time to take a stand
It's Time to Take a
Stand
Dave McPhail
Time is running short. It is Friday
night. The Friday night before the 2000 election next Tuesday November
7, 2000. This is probably the most important presidential election in our
lifetimes.
In a startribune.com
story of Thursday November 2, 2000 by Brigitte Greenberg - an Associated
Press Writer, Joe Lieberman is quoted as saying "Al Gore and I respect
the Second Amendment right to bear firearms. That's in the Constitution.
No hunter, sportsperson or law-abiding citizen will lose any rights they
have under our proposals,"
What I would like to do here is break this
statement down and analyze it piece by piece.
Lieberman says that he and Algore "respect
the Second Amendment right to bear firearms. That's in the Constitution."
OK, so here is a Vice Presidential candidate, the running-mate of the current
Vice President, stating unequivocally that the Constitution of the United
States of America guarantees citizens the right to keep and bear arms.
That being said, there should be no further
need for any discussion on whether or not the Second Amendment of
the Bill of Rights applies to individuals. At this point it should be a
done deal. Game over, we win.
Lieberman is making this statement as a declaration
of an Algore/Lieberman administration's position on the Second Amendment
and the individual right to keep and bear arms. There are, however, problems
with this position when one considers his statements a bit further.
Lieberman statement continues: "No hunter,
sportsperson or law-abiding citizen will lose any rights they have under
our proposals,"
This comment is somewhat puzzling considering
that under the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, hunters and sportspersons,
--whatever the hell a "sportsperson" is-- has no inherent right to hunt
game. Why do I say this? Because, before a hunter can legally take
a deer, elk, moose, bear, sheep, boar, duck, goose, pheasant, quail, or
whatever game animal one desires, the hunter must obtain a permit.
In general, a hunter cannot shoot any game without the requisite permit,
which limits the number of animals that can be taken. Further, a fee
is paid for said permit. Shooting game coupled with a failure
to obtain a hunting permit is called "poaching" which is illegal. A person
caught poaching is subject to stiff fines and incarceration.
Hunting is regulated by the government and
is not to be considered a right. To do so would be folly.
I say this is puzzling because by including
hunters in his statement Lieberman is attempting to set the stage for the
future. In this Lieberman future the Algore/Lieberman administration would
be in a better position to narrow the meaning of the Second Amendment.
By mistakenly considering hunting to be a
right the result could be complacency by hunters. Hunters need to be aware
that the Constitution guarantees them no rights to hunt. If such a time
comes that handguns, semi-auto loading rifles and shotguns are confiscated,
hunters would not and could not expect protection of the Constitution of
their rights to hunt. States could render their ability to hunt a moot
point by simply declining to offer a hunting license or permit. One must
remember that what the government giveth, the government taketh away. At
that point, there would be no reason for the government to refrain from
confiscating rifles and shotguns used for hunting. [See Britain.]
By this time we should
assume that you would no longer have an opportunity to take a deer or bear
with your 10", scoped Ruger Super Blackhawk.
So, we must not consider hunting to be a right
and that the issue we are faced with as regards the Second Amendment is
not hunting.
Next, what are sportspersons anyway?
Are sportspersons people who shoot clay pigeons
with shotguns? Or are sportspersons people who are involved with IDPA,
or IPSC competition? Are sportspersons Cowboy Action Shooters? Are sportspersons
U.S. Olympic shooters, who by the way received almost no media coverage
in Australia recently? I doubt that anyone involved in these types of shooting
sports would qualify as "sportspersons" under the Algore/Lieberman "proposals."
What would happen to your $3,500.00 Bianchi
Cup racegun under an Algore/Leiberman administration? What would happen
to your prized Pin Gun? Would silhouette shooting become illegal? (I recently
heard that one mid-west municipality made it illegal to shoot at silhouette
targets. The reported reason? Because they are black. Is that why I'm now
seeing BLUE silhouette targets?) Would we be reduced to paintball guns
and air guns as are the citizens of other countries? [There are many
areas in America where you cannot shoot at a human silhouette.]
Lieberman's statement is just too ambiguous
for comfort.
However, in light of Lieberman's comment why
should law-abiding gun owners, supporters of the 2nd Amendment,
supporters of one's right to protect self and family and home even have
to be concerned about losing their rights to keep and bear arms?
Let's look at Lieberman's congressional voting
record to determine if we could trust him or if we should be concerned
about his position on our 2nd Amendment rights.
06/28/1991 - Handgun Waiting Period - Amendment
- the Senator voted for a five-working day waiting period for handguns.
[Make a woman wait to get a gun to defend against a stalker that has
threatened her life? Vote Gore/Lieberman.]11/20/1993 - Brady Bill - Passage - The Senator
voted for the Brady Bill. [Backdoor registration? Joe likes it.]
11/19/1993 - Brady Bill - Waiting Period Sunset
- The Senator voted against the Brady Bill sunset;
11/17/1993 - Violent Crime Control and Law
Enforcement - The Senator voted to ban so-called "assault weapons". [See assault
weapons articles, and ask why Liberman would vote to take away militia
rifles from honest citizens.]
11/09/1993 - Kill Semiautomatic Assault Weapon
Ban - The Senator voted against killing the "assault weapon" ban. [Let the
militia have their rifles back? Heavens no!]
It should be noted that the Senator attempted
to exclude certain Colt firearms from the "assault weapon" ban --to no
avail-- because Colt is in the Senator's home state of Connecticut. While
I would love to have seen Colt's firearms excluded in such a ban there
is virtually no difference in Colt's AR-15 and Ruger's Mini-14 and other
semi-auto loading rifles except in appearance. This is especially true
when one considers that the cartridge used by both the Colt and the Ruger,
the .223, is considered by many to be an under-powered and ineffective
round.
Therefore, if an exclusion was appropriate
for Colt then why ban any semi-auto loading rifle? Simply to satisfy liberal's
need for feel good legislation. [And to disarm the militia.]
These so-called "assault weapons" were banned
because DiFi and others do not have the slightest understanding about firearms.
They banned rifles that they determined had
no legitimate sporting value. Apparently they have never even watched a
three-gun competition utilizing a handgun, shotgun and semi-auto rifle.
They banned these rifles because they obviously
don't know the difference between an M-16 and an AR-15. In other words,
they were banned because of their similarity in appearance.
They banned them because they are part of
the socialist ruling elite who knows better than we do what is good for
us and what is bad for us. We are as little children who need to be watched
over lest we harm others or ourselves.
They banned these rifles and magazines having
a capacity of more than 10 rounds, as another in a long line of incremental
steps to ban all privately owned firearms.
Senator
Lieberman's congressional record is one of staunch adherence to the
party line of liberal elitists who are determined to disarm us making us
all potential victims of violent crime.
But remember that Lieberman says that he and
Algore "respect the Second Amendment right to bear firearms. That's in
the Constitution." So let's exam the record of the man with whom Senator Lieberman
has allied himself: Algore, the Vice President in an administration
that has to date made it clear to one and all that the federal government
knows no bounds when it comes to creating millions of potential violent
crime victims.
According to the above cited news article
Algore supports licensing future handgun buyers and expanding background
checks. The article states:
"Earlier in the campaign, he would hold aloft
his proposal to require photo IDs for new handgun purchases, background
checks at gun shows, a ban on junk guns and an increase in the handgun
purchase age from 18 to 21. Now, he rarely spells out the restrictions
he favors, but emphatically says that nothing he has proposed would interfere
with the rights of hunters."
Once again I will remind you that hunters
have no constitutional rights to hunt.
Also we can't miss how he has seen the light,
as it were, that "gun-control" is a losing issue in this election and has
softened his public stance on gun-control. This is just another of his
infamous flip-flops.
Algore says that the Constitution is a "living,
breathing document." Well, it just ain't so. The Constitution is not living
or breathing. It wasn't designed to change with the times. What it says
is what it means. The Constitution and the Bill of Rights weren't meant
to be interpreted based on the ruling party's whim.
But, Algore would interpret the 2nd
Amendment to suit his political agenda. We all know what the Klinton/Algore
government prosecutors in the "Emerson" case said about an individual's
right to keep and bear arms. They contend that the 2nd Amendment
doesn't extend firearm ownership to the individual.
Without rehashing Algore's position on private
firearm ownership -- we all know what that position is, one of registration
and confiscation -- we know that these people have no respect for us or
for the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Algore and Lieberman and other
socialist, elitist liberals (DiFi, Boxer, Klinton, Schumer, et al) would
rather see us become victims of violent crime at the hands of criminals
who obviously have more rights under the law than we do.
Therefore, it is imperative that we tell all
the would-be gun-grabbers in this country that their time is up. All their
gun laws have done is to create a burden on law-abiding people. These laws
have done nothing of consequence (if anything) to stem the tide of violent
crime. It is time to tell the Sarah Brady's of the country "This far and
no farther."
I've said it before and I'll say it again,
Algore must be defeated November 7th.
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