some interesting stuff here: http://www.capitalism.org/capitalism/tour/index.htm
guns, self-defense, & the second
amendment http://www.capitalism.org/capitalism/faq/guns.htm
Is the right to own a gun based on the second amendment?
No. The right to own guns is not based on the second amendment. If there were no second amendment in the U.S. Constitution, one would still
possess a right to own a weapon of self-defense, which in today's context, means a firearm, i.e., a gun, i.e., a civilized man's means of
self-defense.
What is the basis of the right to own a gun for self-defense?
The right to own a firearm, is based on the right to self-defense, i.e., the right to those means to defend oneself against those who wish to destroy
one's life. The right to self-defense is itself is a corollary of the right to life (a corollary is here defined as a self-evident implication of a general
principle).
It would be absurd to say one has the right to life, but does not have the right to the means necessary to protect that life. It would be like saying
one has the right to life, but not the right to purchase food. Yet, this is what opponents to the right to own a gun are really against: the right to life.
Unfortunately, it is the right to life, that is ignored in the debate over the right to bear arms, both by its opponents, and by its so-called defenders!
As Adam Mossoff writes in Capitalism Magazine:
"The field of battle on which gun control should be fought is exactly on this issue: man's rights. Statistical arguments on gun control
are a red herring--as the leftists' appeals to hungry children or the environmentalists' appeals to clean parks are also meant to distract
their opponents from the fundamental issues at stake. While the National Rifle Association (NRA) and other defenders of the right to
bear arms argue over statistics and interpreting the Constitution, the real issues remain untouched and are sacrificed to the enemies
of our freedom."
How is the right to self-defense applied under capitalism?
Under capitalism, it is the government's job to use force to defend its citizen's rights; however, government is not omnipotent, and it is not
omnipresent: it cannot be everywhere. In many cases the protective forces of government cannot arrive to a criminal situation in time to prevent an
irreversible situation, i.e., such as a murder. As such, every peaceful citizen has the right to those means necessary to protect themselves in
emergency situations, until the police can arrive to 'takeover', i.e., an intrusion by a would be rapist when a woman is alone in ones apartment.
Isn't owning a gun inherently evil?
No. Evil and good are moral terms that apply to entities that can make moral choices. A gun is a non-volitional object. Guns have no power of
choice; they simply act according to their identity, their nature. Unlike a gun, the user of a firearm possesses free-will, and can be morally judged for
his actions. It is only the user of a gun who is good or evil: a woman who uses a gun to shoot a man wishing to rape her is acting selfishly to save
her life--and is judged as good; a bank robber using a gun to rob a bank is acting irrationally and selflessly (by placing himself in such a
predicament, and attempting to achieve values by theft)--and is judged as evil. To say that a gun is intrinsically evil, because it can be used by
criminals--and corrupt governments--to rob peaceful citizens, is like saying water is evil because people can drown in it.
Does the right to bear arms, include the right to privately owned nuclear weapons as the 'Libertarians' insist.
No. There is no right to bear weapons like a gun, outside of the right to life (whether for self-defense, or hunting, etc.). A corollary of a principle
(such as the right to bear arms) cannot violate the principle on which it hierarchically depends upon (the right to self-defense). A nuclear
weapon--i.e., an atomic bomb--is a weapon of mass destruction. There is no such thing as the right to mass destruction, as it lies in contradiction to
the right to self-defense. One does not defend oneself against a mugger by tossing a nuclear bomb.
Nuclear weapons are not weapons of self-defense. They are weapons of total offense, that render (in the present context) all weapons of
self-defense useless. Such a 'right to own a nuclear weapon' would in practice turn the right to self-defense into a chimera. After all, how does one
defend oneself against a nuclear bomb? By 'ducking for cover'?
guns, self-defense, & the second
amendment http://www.capitalism.org/capitalism/faq/guns.htm
Is the right to own a gun based on the second amendment?
No. The right to own guns is not based on the second amendment. If there were no second amendment in the U.S. Constitution, one would still
possess a right to own a weapon of self-defense, which in today's context, means a firearm, i.e., a gun, i.e., a civilized man's means of
self-defense.
What is the basis of the right to own a gun for self-defense?
The right to own a firearm, is based on the right to self-defense, i.e., the right to those means to defend oneself against those who wish to destroy
one's life. The right to self-defense is itself is a corollary of the right to life (a corollary is here defined as a self-evident implication of a general
principle).
It would be absurd to say one has the right to life, but does not have the right to the means necessary to protect that life. It would be like saying
one has the right to life, but not the right to purchase food. Yet, this is what opponents to the right to own a gun are really against: the right to life.
Unfortunately, it is the right to life, that is ignored in the debate over the right to bear arms, both by its opponents, and by its so-called defenders!
As Adam Mossoff writes in Capitalism Magazine:
"The field of battle on which gun control should be fought is exactly on this issue: man's rights. Statistical arguments on gun control
are a red herring--as the leftists' appeals to hungry children or the environmentalists' appeals to clean parks are also meant to distract
their opponents from the fundamental issues at stake. While the National Rifle Association (NRA) and other defenders of the right to
bear arms argue over statistics and interpreting the Constitution, the real issues remain untouched and are sacrificed to the enemies
of our freedom."
How is the right to self-defense applied under capitalism?
Under capitalism, it is the government's job to use force to defend its citizen's rights; however, government is not omnipotent, and it is not
omnipresent: it cannot be everywhere. In many cases the protective forces of government cannot arrive to a criminal situation in time to prevent an
irreversible situation, i.e., such as a murder. As such, every peaceful citizen has the right to those means necessary to protect themselves in
emergency situations, until the police can arrive to 'takeover', i.e., an intrusion by a would be rapist when a woman is alone in ones apartment.
Isn't owning a gun inherently evil?
No. Evil and good are moral terms that apply to entities that can make moral choices. A gun is a non-volitional object. Guns have no power of
choice; they simply act according to their identity, their nature. Unlike a gun, the user of a firearm possesses free-will, and can be morally judged for
his actions. It is only the user of a gun who is good or evil: a woman who uses a gun to shoot a man wishing to rape her is acting selfishly to save
her life--and is judged as good; a bank robber using a gun to rob a bank is acting irrationally and selflessly (by placing himself in such a
predicament, and attempting to achieve values by theft)--and is judged as evil. To say that a gun is intrinsically evil, because it can be used by
criminals--and corrupt governments--to rob peaceful citizens, is like saying water is evil because people can drown in it.
Does the right to bear arms, include the right to privately owned nuclear weapons as the 'Libertarians' insist.
No. There is no right to bear weapons like a gun, outside of the right to life (whether for self-defense, or hunting, etc.). A corollary of a principle
(such as the right to bear arms) cannot violate the principle on which it hierarchically depends upon (the right to self-defense). A nuclear
weapon--i.e., an atomic bomb--is a weapon of mass destruction. There is no such thing as the right to mass destruction, as it lies in contradiction to
the right to self-defense. One does not defend oneself against a mugger by tossing a nuclear bomb.
Nuclear weapons are not weapons of self-defense. They are weapons of total offense, that render (in the present context) all weapons of
self-defense useless. Such a 'right to own a nuclear weapon' would in practice turn the right to self-defense into a chimera. After all, how does one
defend oneself against a nuclear bomb? By 'ducking for cover'?