Maybe you should speak for yourself when you want to promote homosexuality. As I said, my region has other values.Speak for yourself before you say 'our values' or embrace this or that.
If you like guns, you must be a social conservative with a specific religious point of view, view on social policies, etc.
That is just not true.
Some of us like guns and homosexuality.But that is what you are saying ... you are saying that if we like guns then we must embrace homosexuality, and I am saying that is not our values in this region where I live. We like guns, we do not like homosexuality. I think it has something to do with values, culture, society, Christianity ... of course, libertarianism precludes all such things.
It is a personal right.It's sad that y'all would take the Second Amendment, reduce it to some personal right, and compare it to the right to commit homosexual acts.
In my reality, the Second Amendment regards a people being armed to ensure majority rule. That is what a free State is - not a State that must accept homosexuality because of some libertarian dictate, but a State that is free to decide for themselves what is and isn't sodomy.
I didn't start this. Somebody was saying that it was inconsistent to be against gun laws and for sodomy laws. I think that is completely absurd. The South is the pro RKBA region, and the South accepts homosexuality the least. There is no correlation.
I really hope there was an error somewhere in that sentence. In the reality that the rest of us live in the Second Amendment regards a people being armed to PREVENT majority rule. It makes sure that if 80% of the population wants guns banned completely it doesn't happen. It makes sure that if 80% of the population wants to ban christianity that it doesn't happen. It makes sure that if 80% of the population wants to throw people in jail for driving pickup trucks that it doesn't happen.In my reality, the Second Amendment regards a people being armed to ensure majority rule.
44 AMP said:I grew up in northern New York, very near the Vermont border. You could look out the window and see the Green Mtns. North of Saratoga, and south of Ticonderoga. We would go to the Rutland fair. And my grandfather was as Yankee as a Nantuckteer. Ayah.
They are fading now, fewer and fewer are left. Stubborn, independent, thrifty, and often frugal, they are the direct spiritual decendants of the people in the northern colonies who threw off English rule.
They know what really is, and isn't, and no amount of liberal rehetoric will change their minds. They are the country people.
Sadly, wealthy urban folks (with different values) have been buying out the old breed, offering irresistable amounts of money for old country farms.
Like in the west, where people are moving to Washington and Oregon to get away from California, and then they try to turn their new homes into what they left, the same is happening to Vermont and New Hampshire. For now they are decent places for gun owners, but there are people actively working to change that every day.