Who said anything about very large groups? It is no indicator of size of group, just that it refers to more than 1 person, thus, NOT an individual.
And i'm pretty certain, that in the course of carrying out their duties, if the police want to search an individual or their property, they have the power to do so already. How is that going to raise anyone's eyebrows?
!!!!
If the police had that power, we'd already be in a totalitarian state.
Cops can't search anyone without permission or a warrant. If a cop stops me and wants to search me, my proper response is to get his name, badge number, and supervising officer, then ask if he has probable cause to believe there has been a crime and I was involved. If he says "no", then I file a complaint. It he says "yes", then I ask for the crime and the statute. If he provides these, I write them down; if he does no, I bid him be on his way and file a complaint. If I have written them down, I then tell him no, he may not search me, and I will answer no questions without an attorney present.
That is the proper duty of any citizen of a free state, to make sure the police behave themselves. Unfortunately, schools aren't teaching that, so today's kids are growing up as sheep.
If an officer searches my property without a warrant, I'll have his badge and probably a $250k settlement from the court.
I'm pretty certain that historians would not only (and do) dispute that Mr Henry's view was NOT commonly understood, but that it was practically unheard of.
And yet the pro-gun lobby insist it means something more than being the safeguard of potential federal tyranny.
Mr. Henry's view was common enough it was considered for the text f the Second Amendment to require everyone to be armed. The Quakers and others pointed out that if you require it, it's no longer a right, and that ended that.
The view was held by Henry, Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Hancock, and a lot of others. But they felt that no sensible American would ever want to not be armed.
Two points to make here. Firstly, the good Englishmen you refer were not merely 'all individuals', they were part of the 'militia', there was never an inherent right for everyone to be armed.
Tell that to the Scots.
And of course there was an inherent right. That was understood in Celtic culture 'way, 'way back, and (oddly enough) in Norman (Northmen, i.e. Norse and Vikings) as well. The Normans learned differently from the Romanized Franks, so their conqueror culture came into conflict with the traditional culture: allowing everyone to be armed makes it hard to enjoy despotism.
Secondly, there was already an established militia prior to the revolution was there not. And that a split developed between them. Some members had a distrust of those in the militia who were loyal to England. They didn't trust the Loyalists, so created militia of their own. As such, the established militia had good reason to view the new militia as insurrectors. Fight ensues, and before you know it, its no longer a quarrel between militia members, but a quarrel between the colonists and the English. The revolution occurred just as much from the distrust shown towards those who were friendly with England, not solely because there was a dislike of the way England was governed and the desire to do things differently in the new land. Move forward 300+ yrs and it becomes irrelevant, there is little difference between the USA and UK now.
That's an interesting revisionist view of history. Very few in the organized militias went Loyalist.
The Revolution occurred not because of a desire to do things differently, but a desire to be treated like Englishmen, with the traditional rights of Englishmen (including to keep and bear arms). The novelty in things was in London, where an imported foreigner sat on a throne he didn't understand and wanted to treat colonial Englishmen as virtual serfs.
Strange, i thought you were of the view that the militia was 'entirely' separate of government. So it is curious that you now view the militia in the 'swiss' sense. As you have a standing army, and one of the greatest in the world, it doesn't seem necessary to have a 'militia' at all. Furthermore, who is this militia that elects its own officers, keeps them in order and trains them? I assumed that individuals decided to elect themselves, arm themselves and train themselves, since that is what you claim every individual to be, a member of the militia. So actually, they are not elected at all, are they? Its simply individuals taking it upon themselves to take up arms for the benefit of themselves. That is about as far away as well regulated militia as you can get, short of banning bullets.
Wow.
Having a standing army is all the more reason to have a well-regulated militia, meaning fully outfitted and well trained and ready to act!
In a particular militia, yes -- people volunteer. They elect their officers, supply themselves with weapons, drill and practice together -- and that is being well-regulated.
So tell me then, what do the militia do? From where i'm standing, there is nothing for them to do at all, not needed. The military looks after the nation, the police look after the population. The 'privilege' you speak of, is given to them by the people, as elected militia. The police are not merely security guards being alert. Where once there was a sheriff riding his horse around the wild west, you now have a police force. The sheriff would have been the elected representative of the militia (tho not necessarily elected), and he would have his posse of townsfolk functioning as the militia to help him do his duty when needs be. Its absurd to suggest that the role of the police is to 'raise the hue and cry' before letting the public deal with whatever is the threat.
Standing army, added to militarized police, equals a huge need for a militia that's not only well-regulated but proven effective. If we had an active militia, the feds wouldn't have gotten away with murdering people at Waco.
And the police decidedly do
not "look after the population". First of all, that's an impossibility, unless you have a police force big enough to literally keep an eye on every last individual at every moment; second, there is no requirement under law for them to do so. They don't protect the populace, they react after the populace didn't get protected.
BTW, yu have it backwards with the sheriff and the posse: he leads them so they can do their duty in exercising their rights.
A fair comment, but missing the point. Sarandan is acknowledging that the negative effects of modern weaponry could never have been accounted for, and if they could have been, would likely have led to a more explicit statement of intent within the amendment, that would have seen the same restriction that existed within the english application of the law. The individual rights view has really led to this? That the amendment doesn't just do what it says on the tin, but seemingly allows everybody to arm themselves against their fellow citizens and with the latest available technology? That is a hell of a lot to read in to what was only ever included in the constitution to allay fears of anti-federalists that their rights wouldn't be infringed upon by the new government. The only people misinterpreting the intent of the amendment, are those who insist they need firearms in order to feel secure.
What the amendment says, using the definition of the terms from the day, is that every individual has the right to own and to haul around the latest in individual military weaponry. To "bear arms" meant to carry, for the purpose of use, the best military weapon for an individual that you could get.
Wrong. The government cannot force people to take up arms, nobody is a part of any militia. It is the people's choice to defend the nation, we have a standing army, a territorial army, and in the worst case scenario, a bullish desire within the common man to protect our homeland. That is all that is needed for security because we do not fear our government, we elect it, we can remove it. We need not fear our fellow citizens because we have a police force to protect us. Where they alone cannot fully defend us, we at least have a fighting chance. A 13yr old girl was stabbed unprovoked last week, she managed to get to a phonebox in a park, she was treated for her injuries but sadly died. Had she been shot, she would probably have died at the scene, no chance.
Trusting in a police force is foolishness. If you really believe that, you've accepted being a sheep, not a man.
"Nobody is a part of any militia"? That's not what the British used to believe! How far you have fallen.... The Founders here knew, from British jurisprudence, that "the militia is the whole of the people". That's what the Second Amendment means, and it's also federal law.
I love that "we elect it, we can remove it" mantra about the government. The real power ion government rests with people not only not elected, but totally unknown. And even the elected portion is not immune -- remember that Hitler came to power quite legitimately. The worst tyrants are those the people think they've chosen.
I believe that would stem from the fact that you are not a totalitarian state, my guess. The republicans may not be popular to some, but they're not nazis.
Let's see...
In the interest of "National Security", they already got us to gut the fourth and fifth amendments, do away with habeus corpus, butcher the right to privacy... they want to make it legal to deny gays not just marriage, but housing, education, and employment merely for being gay... and they're not Nazis?
They WANT a totalitarian state, specific a plutocratic theocracy. If they had free reign, only white Christian landowners would be allowed to hold office, and everyone else would be second- or third-class citizens.
First bolded part: What community? You truly sound paranoid.
Huh?
The criminal community. They're effectively a separate society.
Second bolded part: Two years ago, a man suffered a huge financial crisis which resulted in him about to go brankrupt. He took his legally held rifle, shot his wife, his daughter, his horses, and then himself. So don't try telling me that in a nation where guns are far more prominent in availability and type, that 'trusted' people do not cause harm. Guns are too easily abused.
And I could give a list of people who have been killed by gun, knife, and even pitchfork who would all be alive if it weren't for laws to keep them "safe" by keeping their firearms locked up where they're hard to get at.
Available firearms are the right of anyone who wishes self defense. To tell people they aren't allowed to have their firearms is to tell them the criminals are supposed to win. The real killers of the teen girl and her younger siblings in California wasn't the intruder, but the legislators who made it impossible for her to get to the family guns and protect herself and family.
In part, yes. But that is all it is. A small sacrifice for a meaningful purpose. It provides the counterbalance. Whilst it is essential to protect the rights of individuals from the tyranny of the many, it must also be accepted that the tyranny of a few can damage the rights of a group. So it is important to always allow enough freedom to protect individual rights, but not so much so that it has a demeaning effect on the rights of groups. Allowing freedom of speech to include hate is great for individuals, but sacrificing the right to be hateful means positevly protecting those groups who would otherwise suffer from the unrestricted individual right. Don't you wonder why there exists a need for the 'It gets better' campaign? It exists to fill the void where groups are not protected from the rights of the individual, where government cannot act to positevly reinforce the value of tolerance. Education alone does not work, because people don't care to listen anyway. The individual view is stifling gay rights, so, far from wondering why gay guys are not taking up arms, you should be considering throwing your own away, because your adoption of the individual view is the very view that allows the Phelps family to spread their message of hate and subject young minds to the atmosphere of intolerance which comes from the very same people you believe you need your gun to protect against.
So because of a few, you would reduce people to sheep?
The "individual view" isn't "stifling gay rights", it's what drives them. Without the individual view, society would just keep on doing what it has: oppressing gays. Gays want to be allowed to be individuals; the witches of NOM and other organizations work from your "limited individuality" view: they want a conforming, trained society where individual views and differences are squelched.
The solution to the abuse of freedom is never less freedom.