Maximus wrote:Some key things the anti's need to look up - what the term "assault rifle" means (select fire or burst!). The difference between semi-automatic and automatic. The semi is not put there just for show. Finally guns that LOOK like guns made for the military are NOT the same thing. A Ferrari with a golf cart motor is under no circumstances a Ferrari.
US Supreme Court, DC v Heller wrote:Before addressing the verbs “keep” and “bear,” we interpret their object: “Arms.” The 18th-century meaning is no different from the meaning today. The 1773 edition of Samuel Johnson’s dictionary defined “arms” as “weapons of offence, or armour of defence.”... Timothy Cunningham’s important 1771 legal dictionary defined “arms” as “any thing that a man wears for his defence, or takes into his hands, or useth in wrath to cast at or strike another.”...Although one founding-era thesaurus limited “arms” (as opposed to “weapons”) to “instruments of offence generally made use of in war,” even that source stated that all firearms constituted “arms.”
texasprowler wrote:Machine guns used to be legal, UNTIL the Heller case. Scalia's opinion appears to set precedent when he specifically excludes machine guns and short barrelled shotguns as being not in common use.
We therefore read Miller to say only that the Second Amendment does not protect those weapons not typically possessed by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes
It is particularly wrongheaded to read Miller for more than what it said, because the case did not even purport to be a thorough examination of the Second Amendment. JUSTICE STEVENS claims, post, at 42, that the opinion reached its conclusion “[a]fter reviewing many of the same sources that are discussed at greater length by the Court today.” Not many, which was not entirely the Court’s fault. The respondent made no appearance in the case, neither filing a brief nor appearing at oral argument; the Court heard from no one but the Government (reason enough, one would think, not to make that case the beginning and the end of this Court’s consideration of the Second Amendment). See Frye, The Peculiar Story of United States v. Miller
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The final section of the brief recognized that “some courts have said that the right to bear arms includes the right of the individual to have them for the protection of his person and property,” and launched an alternative argument that “weapons which are commonly used by criminals,” such as sawed-off shotguns, are not protected.
TommyMN wrote:Wait, there's people that think Romney actually cares about guns or gun ownership in a positive way?
Heffay wrote:TommyMN wrote:Wait, there's people that think Romney actually cares about guns or gun ownership in a positive way?
He's for whatever the polls say he's for.
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