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Second Amendment Questioned

dheera writes "Attorneys in Washington, DC question the scope of the Second Amendment in the first case in nearly 70 years, citing that the right to bear arms only applies to 'a well regulated militia.' 'We interpret the Second Amendment in military terms,' said Todd Kim, the District's solicitor general."

58 of 1,471 comments (clear)

  1. Your Rights ONLINE? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    What the hell does the second amendment have to do with my rights ONLINE? I'm still allowed to shoot people in games over the internet, regardless of what the handgun rights are here in DC.

    1. Re:Your Rights ONLINE? by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 5, Funny

      If the government is going to tax people for their "virtual earnings", taking away their "virtual weapons" is the next step.

    2. Re:Your Rights ONLINE? by molarmass192 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't forget that if that passes, we will be able to deduct all expenses incurred while potentially making those earnings including monthly fees, ISP costs, electricity costs, cost of the game, hardware, "office" space, training costs in terms of cable bill for receiving G4, plasma TV cost, etc. By treating gaming as an independent "business" they're gonna be promoting a whole lot of deductions that wouldn't otherwise be deductible. Heck ... I hope they go ahead and do it ... I'm looking to claiming my gaming "losses".

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    3. Re:Your Rights ONLINE? by buswolley · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Officially, /. is about nerdy news. However, the reality is different. Often the political articles are the most popular on /. and generate the most discussion. Perhaps it will ease your mind to think of it from a different perspective: Nerdy Perspectives about the News. A political discussion by nerds..

      Nerds see themselves as being part of an enlightened and well established subculture. To ignore every discussion which transcends the traditionally geeky however, would be paramount to calling that subculture stupid, out of touch with the world that influences their lives, in a word, unenlightened.

      It is obvious from the popularity of /. articles concerning rights, freedom, politics, and how we've been Bushywhacked for the last six years, implies that nerds care deeply about these issues. It is easy for the enlightened to see that we live in a dangerous world: from terrorism to oppression, from bi0 weapons to outsourcing IT to India, from global warming to bad presidents, surveillance to CowboyNeal's evil twin.

      The point is this: Nerds are smart, and when thy looked up from their code and saw the desperation of the world's people, they saw a world that needed their comments on Slashdot.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    4. Re:Your Rights ONLINE? by ancientt · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Oh the irony! The issue of whether or not non-militia individuals have a right to bear arms is about the comma as well.

      The hand written version does, the version ratified by the states does not. If the comma is to be taken as intended, then the militias have the right to bear arms, but common people don't. If the law is to be taken as written when ratified, then the common people do have the right to bear arms.

      There is solid precident and writing to support either cause but I think it worth considering two pertinant facts.

      1. The democratic rule rose out of a fight against tyranny and the rights were to protect the people from the same problems the drafters of the bill of rights had experienced. The writers were probably very concerned to make sure that the common people always would have a way to fight the government should it exhibit symptoms of tyranny.
      2. The right to bear arms is grouped with other civil liberties and as such, if taken in context, can only be associated with the rights of the common man.
      Funny, AC parent considers the topic to be intended as written and thus not correctly placed. The topic at hand is a debate on whether the amendment should be taken as written or not.
      --
      B) Eliminate all the stupid users. This is frowned upon by society.
  2. US DOJ says by RevDobbs · · Score: 5, Informative

    The United States Department of Justice says that the 2nd amendment is an individual right.

    1. Re:US DOJ says by aichpvee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pretty sure the Department of Justice is condoning torture and crimes against humanity now. Not exactly the most credible source of opinion on such things.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    2. Re:US DOJ says by Spetiam · · Score: 4, Informative

      Be that as it may, "the people" is never used in the bill of rights to refer to citizens collectively. The majority in Dred Scott knew this, which is why they said it was unthinkable that blacks could be citizens because then they could "keep and carry arms wherever they went." Interesting that a Jim Crow law is still so popular in DC...

    3. Re:US DOJ says by troll+-1 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The United States Department of Justice says that the 2nd amendment is an individual right.

      That's interesting because it's apparently wrong. Morton Grove, Illinois banned hand guns in 1981 and the ban withstood a constitutional challenge in the case of Quilici v. Village of Morton Grove.

    4. Re:US DOJ says by supabeast! · · Score: 4, Informative
      Interesting that a Jim Crow law is still so popular in DC...


      That statement is flat out ignorant. The DC handgun ban was passed by the democratically elected government of the city at a time when the population was over 75% black. It was passed as an attempt to keep people from killing each other when DC was still one of the most violent cities in the nation and has nothing to do with Jim Crow.
    5. Re:US DOJ says by delong · · Score: 4, Informative

      And the US Supreme Court declined to grant certiorari. Which means that it is only precedent in the Seventh Circuit - Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin. Hardly the definitive statement on whether the Second Amendment is an individual right.

    6. Re:US DOJ says by Agelmar · · Score: 5, Informative

      I call BS. In this year's rankings, DC is #19, behind cities like Memphis, Trenton, and Kansas City. DC has improved greatly since the handgun ban was passed.

      As for the murder rate - it definitely does not drop immediately once you cross the border. I'll grant you that the Virginia border takes you into reasonable areas for the most part, but if you go across the Maryland border into PG County, don't tell me that you're going somewhere safe. Frankly, much of the blight is being pushed out of DC into VA and MD due simply to the increasing cost of downtown real-estate. Ten years ago I would never have considered living in Southwest, but now the area is undergoing massive investment, and in my time living there I never had any problems.

    7. Re:US DOJ says by raehl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It should be no shock that D.C. is still one of the most violent cities in the U.S. (#2 or #3, the last I checked). The murder rate drops by a factor of 10 when you cross the Potomac River into Virginia (still in metropolitan Washington; it gets even lower further away) where there is no gun ban.

      What are you trying to say?

      It seems like you are trying to say that the crime rate would be lower if nobody had guns. If that is what you are trying to say, either you are intentionally putting forth a bad argument, or you're stupid.

      We have two sets of data: Data when it was legal to own handguns on both sides of the river, and data when it was legal to own a gun on only the low-crime side of the river.

      The high-crime side of the river had high crime in both circumstances. At best, with the data you're using in your argument, you can argue that taking away legal handguns didn't make a difference.

      That's the big problem with the gun debate. There are very few people involved capable of a rational argument. They know what side they are on, and emotionally, irrationally argue in support of their position, summarily dismissing any information that does not help their cause, while seizing on any bit that seems to support it, no matter how flawed.

    8. Re:US DOJ says by toxicity69 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      From your own link: CITIES OF 500,000 OR MORE POPULATION: (32 cities) Most Dangerous 10: 1 Detroit, MI 2 Baltimore, MD 3 Memphis, TN

      4 Washington, DC

      5 Philadelphia, PA 6 Dallas, TX 7 Nashville, TN 8 Charlotte, NC 9 Columbus, OH 10 Houston, TX
    9. Re:US DOJ says by jadavis · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In my mind, this safety means:

            1. Safety from fellow citizens, and
            2. Safety from the government.


      Neither of those are, at their heart, rights, nor are either of those the basis for a right. Both of those are still empirical questions, and nothing more. Does freedom of speech increase or decrease the incidence of spontaneous combustion? It doesn't matter, freedom of speech is a right.

      The basis for the right to bear arms is the right to defend yourself. If you depend on the government for all of your safety, then the rest of your rights are meaningless. Consider this: if the government doesn't like you, and you depend on the government for your safety, all they have to do is stop making you safe from people that can harm you. They may release people from prison, or not put someone in prison that they should. Or they just might make it a well-known fact that they will not protect you, and wait for non-governmental citizens to have their way with you.

      Think if you're a black person in the deep south a few decades ago. Perhaps everyone knows that the government won't arrest someone for hurting or stealing from black people. It's a form of passive punishment, and it's very real. It's happened in a million forms throughout history, and the founders knew that. It's a way of passing the buck saying "we didn't kill him" when they just didn't provide the protections necessary such that he wouldn't be killed.

      You can't stop all forms of passive punishment by governments, but allowing citizens to defend themselves closes an important loophole.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    10. Re:US DOJ says by atriusofbricia · · Score: 4, Informative
      Gee, why ever would someone from The City misread the Second like that. I'm sure it's never happened before!

      All you have to do is consider why the states would need such an amendment in the first place. There is no need for the Second to preform that task as the Tenth already does so:

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.


      Furthermore, the creation of state "militias" can be handled under Article I, Section 10:

      No state shall, without consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, keep troops, or ships of war in time of peace...


      And now some quotes on the subject:

      No free man shall be debarred the use of arms.
              Thomas Jefferson, Proposal for a Virginia Bill of Rights, 1776

      To preserve liberty it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them.
              "Letters from the Federal Farmer" (Pamphlet, 1788)

      The great object is that ever man be armed.
              Patrick Henry
              Virginia Convention on the ratification of the Federal Constitution

      The people are confirmed by the next article in the right to keep and bear their private arms.
              Federal Gazette June 18, 1789 (describing Madison's proposal for a Bill of Rights)

      We have found no historical evidence that the Second Amendment was intended to convey
      militia power to the states, limit the federal government's power to maintain a standing
      army, or applies only to members of a select militia while on active duty.

      All of the evidence indicates that the Second Amendment, like other parts of the Bill of Rights, applies
      to and protects individual Americans. We find that the history of the Second Amendment reinforces the plain meaning of its text, namely that it protects individual Americans in their right to keep and bear arms whether or
      not they are a member of a select militia or performing active military service or training.

      We reject the collective rights and sophisticated collective rights models for interpreting the
      Second Amendment. We hold, consistent with Miller, that it protects the right of individuals,
      including those not then actually a member of any militia or engaged in active military
      service or training, to privately possess and bear their own firearms, such as the pistol
      involved here, that are suitable as personal, individual weapons and are not of the general
      kind or type excluded by Miller. However, because of our holding that section 922(g)(8), as
      applied to Emerson, does not infringe his individual rights under the Second Amendment
      we will not now further elaborate as to the exact scope of all Second Amendment rights.
      http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:cq6jSE2-picJ:w ww.publichealthlaw.net/Reader/dl.php%3Fdoc_id%3D72 70203+%22applies+only+to+members+of+a+select+milit ia+while+on+active+duty%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd= 3

      In light of the proceeding, please pray tell how people with your world view invent this collective right hogwash. There is no evidence from the time period suggesting it, there is no way to correctly read the sentence that will support it. So please, tossing aside for a moment the relative crime statistics involved, what is the basis of your logic? Are you aware of some super secret Federalist paper that says: "Oh yeah, that Second amendment thing doesn't really mean what it says. It really means something totally different and inconsistent with the language of the rest of the Constitution. Feel free to ignore it at will."
      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    11. Re:US DOJ says by Yunzil · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I call BS. In this year's rankings, DC is #19, behind cities like Memphis, Trenton, and Kansas City. DC has improved greatly since the handgun ban was passed.

      Yeah, and before women got the vote we didn't have the threat of nuclear war.

      Logical fallacy: post hoc ergo propter hoc

      Just because one thing happens after another thing does not mean the second thing was caused by the first.

  3. Oh, this should be cute. by cprael · · Score: 4, Informative

    Even accepting their argument that the 2nd amendment applies only to militias, federal law is pretty black-letter on the matter: the unorganized militia is clearly defined in federal law, and includes pretty much the entire populace.

    That being said, the 2nd amendment is the _only_ place in the Bill of Rights where "the people" are defined as a collective body, rather than individuals. And even then, only in the 9th Circuit's realm.

  4. I've allways wondered about this ... by kryten_nl · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... do you guys (/girls) have the right to walk around town with a japanese sword hanging on your belt?

    --
    For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
  5. Re:From my cold dead hands by CRCulver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right, because your grand-daddy's rifle is really going to help against tanks and automatic weaponry. And most people can buy a gas mask, but not many do, which means that anyone wanting to subdue you non-violently just has to use some simple tear gas. The times when a group of civilians could contend with an equally numerous group of soldiers are long gone.

  6. Excellent! by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is a great subject for debate on Slashdot. I look forward to getting this issue settled, once and for all!

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  7. Re:From my cold dead hands by kryten_nl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You haven't seen the news in the last couple of years, have you? (Iraq, Afghanistan)

    --
    For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
  8. Basic English, please by Quila · · Score: 4, Insightful
    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 2nd Amendment states a right (keep and bear arms) that cannot be infringed. That's it -- no infringement, period. The introductory phrase states a reason for stating this right, but "shall not be infringed" is an absolute. Note it doesn't grant the right; it considers that right, along with "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects" and others to be inherent, above government powers, and says the government will not infringe on them.
  9. Colonial Militia... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Jerry Pournelle mentioned in a panel debate at Baycon 2006 that the colonial government provided guns and ammo to the citizens (whether they wanted it or not) in case self-defense against a common enemy was needed and that was the original definition of "a well regulated militia". If so, maybe the government today should require every 18-year-old to serve two years in the military and let them keep their gun after their service. You kill three birds with one bullet: everyone in time will have the proper training for using their gun (which should reduce accidents), be armed for self-defense (which should reduce crime) and the whole stupid 2nd Amendment will be gone. Just an idea.

  10. Personal safety by MSG · · Score: 5, Informative

    That is bullshit, and I'll tell you why. The courts have established that "Police Have No Duty To Protect Individuals".

    Just reading about the case history behind this makes me spitting mad. It takes a stong constitution to even read that entire compilation.

    Everyone has the right to defend their safety. In my eyes, everyone has the responsibility to defend their safety.

  11. well regulated by gorehog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In the phrase "A well regulated militia" regulated = equipped.

    The idea was that in the event of tyranny or invasion the people could form up and defend themselves. We are guaranteed the right to pursue life, liberty, and happiness. To pursue life one must be able to defend it. That is why we are guaranteed the right to keep and bear arms.

    By now I would have expected the noise about gun control to die down. It's a losing issue for democrats, and gun ownership may well be the only thing that recently stopped the USA from falling into fascist totalitarianism.

  12. Re:From my cold dead hands by isomeme · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The times when a group of civilians could contend with an equally numerous group of soldiers are long gone.

    Absolutely. But combat-capable civilians outnumber soldiers and police in our country by at least fifty to one. That tends to even the odds a bit.

    To quote (from memory) a German commander on the Easter front during WWII: "Each of our tanks could beat five of theirs. We kept meeting six."

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a skull.
  13. Re:From my cold dead hands by CRCulver · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The resistance in Iraq and Afghanistan has access to automatic weaponry and rocketry. American civilians don't, and many advocates for the Second Amendment don't try to claim that anyone has a right to arms so powerful.

  14. Re:From my cold dead hands by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How many tanks do you and your neighbors own?

    The US Army does not have enough tanks to cover the contry. If it actually came down to it, you would not have a tank in your neighborhood, but your friendly local cop at your door. And him I can defend against.

  15. Re:From my cold dead hands by cptgrudge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's nothing magical or extraordinarily high tech about automatic weapons and rockets. If it really came down to a full on Civil War in the USA, I'm sure a few facilities could ramp up to produce the things under the radar. There are drug labs all over the place now, and look how efficient we've been at taking care of those.

    Of course, all that may be unnecessarily complicated. There are plenty of international weapons manufacturers that would love to sell to the American public, and getting those products across the largely unprotected/unwatched US borders would probably be trivial.

    In short, if it gets that bad, the weapons will show.

    --
    Qualitas edurus commercium, nullus penitus net rimor, nullus deus beneficium
  16. Constitutionally Consistency by rossz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Throughout the Constitution, the wording is very specific. When referring to individual rights, the term "The People" is used. When referring to state rights, the term "The States" is used. Unless you believe the 2nd Amendment is the ONLY EXCEPTION to this rule, it is most definitely an individual right as it says "... the right of The People ..."

    If the meaning of "The People" is changed to indicate a state right, ALL our rights will be lost. Suddenly, speech, religion, assembly, redress, etc, will be State rights and everything that makes this country worthwhile will go into the shitter.

    If the government can abuse a law, eventually the government will abuse a law. Maybe not right away, but a few years down the road it will happen. A good example of this is the seizing of property without due process. At first they were seizing property of convicted drug dealers. Then they started seizing the property of unconvicted drug dealers. After getting away with this obvious violation of the Constitution, they started seizing property of people with the thinnest thread of a connection to drugs, e.g. a guy had his car seized because his passenger had a joint in his possession.

    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
  17. Re:From my cold dead hands by zippthorne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Infantry can take out tanks with a rifle. Not an ordinary rifle, mind, but a rifle small enough to reasonably include in thousands of personal armories. (esp. in a population in which there are almost as many guns as there are people.) Further, owing to their reduced mobility, tanks are vulnerable to even less sophisticated weapons wielded in sufficient supply.

    A foot is a good weapon to take on ants, but you must be careful not to anger too many of them or your foot will be useless.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  18. Context by pete-classic · · Score: 4, Informative
    This is from the answers page to my kooky political quiz:

    The first Congress passed the Militia Act of 1792, which said, in part:

    [. . .]That each and every free able-bodied white male citizen of the respective States, resident therein, who is or shall be of age of eighteen years, and under the age of forty-five years (except as is herein after excepted) shall severally and respectively be enrolled in the militia[. . .]


    So you see, militia was only meant to restrict who possessed firearms on a basis of race and sex, not based on military service.

    -Peter
  19. Re:From my cold dead hands by Luteus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thing is, the US Military is made up of, get this, Americans. Hopefully, a large portion of them would either refuse or even defend the civilian population. I remember something about Katrina and the national guard refusing to help enforce the gun confiscation ordered by the local police.

  20. People can't read, especially lawyers... by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "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."

    I've noticed there has been a trend to re-structure the sentence of the 2nd Ammendment and interpret it on the basis of a "well regulated militia" and then equate this to the National Guard and thus declare the 2nd Ammendment fullfilled.

    This is incorrect, and is not what is said above. There are two aspects to the above statement.
    1) that a well regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free stae
    2) the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed

    What we have is a stacking of concepts. A militia is necessary to the security of a free state. Militias draw from the people, both arms and manpower. Therefore, it is necessary for the people to retain the right to bear arms or there is no means to call up a militia.

    If you remove the right to bear arms from U.S. citizens then you have no means to call up and organize a militia. You will have a bunch of unarmed men unable to defend their country. This is well understood within the context of the Constitution being written. A simple test can be done to express such.

    Apply both interpretations, which one would fit and fulfill the needs of the time. If we apply the traditional interpretation everything fits. However, if we apply the re-interpretation you find yourself in a place in which the American Revolution would never have existed. Let' remove all guns from ownership by the colonials. The only guns are now owned and in the hands of the British Army and the regulated militias under the British. The colonials now are completely unarmed facing both the regulars of the British Army and the militias under the British.

    Clearly there is no way that this was the intention of the authors of the Constitution. And if the courts ever decided to re-interpret such ammendments it is the right of every arms bearing American and the duty of every U.S. soldier (if you've ever served you swore an oath to protect this country from powers both foreign and domestic) to kill those judges and remove that segment of government from power.

    The 2nd ammendment is our assurety against tyranny. It is the last and final line in our "checks and balances" within the government.

    - Saj

  21. Re:From my cold dead hands by GIL_Dude · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Quite a bit since the guy in the tank needs to get out from time to time. Even the stuff that is up and coming like the tank you control from another country remote can have it visual sensors shot out and then that tank is a useless husk. Until they make humans that can't be shot, that rifle has plenty of life left in it.

  22. Re:From my cold dead hands by deesine · · Score: 5, Insightful
    1. Children can hurt themselves with all manner of household objects. Why should guns be any more regulated than swimming pools in this regard?

    2. Shootings are only one part of the spectrum in domestic violence. Like point one, why should guns be any more regulated than say, hammers, in this regard?

    3. Accidentally killing a person whom you suspected of breaking into your home is a tragedy. But really, how often does this happen? And on the other side of that coin: civilians shoot more bad guys with guns every year than cops. Plus, they're five times more likely to be correct about the good/bad status of the shot person.

    I think you've presented the classic case of the Paternal Government, the one that defaults to being everyone's best protection against themselves. You are giving up your rights for the belief that you are more secure.

    --
    damaged by dogma
  23. Re:Now is the time to define. . . by hey! · · Score: 5, Informative

    What a 'well regulated' militia is. Probably has to be set up to defend nat'l safety.


    Not necessarily.

    Think of what the country would be like if you had no local police or state police; you are also in a country that includes other nations (Indians) some of them hostile.

    One of the most important functions of a militia would be to provide for local security and peace.

    We have to be careful about attributing modern viewpoints to the founders, or pretending they all thought the same way. None of them subscribed to libertarianism as we know it, although some (Jefferson) were closer than others (Adams). It isn't that they didn't believe in individual liberty -- they did. But they also had a stronger attachement than we do in the idea of community liberty.

    It's interesting to read about the operation of militias in the Revolution. They operated in a primitive democratic way, choosing their leaders from the respected men of the community; nor did those leaders excercise autocratic powers. When not actually in battle, matters of strategy and tactics were debated and even voted upon. This practice infuriated Washington at first, who saw it as undisciplined. However he adjusted his style of command to this, and was a better commander because of it. The lessons he learned from this also helped him form an effective working relationship with the Continental Congress (Adams was particularly nettlesome), an example which was very important in the development of the US Constitution.

    In any case, militias were not mobs or random collections of individuals. They were the defensive organ of the community. It is not that they had no discipline, they had a different kind of discipline, one of community responsibility, reputation, and mutual reliance.

    Community liberty is not incompatible with individual liberty, but sometimes they do conflict, especially when the more influential in the community are able to claim greater protection. In the late 19th century, the national guard was used against strikers in Andrew Carnegie's steel mills.

    The right of private firearm ownership is not, in my opinion, not directly covered by the Second Amendment, which I believe is about the right of communities to arm themselves. Most quotations from the founders that are used to support private firearm ownership are more accurately read in that light.

    However, that doesn't mean it is not protected by the Bill of Rights. After all, there is constitutional right of privacy that can be asserted against the government, even though the legal concept of privacy did not exist at the time. The right to privacy is implicit in the third, fourth, fifth and fourteenth amendemnts. The fact that this is implicit makes it no less enforceable, because of the ninth amendment.

    Personal firearm ownership is implicit in the second amendment. That it cannot be taken away unreasonably is implicit in the due process clause of the fifth amendment. That this implicit right has equal force as other rights is established in the ninth.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  24. Some statistics... by malaxi · · Score: 5, Informative
    I wrote a thing up for my book club a year or two ago when we started talking about gun control and how dangerous "just having guns around" is, so I looked into it. I know this is long, but maybe some of you will find the numbers different than your intuition tells you. (Disclaimer: I am pro-gun).

    These numbers are all from the CDC.

    http://webapp.cdc.gov/sasweb/ncipc/mortrate10_sy.h tml

    My queries are for the years 1999-2002 (all they have), the entire U.S., all races, both sexes, all ages. (four year totals)

    Unintentional death by falling : 57,760
    Unintentional Pedestrian deaths: 24,079
    Unintentional Drowning : 13,739
    Unintentional death by burning : 13,642
    Unintentional Firearms deaths : 3,164
    Unintentional Bicyclist deaths : 3,099

    You can also break it down by age range. If we're worried about the teen years, we can look at ages 12-18. (four year totals)

    Unintentional Pedestrian deaths: 1,561
    Unintentional Drowning : 1,495
    Unintentional Firearms deaths : 494
    Unintentional Bicyclist deaths : 453
    Unintentional death by burning : 423
    Unintentional death by falling : 306

    Younger still, ages 1-11: (four year totals)

    Unintentional Pedestrian deaths: 2,118
    Unintentional Drowning : 2,870
    Unintentional death by burning : 1,920
    Unintentional Bicyclist deaths : 371
    Unintentional death by falling : 292
    Unintentional Firearms deaths : 164

    Accident-wise, young kids have a lot more to worry about than guns. And teenagers are almost as likely to die on their bicycles. God forbid they're bicycling to the swimming pool... or even worse, *walking* to the swimming pool ... but yes, there are gun accidents.

    Non-accidental deaths:

    It's interesting to note that more than half of violent deaths attributed to firearms are suicide. Whenever you read an article in the media that mentions the number of gun deaths it's a good bet that they're including suicides.

    • Violent deaths by firearm: 113,160 (includes suicides)
    • Suicide by firearm: 67,162

    Now I, personally, don't mind if people kill themselves. More power to them. I do agree that that there is a lower barrier to entry when using a gun and understand that depressed people might not be the best people to own guns, but gun control isn't really the solution to depression.

    So, anyway, taking out suicides leaves us with:

    • "legal intervention": 1,192 (cops killing criminals?)
    • Homicide by firearm: 44,806 (11.2K per year)

    As compared to

    • Non-firearm homicides: 26,794 (6.7K per year)

    So, more people are definitely intentionally killed by guns than by any other single cause, roughly 11K people per year.

    But...

    How many times are guns used defensively? Since defensive gun use isn't something that is reported (like an offensive gun use is), numbers are harder to find. Here is the page I have bookmarked with the only numbers I've ever seen. (refers to Gary Kleck's survey and a DOJ-sponsored study, and has a table of the results of 13 other surveys). (Gary Kleck is a criminologist at FSU - and, no, he's not an NRA member. http://www.criminology.fsu.edu/p/faculty-gary-klec k.php)

    Summary: Kleck thinks defensive gun use happens 2.5M times per year, other surveys listed range between 770K and 3.6M. The DOJ study thinks it's 1.5M times per year.

    Let's aim low and go with 1M defensive uses per year. The question posed at the book club was "when does the ratio become w

  25. Re:Now is the time to define. . . by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 5, Informative

    The gov abandoned the idea of a state regulated militia in favor of a federally regulated national guard. If the right to bear arms only applies to a state regulated militia, then we lost our right to bear arms many years ago. If the DoJ interpretation of the 2nd amendment stands, then we still have it.

    What we should be asking is "WHY?" Why does the government want an unarmed population? The founding fathers made it clear that the purpose of our government was to protect rights. They also warn about modifications to the 2nd amendment.

    "A free people [claim] their rights as derived from the laws of nature, and not as the gift of their chief magistrate." - Thomas Jefferson

    "[H]owever weak our country may be, I hope we shall never sacrifice our liberties." - Alexander Hamilton

    "A strong body makes the mind strong. As to the species of exercises, I advise the gun. While this gives moderate exercise to the body, it gives boldness, enterprise and independence to the mind. Games played with the ball, and others of that nature, are too violent for the body and stamp no character on the mind. Let your gun therefore be your constant companion of your walks." - Thomas Jefferson

    "No freeman shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -Thomas Jefferson: Draft Virginia Constitution, 1776.

    "[The Constitution preserves] the advantage of being armed which Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation...(where) the governments are afraid to trust the people with arms." -James Madison,The Federalist Papers, No. 46.

    "I ask, Sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them." -George Mason, Co-author of the Second Amendment

    "The constitutions of most of our States assert that all power is inherent in the people; that ... it is their right and duty to be at all times armed; ... " -Thomas Jefferson

    "The greatest danger to American freedom is a government that ignores the Constitution." -Thomas Jefferson

    Gun confiscation leads to a loss of freedom, increased crime, and the government moving to the left. This has already happened in England and Australia. After Great Britain banned most guns in 1997, making armed self-defense punishable as murder, violence skyrocketed because criminals know that law abiding citizens have been disarmed. Armed crime rose 10% in 1998. The Sunday Times of London reported on the new black market in guns: "Up to 3 million illegal guns are in circulation in Britain, leading to a rise in drive-by shootings and gangland-style execution." There has been such a heavy increase in the use of knives for violent attacks that new laws have been passed giving police the power to search anyone for knives in designated areas.

    Where are we going? Who is taking us there? Should we be kicking and screaming?

    --


    "Lame" - Galaxar
  26. Re:From my cold dead hands by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not the cops I'm worried about. It's the sheep that have proven themselves to not give a fuck and instead tell you that you're paranoid.

  27. Re:Thank God for that by RyanFenton · · Score: 5, Informative

    The UK has the fastest growing rate of gun crimes in all of western civilization.

    Yes. The reason the rates increase so much, is because the actual numbers are so low.

    Gun Death Rates per Nation

    If you're trying to be honest about the statistics, avoid harping too much about relative increases in rates - that's like bragging about your brother growing richer faster at a rate faster than Bill Gates.

    Ryan Fenton

  28. Re:US DOJ is the EXECUTIVE, not JUDICIAL, branch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Christ. Half the problem with this country is American's basic inability to understand the simplest concepts of the US government.


    Yeah, and the other half is people like you who want to take away everyone else's *rights* because you're scared of what they might do with that right. As is usually the case, that fear is irrational. You have absolutely nothing to fear from 99.9999% of *legal* gun owners. Yet you're so afraid of what people who own guns *illegally* might do to you, you'd rather just ban guns altogether (as if that is a solution to the problem of people being able to obtain guns illegally), and you don't care if you destroy a Constitutional right in order to do it.

    It's funny how the anti-gun crowd pretends that they're just trying to interpret the Constitution, and only wish to apply it the way it was meant to be applied. In reality, if you *really* want to know how the 2nd Amendment was intended, you don't have to look very far. Read some of the writings of the people who actually *wrote* the damn thing, and it's obvious. They state explicitly that *individuals* need to be able to own guns. But of course you don't really care how it was intended. That's just a show you put on so that people will think your argument is based on the Constitution, rather than trying to destroy the Constitution.

    In reality, you don't give a rat's ass about the Constitution as a whole. You just want to cherry-pick the parts *you* think are important and discard the rest. And you're sick of hearing everyone heap praise and reverence on the "Founding Fathers" because you think you're smarter than they are, and besides times have changed, etc, etc. It's people like YOU that this country needs to guard against, because in your supreme arrogance, you're willing to destroy the very foundation of our freedom. (not that thousands of people just like you haven't already done so to a large degree. sigh.)
  29. Re:US DOJ is the EXECUTIVE, not JUDICIAL, branch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The original post is dead-on, not you. As you and that little paragraph (from the *DOJ's website*) say: the Attorney General's opinions are just that: opinions. They are not statements of the law and they have no binding affect on anything.

    Just so you don't confuse anyone: The fact that such advisory opinions can be "admitted in a court of law as evidence of reliance that a person believed they were acting within the law" is only relevant for the (very few) crimes that explicitly require knowledge of the law as part of their mental state.

  30. What really angers me.... by raehl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What really angers me about the 'need firearms to protect us from the government' people is that they don't understand what they are really saying. "We need guns so the government doesn't take away our rights" they say.

    That's saying that you don't have to comply with the will over the democratically elected government. It's saying that if you don't like the law, yu're going to become a terrorist. That you would rather just become a terrorist than elect people who are going to protect your rights in the first place.

    The people who scream bloody murder about the government taking away the guns they need to protect their rights from the government tend to the VERY SAME PEOPLE who ELECT OFFICIALS WHO TAKE AWAY YOUR RIGHTS!

    How many times have you heard someone say "We need guns to protect our rights!" and then say "If you've got nothing to hide, you've got nothing to fear!"

    How about instead of letting people say "Elect me, and I won't take away your guns!", you elect people who say "Elect me, and I'll repeal the Patriot Act!"

    People who argue that they need guns to protect their rights from the government are just gun nuts. The 'protect us from the government' argument is a red herring. If their RIGHTS were really what is important to them, they'd vote for people who wanted to protect their rights instead of people who wanted to protect their guns.

    But that's not what happens. Search you without a warrant? Listen in to your phone calls? Arrest and detain you, even if you're a US citizen, without access to courts or a lawyer? Torture people? Sure, we'll reelect that guy, as long as he promises we can keep our guns!

    Using the right to bear arms to protect your rights is useless if you're willing to trade away all your other rights just to keep your gun. Then what are you protecting?

    1. Re:What really angers me.... by xstonedogx · · Score: 4, Insightful
      That's saying that you don't have to comply with the will over the democratically elected government.


      No, that's like saying you don't have to comply with the will of a tyrannical government (democratic or otherwise). It is because these people recognize individual sovereignty and know that the government has no natural sovereignty or power.

      It's saying that if you don't like the law, yu're going to become a terrorist. That you would rather just become a terrorist than elect people who are going to protect your rights in the first place.


      No, it's like saying if someone is going to tread on you, you're going to defend yourself. You do realize the difference between attacking civilian targets to influence policy and defending yourself against agents of a tyrannical government, right? For instance, right or wrong, crazy or sane, the Montana Freemen were not terrorists.

      The people who scream bloody murder about the government taking away the guns they need to protect their rights from the government tend to the VERY SAME PEOPLE who ELECT OFFICIALS WHO TAKE AWAY YOUR RIGHTS!


      Please show me an elected official who hasn't increased government power at the expense of our rights. Since many people vote on a host of issues and often feel dis-empowered to vote for someone who truly represents them (perhaps a third party) your argument isn't particularly compelling. In fact, if anything, it supports the idea that we need our guns to keep our rights.

      How many times have you heard someone say "We need guns to protect our rights!" and then say "If you've got nothing to hide, you've got nothing to fear!"


      From my mouth? Never. Please don't conflate the small, but voracious neo-con movement with true conservatism as it relates to the power of the government.

      How about instead of letting people say "Elect me, and I won't take away your guns!", you elect people who say "Elect me, and I'll repeal the Patriot Act!"


      The guy I voted for said both. In fact, that's why he got my vote.

      Your position simply makes no sense to me. You seem to be frightened of ignorant mobs but perfectly willing to let those mobs take away your gun before they tear you apart. I completely agree that people should vote out the people who fail to preserve our rights (and have an integral position). I share your anger at those who would take away our rights or empower the same. However, I fail to see why we should give away yet another right just because we've failed to protect others.
  31. Guns guns guns by PenGun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I guess if you live where everybody is crazy and armed you would need a gun. I give thanks I do not live in such a place.

        PenGun
      The Peace Arch ... That's where South America starts

  32. Re:US DOJ is the EXECUTIVE, not JUDICIAL, branch by Entropy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It's not their job to "interpret" law or the constitution. It is their job to execute the law of the land. Did you flunk middle school and high school history/civics?


    The President takes an Oath to "preserve, protect and defend" the Constitution.

    You say that it is not the executive branch's job to interpret the Constitution.

    But would you rather have someone protecting the Constitution who THINKS about what they are doing, or someone being an automaton?

    Because if THEY don't interpret it, how are they to protect it? Follow someone else's interpretation?

    Now - please show me in the Constitution itself (the supreme law of the US) where exactly it says the Supreme court has sole authority to interpret the Constitution?

    Guess what. You won't find it. They assumed that authority for themselves in Marbury.

    PS: Anyone reading the above as a defense of the current POTUS or his administration quite plainly isn't reading the same things I wrote ..
    --
    The sea changes color, but the sea does not change.
  33. Re:NAACP and guns by soft_guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Um, maybe you should check out the WHOLE REST OF THE WORLD.
    I have. At least where reliable data is available and reasonably accessible. You, clearly, have not. Even if gun bans worked (which they don't), I would not support them.

    Just like, if torture worked (which it doesn't), I would not support torture.

    Some folks think safety is more important than liberty. I disagree with them. I think that liberty is more important than safety, although I don't even agree that it has to be one or the other.
    --
    Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
  34. Re:NAACP and guns by Spetiam · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thank you for making this point.

    We could all roll around in bubbles with cameras recording our every move, and I'm sure that would make this a safer society, but that would be...horrible.

  35. Re:NAACP and guns by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 4, Informative
    Um, maybe you should check out the WHOLE REST OF THE WORLD.

    Yes, one should. One would see countries like Switzerland and Israel where people have easy access to guns, and a murder rate much lower than in the U.S.

    We Americans stab and bludgeon each other to death more than most other nations commit total muders.

    In the U.S. firearms are used in only 71% of murders. With a base homicide of 5.6 per 100,000 people, that give 1.6 non-gun murders per 100,000.

    According to stats here (a bit old, admittedly), that's more than the total muder rate in Denmakr, Austria, Switerland, France, England, Belgium, Japan, Sweden, Germany, Norway, New Zeland, Ierland, the Netherland, Spain, Greece, or Kuwait.

    If all guns disappeared from the U.S. tomorrow, and we pretended that guns were never used defensively and that people wouldn't turn to other methods of killing each other, the U.S. would still have about two and half times the murder rate of Japan (0.62/100,000).

    Our problem with violence does not rest in our guns.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  36. Re:From my cold dead hands by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To quote (from memory) a German commander on the Easter front during WWII: "Each of our tanks could beat five of theirs. We kept meeting six."

    How many tanks do you and your neighbors own?

    Doesn't matter, for multiple reasons:

    1. Tanks are ineffective anti-insurgency weapons. Notice that they were used in the Iraqi invasion, but these days they don't do much other than sit on street corners and look imposing.
    2. Unless they're moving fast and hard, tanks are easy prey for infantry. That's a rather surprising statement to most people who don't know anything about military history and tactics, but ask someone who does. That's why standard tank warfare doctrine accompanies the tanks with screening infantry, because otherwise enemy infantry will destroy the tanks.
    3. The US military has nowhere near enough tanks to deploy them effectively against a large-scale uprising in an area as large and heavily populated as the continental US, even ignoring the questions of what they'd do with them and how they'd protect them.

    Tanks are good for three things: (1) fighting other tanks, (2) smashing through enemy lines to create breaches that can be exploited by infantry and (3) looking scary to unorganized mobs.

    Similarly, much of the rest of the US military's advanced technology, particularly aircraft, isn't useful in scenarios where the enemy is mixed in with non-combatants or is just plain hard to find. Consider the fighting in Iraq, and the trouble the US military has with those insurgents, in spite of the fact that the opposition forces there are truly tiny.

    Finally, I'll just note that whenever this topic comes up, and a bunch of slashdotters declaim the worthlessness of early 20th-century small arms against modern military forces, I have never, ever found anyone among them that claims any military or even police experience. Find me an Air Force pilot, or an Army tanker, or a Marine attack helicopter pilot who argues that hunting rifles, handguns and IEDs couldn't be used to mount an effective insurgency because their hi-tech weapons are just too powerful. Seriously, ask some people who know something about war what they think, and you'll get a very different point of view.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  37. Re:US DOJ is the EXECUTIVE, not JUDICIAL, branch by Almost-Retired · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Mod the parent up, this person gets it. Having studied on the "Founding Fathers" off and on for the last 65+ years, I am absolutely amazed at the miss-interpretation that has been given force of law over the last 100 years, rendering our original Republic an ever more tyranical place to live. Boggles the mind. Only when one recalls Ben's reply about a "Democracy being a very bad form of government, but all the others are so much worse" does it come into a clearer focus. Unforch, the space between is being narrowed inexorably. By lowering democracy toward the "so much worse" category. At some point, the last box (ammo) Ed Howdershelt wrote about in his famous saying about the boxes (soap, ballot, jury, & ammo)to defend liberty, will be opened and used. I believe it was Jefferson who said relative to the tree of liberty needing refreshed with the blood of patriots and tyrants from time to time, adding "Lord help us if we go 20 years without it". Its been about 40 now since the race riots were a pandemic. Read into that what you will, I'm too old & tired to argue with anyone who hasn't read his history.

    --
    Cheers, Gene

  38. Re:From my cold dead hands by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Hopefully, a large portion of them would either refuse or even defend the civilian population."

    Yea, good luck with that. See, the military is already prepared for that answer. If you refuse a direct order in the field -- and make no mistake, when they come for you, it won't be in an office meeting -- you get shot on the spot.


    That is one of the most ignorant and ill-informed things I have read in this thread. The truth is that from basic training onward US military personnel are taught that it is *their duty* to disobey illegal orders. Illegal orders include but are not limited to attacking non-combatants. An officer who threatens to shoot a soldier who refuses to follow an illegal order can be immediately relieved and taken in custody, even by a subordinate.

    Now to preempt more nonsense hypotheticals you might counter with, reality is that officers survive combat due to the men in their command, not in spite of them. Any officer who acts that way towards his men is suicidal. The men not only heavily outnumber the officer but the men are more heavily armed and practiced. The men, not the officer, are the trigger squeezers. The officer in the read-map-use-radio-call-in-airstike'er. The men don't even have to pull the trigger or roll the grenade themselves, it *has* been done more simply by saluting an officer in the field.

  39. Re:NAACP and guns by Lordrashmi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you want to compare licensing guns to licensing cars, then here is a good point.

    The government only licenses cars and drivers for use on public roads. I can go out and buy any vehicle I want, and as long as I only use it on private property, the government doesn't care. I don't need brake lights, airbags or anything else the government requires, as long as I only use the vehicle on private property. It is once I take it onto public roads that the government cares.

    This should be true for guns as well. What I do on my private property on my business, as long as I don't endanger people around me. So in a residential neighborhood I should be able to keep any firearm I like, but not discharge them (as it poses a danger to those around me). However, if I am out in the middle of nowhere (again on private property) I should be able to discharge any firearm I like. However, if I want to carry a loaded weapon with me in public, the state government should be able.

    In my state this is true. If I wanted to carry a concealed handgun, I would have to pass a background check, go through a safety course and pass a test. In addition, once I was issued a license I would be subject to a stricter set of rules when carrying the weapon.

  40. If you had studied 1787 Common Law texts: by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You would have discovered the following:

    There are two types of militia, civil milita (unorganized civilians bearing own arms) and state milita (national guard, state troopers, standing forces, whatever is organized for and paid (and bearing arms owned) by the state).

    Well regulated meant only one, and possibly two things. You are reading "regulated" as in today's "regulations".

    Regulated, in the 1787 terminology, refers to only one thing. "Disciplined and officered." No joke, a militia with a set structure, even if self organized, is a "well regulated militia". The irony is that the term can also be read to mean "well equiped, trained and supplied."

    The ratification misdeeds do not even enter into it.

    What I find ironic, is that you are all begging for scraps from the tables of lords and masters with loyalties to anyone but you. Washington DC is a crime capital under a declared "state of crime emergency" since July or August of 2006 (don't remember the exact date). And it isn't just guns, some british guy got knifed and killed in his own driveway, which makes the "protect yourself by staying home" or "don't go into the dangerous parts of DC after dark" completely idiotic.

    Since most of you are socialist "democrats" or so called "liberals" (my how that term stopped meaning what it used to mean in Jefferson's day), perhaps this example comes closest to your hearts. Some time ago, in their home in Germantown (rich part of Wash, DC) Theresa Heinz Kerry got ROBBED while outside of their home. Yep, John Kerry's wife... the ketchup girl. Humorously, the news barely touched on it, presumably for fear that the properties there would stop soaring in price, and also that the DC 30year gun ban would go bust if even the big antigunners are being robbed at screwdriver point (making the gunban worthless, what next, piece of rock and treebranch ban?)

    (Frankly, I didn't know there were any "safe" zones in that DC, I've watched drug deals and "hot merchandise" deals, going on within plain sight of police squad cars (and the cops within them), and it wasn't a sting, nobody got busted AND there were no headlines or sirens/lights the whole day I was there. I left severely perturbed by that sight. I called the cops about it, and got the run around, they took my statement and basically blew me off. Guess if shots weren't fired, or blood spilled, it wasn't worth their time, though how would "shots be fired" in a gun ban city?)

    However, you are correct, the "founders" were two separate camps which are mistaught in history class, one was the rich fascistic overlords known as the "federalists" (a hijacking of the term that has stuck) and the other, the unprepared, populist/agrarian/Jeffersonian group, lead by the very vocal Patrick Henry and Samuel Adams, were the ANTI Federalists (of whom you may hear little or nothing in high school history and if you are fortunate, a tad smidgen from a libertarian professor in college, IF you are lucky). James Madison watered down the actual text, but the states all ratified the text THEY felt was necessary. Do some research while the National Archives are still available to the public. It might open everyone's eyes, especially since we're geeks, we're supposed to be libertarians at heart, seeking knowledge and truth, instead of being gimme gimme beggars and weaklings.

    --
    " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
  41. US Constitution, version 2.0 by surfcow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The US constitution was a best-effort. It was not written by god on a tablet. It's authors said it was deeply flawed and they hoped it would last 20 years. It needs an over-haul.

    Because smart people can't agree on even the most basic intentions of the constitution's authors. Do people have a right to arms or not? What kinds of arms? It there a right to privacy or not? Even from the government? It is NOT CLEAR. And it won't EVER get any clearer.

    Some people say that is the beauty of the document, it's flexibility and ability to be reinterpreted.

    I say bullshit. I don't want to hear about *implied* rights. Spell it out clearly, in contemporary english, with no spin. We don't live in the dark ages, we can examine the ideas of the past and use what is useful.

    I think we need to update the language of the constitution. Maybe we need a constitutional convention every 10 or 20 years as Jefferson suggested, to carefully clarify the language. Baby steps.

    And do we want to add new rights? Should there be a right to euthanasia, a basic job, basic health care, an abortion, basic shelter, a basic education, porn? How about freedom FROM religion? We seem to *effectively* have some of these rights, but not literally. Why not?

    Would someone please get Richard Stallman on this? And Linus Tovalds?

  42. People are. by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People kill. Guns hold NO responsibility. Neither does a kitchen knife hold guilt if some criminal breaks into your home and kills you with it. The criminal is too often absolved of guilt, with it being transfered to the item/weapon.

    Look at London. Now they got themselves a "knife amnesty", because criminals began using knives (naturally silenced, without need for sound suppressors). What is next? Tree branches and rocks are "causing" crushing blows to back of skulls? Steel pipe amnesty?

    If you want to see, go to a gun show. Perfect example of well behaved people, go to self regulated gun ranges, I've been to them all to experience it. Strange that nobody dies, and the few accidents are some idiot who didn't bother to study on the proper usage of the gear he/she is handling.

    While I am not a member of the "gungho" culture, I must say I admire the ones that practice what they preach within that culture (they carry, they're safe, they're responsible, and very few have had "accidents" or committed a crime with them... and worth learning from... unlike the geeks of today, who let those in power tell them what to use, and how to use it, including their bodies.)

    --
    " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler