Point is that the 2nd amendement argument is just not such a good argument.
The only good part of it is that governments should at least act acording to their own constitution or they loose credibility.
But to say: people should be allowed to have guns so they can do 'good things' with them just doesn't make any sense, because who's to check whether this realy is the case?
To say that people should have guns so they can protect themselves against the government is realy asking for things like the incident in tuscon to happen, because who's to tell guy's like loughner that this doesn't mean that you can just shoot any politician you don't like?
Not anybody working for the government, because guys like him already believe they can shoot anybody from the government they disagree with.
So to say to people that they're allowed to use guns against the government is slippery territory, because you could only check whether the use of guns was justified if you would have a government organisation like a court of law to verify this...wich you're allowed to shoot at if you feel this is needed for your protection and i guess if they want to lock you up because they find you used a gun in an unjustifyable way, you could feel you need to protect yourself against them.
It's realy a dangerous argument, because even if the 2nd amendement wasn't meant to justify any act of violence unconditionally, you just have to assume that people will only act according to the right conditions.
It is literally like saying: you may have guns, but only to do good things with.
Well then you need a strong government to control whether this is realy the case and to see to it that people won't do bad things with them. But the on of the most elementary 'good things' assumed here is to overthrow a government that isn't good.
So you have to see that it just doesn't add up.
The only good part of it is that governments should at least act acording to their own constitution or they loose credibility.
But to say: people should be allowed to have guns so they can do 'good things' with them just doesn't make any sense, because who's to check whether this realy is the case?
To say that people should have guns so they can protect themselves against the government is realy asking for things like the incident in tuscon to happen, because who's to tell guy's like loughner that this doesn't mean that you can just shoot any politician you don't like?
Not anybody working for the government, because guys like him already believe they can shoot anybody from the government they disagree with.
So to say to people that they're allowed to use guns against the government is slippery territory, because you could only check whether the use of guns was justified if you would have a government organisation like a court of law to verify this...wich you're allowed to shoot at if you feel this is needed for your protection and i guess if they want to lock you up because they find you used a gun in an unjustifyable way, you could feel you need to protect yourself against them.
It's realy a dangerous argument, because even if the 2nd amendement wasn't meant to justify any act of violence unconditionally, you just have to assume that people will only act according to the right conditions.
It is literally like saying: you may have guns, but only to do good things with.
Well then you need a strong government to control whether this is realy the case and to see to it that people won't do bad things with them. But the on of the most elementary 'good things' assumed here is to overthrow a government that isn't good.
So you have to see that it just doesn't add up.