endanger others. Owning a fully automatic machine gun does nothing to endanger others. Owning a nuke might, but if one can prove that they can store it safely and securely without any nuclear energy leaks, there's no reason they shouldn't be able to build one or have one. Individual people have a right to own any weapon the government has, if not more. |
The rights of others, yes. Vide Ringer's Paradox: A right restricted is a right preserved. It does not greatly matter who does the restricting, as long as the restriction is kept to the minimum necessary to preserve.
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Yay for pocket nukes!!
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The darn things will tear your pocket right off, though -- setting a new, and lower, sartorial standard. Heavy futhermuckers, particularly the uranium-cased ones.
It is both easy and well understood how to use a gun as designed and intended to be used in a moral fashion. But using a nuke for its designed and intended purpose in a moral fashion is ever so much harder. Aerial bombs, high explosive shells, and armed guided missiles, ground- or air-launched, fall at various places in the middle of this spectrum. Cogitate and discuss. |
I'm struggling with the concept that the main danger of a nuclear weapon is that it might be contained under unsafe conditions. More troublesome, to me, would be the consequences if the device were used for it's only intended purpose.* I think it is a reasonable function of the government to regulate the possession of anything that could wipe out millions of people with the push of a button.
* Although I suppose one could use the argument that a possessing a nuclear weapon is a deterrent against the use of nuclear weapons. Thus the intended use could be construed as "to prevent my neighbor from using his against me" ...but somehow that doesn't sound like a safe situuation to me. |
Well MAD has seemed to work to this point. I suspect we are going to see a renewed sense of uneasiness as Iran gets the bomb given that their govenment has gone on record as threatening Israel with destruction.
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I always thought it might make them easier to take down in a foot pursuit and arrest. So far though that's not as well documented as the guy with the flashing sneakers that tried to run away from the cops across a darkened field. His feet would have had to flash a lot faster than they did.
I hold the same misgivings Flint does, and agree with Merc too. It has worked, with nations anyway. You have to rejigger MAD to work on terrorist groups that don't have a nation to lose and are banking on massive revanchism if a terror-enabling nation gets nuked in retaliation. It would require destroying the terrorists before they can implement a nuke plot. Call it Unilateral Assured Destruction. |
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Yes, of course: they get a chance to see how they like it.
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Comparing how you modify the behavior of your children with how to respond to violent acts of a terrorist is just a bit crazy.:headshake |
Guerrilla, what if they expect to be spanked, or killed, and so resort to doing the spanking or killing themselves first, before they get themselves spanked or killed? Getting their licks first, so to speak. I said hooray for pocket nukes, because the pro-gunners can't even imagine the consequences of a no gun law society.
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