First, the Constitution doesn't establish rights, it protects them. Secondly, the loss of civil rights due to certain criminal convictions is long and well established throughout history, going back to the Greek idea of the "civil death penalty". But you can't beat the drum for the 2nd Amendment arguing it guarantees unrestricted right to carry a firearm, then turn around and restrict that same right. Either you believe it's an inalienable right, or you don't. I don't mind you being either way, it's the part-timers that irritate me.
Yep. Used the wrong word to describe what the Constitution does vis a vis rights. And agree completely on the part-timers; reminds me of self-proclaimed libertarians who are for the abolition of a whole bunch of laws, but usually only the ones the either help or, at worst, don't affect them. When it hurts them personally, that's where the line gets drawn.
I'm a liberal-libertarian. For example: I don't do drugs, but I don't see why we have to restrict the recreational use of them. Basically the classification of drugs is just a way to protect Big Pharma's monopoly on legal highs*. But, at the same time, we have to put money into health and education programs to offset the negative effects that increased drug use will have. The trade-off being that we eliminate a vast segment of the criminal underworld, take the dangerous variables out of manufacture, eliminate regular people having to interact with said criminal underworld and keep hundreds of thousands of people out of jail and thereby employable in today's mandatory background check employment market.
* The spike in heroin use, addiction and death has been linked to the abuse of prescription drugs and the escalation therefrom. So, ironically, your doctor, not your friendly, neighborhood pot dealer, is holding the gate open to illegal drugs.
Yeah, let's deny Constitutionally guaranteed rights to people who are put on a secret government list. What could possibly go wrong?
Well I'm of the camp that likes to read the 2nd amendment with the commas and connecting the phrases, not separating them (a grammatically correct reading). So unless ISIS is deemed a well-regulated militia, denying them or suspected "thems" the ability to purchase guns is not a conflict for me. I do agree that secret government lists is never a good idea - and "CitizenFour" scared the living shit out of me.
FTR, I'm of the mind that the cat is out of the bag re guns, and further I accept fully that there are myriad legitimate uses for them - even assault rifles (I have been informed reliably that you don't go up against a feral hog in Texas without one). But I don't believe that sensible legislation - background-checks for
every gun sale, limit magazine sizes, registration and insurance - is not contrary to the 2nd amendment. We already legislate around what can (and can't) be purchased by civilians and where and when you can and can't take your guns; e.g. the RNC and NRA conventions which ban attendees from bringing loaded weapons (hopefully no "bad guys with guns" show up).
Limey - Cruz 2016!!
Neither of us was born here - but we got here as soon as we could!!