Wisse wrote:
I can't imagine living in that kind of conditions. Yes, guns probably stop robbers but not suicidal ppl, because they want to die anyway. Someone with proper shooting skills and a plan would still take out 15 ppl before they stop him even if they all own a gun.
It's fairly obvious from this statement that you have never fired a pistol.
It's not the movies people! You can't possibly take out 15 people before anyone else with a firearm could do anything. The first thing you are forgetting that a normal clip doesn't hold that many bullets.
Have you ever tried to hit a moving target with a large caliber pistol? It's quite difficult. Moreso if people are shooting back. It's not the movies! Get it out of your head! This is not hollywood and the average suicidal retard is not James Bond.
Even with proper skills and a plan, you would maybe get 1 or 2 at the most. If you don't have to worry about anything other than people running away from you, it would be like shooting fish in a barrel.
I don't get you Americans either. You guys actually like the fact that you can carry arms. You guys think that you need/will be able to overthrow government if something goes wrong. What the fuck. Seriously I don't get it, plz explain.
Yes, I do like that fact. Does the revolutionary war, or the civil war in America ring any bells? It also helps to understand what our country was founded upon. The US is a republic. We the people run the government, not the other way around (even though the hardcore left is trying to change that for over half a century).
Our country was founded upon the principles that our government is a slave to the people, as opposed to the people being enslaved by the government (Escape from England a'ringin any bells?

).
We're a BIIIIG country encompassing a lot of different cultures. In terms easier for you to understand, think of each of the 50 states as being their own little country.
The problem is when power is taken from state governments and given to the federal government. That's when you start watching your rights as a citizen going *poof*.
The fact is that the majority of americans love their country, and have no qualms about fighting for it (the word "Fighting" doesn't particularly refer to violence).
Maybe this will give you a bit of context and insight:
http://www.usconstitution.net/ wrote:The 2nd Amendment, starting in the latter half of the 20th century, became an object of much debate. Concerned with rising violence in society, and the role firearms play in that violence, gun control advocates began to read the 2nd Amendment one way. On the other side, firearm enthusiasts saw the attacks on gun ownership as attacks on freedom, and defended their interpretation of the 2nd Amendment just as fiercely. If the authors of the 2nd Amendment could have foreseen the debate, they might have phrased the amendment differently, because much of the debate has centered around the way the amendment is phrased.
Is the amendment one that was created to ensure the continuation and flourishing of the state militias as a means of defense, or was it created to ensure an individual's right to own a firearm.
Despite the rhetoric on both sides of the issue, the answer to both questions is most likely, "Yes." The attitude of Americans toward the military was much different in the 1790's than it is today. Standing armies were mistrusted, as they had been used as tools of oppression by the monarchs of Europe for centuries. In the war for independence, there had been a regular army, but much of the fighting had been done by the state militias, under the command of local officers. Aside from the war, militias were needed because attacks were relatively common, whether by bandits, Indians, and even by troops from other states.
Today, the state militias have evolved into the National Guard in every state. These soldiers, while part-time, are professionally trained and armed by the government. No longer are regular, non-Guardsmen, expected to take up arms in defense of the state or the nation (though the US Code does still recognize the unorganized militia as an entity, and state laws vary on the subject [10 USC 311]).
This is in great contrast to the way things were at the time of adoption of the 2nd Amendment. Many state constitutions had a right to bear arms for the purposes of the maintenance of the militia. Many had laws that required men of age to own a gun and supplies, including powder and bullets.
In the state constitutions written around the time of the Declaration of Independence, the right to bear arms was presented in different ways. The Articles of Confederation specified that the states should maintain their militias, but did not mention a right to bear arms. Thus, any such protections would have to come from state law. The Virginia Declaration of Rights, though it mentioned the militia, did not mention a right to bear arms ├óÔé¼ÔÇØ the right might be implied, since the state did not furnish weapons for militiamen. The constitutions of North Carolina and Massachusetts did guarantee the right, to ensure proper defense of the states. The constitution of Pennsylvania guaranteed the right with no mention of the militia (at the time, Pennsylvania had no organized militia). One of the arguments of the Anti-Federalists during the ratification debates was that the new nation did not arm the militias, an odd argument since neither did the U.S. under the Articles. Finally, Madison's original proposal for the Bill of Rights mentioned the individual right much more directly than the final result that came out of Congress.
Perhaps in the 1780's, the rise of a tyrant to a leadership position in the U.S. was a cause for concern. Today, in my opinion, the voters are much too sophisticated to elect a leader whose stated aims would be to suppress freedom or declare martial law. For the leader whose unstated aim it was to seize the nation, the task would be more than daunting ├óÔé¼ÔÇØ it would be next to impossible. The size and scope of the conspiracy needed, the cooperation of patriots who would see right through such a plan ├óÔé¼ÔÇØ it is unfathomable, the stuff of fiction. There are some who fear the rise in executive power under the second Bush presidency is just such a usurpation, and in some ways it may be. But similar usurpations of power by the Congress and the President, such as the Alien and Sedition Acts, the suspension of habeas corpus during the Civil War, or the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, were all eventually overturned or struck down and then condemned by history. My hope is that history can be our guide this time, too.
The defense of our borders had not been a cause for concern for nearly a century before the subject really came up again around the time of the turn of the millennium, in 1999. Concern with border defense again became an issue after September 11, 2001, when a series of terrorist attacks, both in the form of hijacked airliners crashing into buildings and anthrax-laced mail, made people realize that we do have enemies that wish to invade our nation, though not on the scale of an army. But while each state has its National Guard it can call up to guard the borders, the coordination needed is much more on a national scale, and special units of the regular army or border patrol are better suited for such duty than the Guard.
@tombom, you don't truly understand how simple it is to obtain a non-registered handgun. "Tougher" gun laws won't change that. And it forces all those who are incapable of protecting themselves to simply run, giving said criminal immense power over the situation.
This shooting in Germany for example. Exactly what could anyone do? The guy had a gun, it's not like they could do anything to stop it. Now take that same scenario, and imagine that 90% of the people there had handguns on their person. How long do you really think said killer would have lasted?
Gun laws aren't some magical thing which put guns into the hands of every criminal.
If this were actually founded in solid logic, you would realize that gun laws also aren't some magical thing that makes criminals want to stop using them.
In spring terms, you make guns OMGWTF OP.