Tennessee Gentleman
New member
Hkmp5sd said:in your opinion. I suitably use mine frequently.
Except the Congress, the Supreme Court and 70 percent of Alabama agrees with me


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Hkmp5sd said:in your opinion. I suitably use mine frequently.
Tennessee Gentleman said:Comparing FA to computers and equating the SCOTUS criteria of "in common use" to other civil rights is silly. In Common Use is a reasonable criteria to determine what type of firearms are protected by the 2A.
maestro pistolero said:Boy TG, not your usual cheerful self.
maestro pistolero said:Forgetting FA for the moment, do you care to chime in on the circular logic trap at all?
tyme said:How can you know that FA would not be in the mix if the NFA didn't exist? You're drawing conclusions based on circular reasoning.
divemedic said:Using your logic, the only guns that are protected by the 2A are muskets, they being the only guns that were in common use when the 2A was ratified.
divemedic said:The 40 watt Plasma rifle is not protected by the 2A,
csmsss said:devised tests and scrutinies and so forth based not on constitutionally valid grounds but on its own tortured, conflicted "logic". And stare decisis then conveniently keeps the body hidden from subsequent criticism and repair.
So, do you claim the 2nd ONLY protects firearms?Tennessee Gentleman said:divemedic said:The 40 watt Plasma rifle is not protected by the 2A
It isn't a firearm either
raimius said:So, do you claim the 2nd ONLY protects firearms?
Forgetting FA for the moment, do you care to chime in on the circular logic trap at all?
Yeah OK. I think Gura answered it pretty well. Handguns although banned in DC are and have been for over a hundred years in common use by civilians for self defense. In fact either in the decision or one of the Amicus briefs it was validly argued that handguns were the ultimate SD weapon due to their size and compactness.
The fact that just before the FOPA registry closure there were only 118,000 on the books points that out rather clearly. I think the circular logic argument fails because FA were never in common use and that was because people did not care to own them.
Again, common use is a criteria validly developed by the court to ascertain whether a particular type of firearm is protected by the 2A.
The issue is what firearms are protected by the 2A and the court is using a good criteria to determine that.
That is a false choice and you know it. No one but you have said in common use at the time of the 2A.Using your logic, the only guns that are protected by the 2A are muskets, they being the only guns that were in common use when the 2A was ratified.
BTW, how do you know they would be in common use if the NFA weren't around? Isn't that a very large unproveable assumption and circular?
Most folk aren't in that camp.
Common use criteria is fine for 2A issues but not other BoRs concerns and trying to tie that test to free speech is without merit and really a strawman.
TG said:What makes your "logic" any less "tortured" than theirs? Are you a judge? Have you any legal training? Since law and precedent don't work what method would you suggest? Oh I know, let every man determine for himself what is constitutional or not right? In other words anarchy.
zukiphile said:Asserting things as silly or reasonable doesn't demonstrate either. What cogent reasoning renders "in common use" a good limitation on 2d Am. rights, but not the rest of the bill of rights?
"Arms"Tennessee Gentleman said:What do you think it protects?
118,000 on the books before the registry closed out of hundreds of millions of total guns owned legally. If the demand had been that great, many many more would have been legally owned. Your argument that the NFA stopped that is thin and I see no evidence to support it. FA was available for reasonable prices before 1986 and $200 while more in 1986 than today was not overburdensome (I was around back then).
raimius said:"Arms" In application, I believe it protects small arms most rigidly.
Hkmp5sd said:The NFA did in fact hinder ownership of full auto firearms.
I still don't see that you have produced any evidence that the NFA caused those arms to not be in common use.
Hkmp5sd said:It is my position that had the NFA occurred in 1994 instead of 1934, full auto firearms would be much more "common" in the country. They would have been a more common item on shelves in gun stores. More people would have seen them and bought them.
1) Semantic misunderstandingThis is hard for some gun enthusiasts to understand but Joe Citizen does not 1) believe he is a part of a militia 2) feel that a machine gun is a good idea for his own SD and 3) But does think that those who believe in 1 and 2 above are strange.
tyme said:1) Semantic misunderstanding
tyme said:Emotional reaction (MGs can be used semi-auto if that's more advantageous in a self-defense situation)
tyme said:3) Fear of dissimilar cultures/groups (the Other)
I don't think it protects "plasma rifles" but then I wouldn't what the heck those are anyway.
And look how few people legally owned them. More proof they were never in common use.
gyvel said:But you still have to consider all the roadblocks, i.e. the $200.00 tax which, at one time, was prohibitve and is still a nuisance factor, the arbitrary behavior of many law enforcement officials who refuse to sign off on applications, and the social stigma attached to FA by the misinformed American Public, as reasons why "few people legally owned them."
They're technobabble. In scientific terms saying "plasma rifle" makes about as much logical sense as "steam gun."
Speculation and no evidence to show reliably that the NFA "caused" FA to not be in common use. I don't think a court would buy it. I don't either.
divemedic said:That means guns, knives, pointy sticks, and even artillery.