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Author Message
25 new of 404 responses total.
nharmon
response 316 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 03:39 UTC 2006

If I shot at a tank with my Glock, I might chip the paint, causing the
steel to rust, and putting a hole in the armor!
cross
response 317 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 03:40 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

cross
response 318 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 03:44 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

nharmon
response 319 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 05:42 UTC 2006

I do not disagree with you Dan.  The military technology that exists
today could never have been imagined by the framers of our constitution.
That makes the 2nd amendment difficult to apply, as evident by the
contradicting legal opinions in place.

But until the amendment is changed or repealed, its still the law of the
land.
naftee
response 320 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 06:22 UTC 2006

you guys are talking in a way that makes it seem that the military isn't
composed of 'average citizens'.
cross
response 321 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 07:24 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

mcnally
response 322 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 07:59 UTC 2006

 re #318:  You know that that argument cuts both ways, right?  From an
 anti-gun-ownership standpoint you can use it to reason that the rationale
 for an armed citizenry is outdated, but from a pro-weapons standpoint it
 works just as well (which is to say, not especially..) as an argument that
 citizens should be allowed to own anti-tank weapons and surface-to-air
 missiles if they so choose.
bru
response 323 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 08:48 UTC 2006

well, individuals used t be able to own cannon during the civil war and 
earlier.  I think you still can own a muzzle loading cannon today.  It 
ain't going to compete with a 155 howitzer, thats for sure.

The citizens are not going to be shooting down any aircraft with 
hunting rifles either, or stand up against a determined advance against 
a brigade.  No one thinks that, and no one has said that.  But if I 
want to get my hands on a SAM, I will need to start with a rifle.  If I 
intend to take on an M1-A1, I will need to use other means, but a rifle 
or pistol would be a good start.

If I was the violent kind, I could have taken several military rifles 
from the National Guard down here with nothing but my pistol.  these 
guys are walking around with unloaded rifles, and they are not wearing 
armor, just fatigues.

in a guerilla war, you take what you need from the enemy, or it is 
given to you by people who agree with your position.

rcurl
response 324 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 16:58 UTC 2006

So, does that mean that you support the Iraqi insurgency, who are just
citizens protesting against their propective government?
nharmon
response 325 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 17:01 UTC 2006

Thats an interesting point Rane. But I'm not sure you can apply this to
Iraq since most of the insurgency are not Iraqis, but are muslim
extremists from other countries like Syria.

Another difference is that the insurgency is not fighting an oppressive
government, but rather a government that isn't oppressive enough! :)
rcurl
response 326 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 17:14 UTC 2006

I'd like to know what factual information you have about the makeup of the 
Iraq insurgency fighters. I heard recently it is mostly radical Sunni 
Iraqis.

Their arms and explosives come from munition dumps plundered when we 
invaded and failed to protect them. The foreign fighters weren't in Iraq 
in any number then.

The radical Sunnis expect a Shiite/Kurd government will be oppressive, and 
they are therefore resisting it.

Even with foreigners in the Insurgency - I presume that when armed 
American citizens rise up with their 30-06s against our government, they 
will welcome Canadians coming to assist them.
marcvh
response 327 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 17:21 UTC 2006

...just as, when we were rebelling against the British, we were happy to
accept outside aid from the French.  I don't think many people would
argue that the American Revolution wasn't a genuine movement but was
instead the meddling of a bunch of cheese-eating surrender monkeys.
Most successful insurgencies will need some kind of outside assistance
eventually.

My take is that such an insurgency, unfortunately, ups the ante on
brutality.  If the occupying force is willing to be extremely brutal
(e.g. the Germans occupying Belgium) then the occupier is likely to
prevail militarily (but perhaps not politically.)
mcnally
response 328 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 20:24 UTC 2006

> But I'm not sure you can apply this to Iraq since most of the
> insurgency are not Iraqis, but are muslim extremists from other
> countries like Syria.

  That's almost certainly not correct.  It's possible the majority of 
  the people setting off car bombs in mosques and marketplaces are
  foreign terrorists but the bulk of the insurgency appear to be Sunni
  Arabs who feel they will be effectively disenfranchised by the new
  government.

> Another difference is that the insurgency is not fighting an oppressive
> government, but rather a government that isn't oppressive enough! :)

  Don't kid yourself, the current Iraqi government is, and will continue
  to be, plenty oppressive.
bru
response 329 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 04:42 UTC 2006

no I do not support the Iraqi insurgency.  silly statement.
rcurl
response 330 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 05:43 UTC 2006

Why not? The Iraqi insurgents are doing what you want American insurgents to
do. 
mcnally
response 331 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 07:19 UTC 2006

 Kidnap journalists and detonate car bombs in public places?  When did 
 bru claim he wanted anyone to do that?

 Look, I like to turn someone's words against them as much as the next
 grexer, possibly more, but the equivalence you've set up is too weak
 even to be called "flimsy."  Surely a respected professor who prides
 himself on his logic can do better..
bru
response 332 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 08:43 UTC 2006

No, it is not what I want american insurgents to do.  I do not want 
another american civil war.

What I do want is for people to understand and respect the constitution 
and not warp the original intent to meet their own ends.

What I want is for people to understand that the ability to do 
something does not mean that you have to do something.

What I want is for the people who are charged with defending this 
country to understand that they are not invincible and that they can be 
killed just as quick by a .22 caliber round in the wrong hands as by 
a .308 in those same hands.
cross
response 333 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 15:17 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

nharmon
response 334 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 16:31 UTC 2006

I'm not defending anybody here, but I learn more by stating something on
Grex and having it contradicted than by asking a question.
rcurl
response 335 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 16:31 UTC 2006

Don't think that American insurgents wouldn't resort to kidnappings and car
bombings. 

Bru writes "What I do want is for people to understand and respect the 
constitution and not warp the original intent to meet their own ends", but 
the original intent was clearly stated to be to form "A well regulated 
Militia", and this has been upheld by the Supreme Court. Who is warping 
the "original intent to meet their own ends"? Bru.
nharmon
response 336 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 16:38 UTC 2006

If you take "militia" as meaning another military, then I can see your
point. But if you take "militia" as meaning an armed citizenry, can you
see our point?
marcvh
response 337 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 17:28 UTC 2006

The most famous contemporary American "insurgents" used bombs in 
Oklahoma City and Atlanta.  I see no reason to believe that, in the
presence of a more oppressive government, these tactics would change.
nharmon
response 338 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 17:39 UTC 2006

Theodore Kaczynski and Eric Robert Rudolph were insurgents. Timothy
McVeigh was not.
bhelliom
response 339 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 17:43 UTC 2006

McVeigh was a terrorist.
marcvh
response 340 of 404: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 17:44 UTC 2006

How is McVeigh different from the people planting car-bombs in Iraq?
I'm not sure I follow.
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