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A Second Amendment hero
Christopher Dorner was clearly a firm believer in the Second Amendment. Meeting what he regarded as intolerable wrong in the state sector, he got out his gun and started shooting. If this is not what
johncwright means when he says that an armed citizenship is a bulwark of freedom, I would like him to explain, because I see no other scenario.
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Funnily enough, my father - a policeman - was once sent over to Eastern Europe - I think it was Bulgaria - to help train up the local police force; and there he found that weapons were so widespread after the fall of Communism that there were some areas the police didn't even attempt to enter - shiftless youths with AK-47's hated the police and occasionally fired on them. Which has made me skeptical that widespread weaponry necessarily encourages law and stability - but perhaps it might work in a country with a more unified populace. Who can say?
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Well, if they obeyed the law, that is. Which of course they don't, or they wouldn't be the Mafia.
Which is what you don't get: criminals will always be armed. Gun control only disarms honest citizens, rendering them more vulnerable to criminal gangs.
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This to say that the whole business of organized crime is slightly more complex than the ignorant demagogues of the NRA make it sound.
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Of course, Derman obviously thought that he was fighting tyranny. If he was right, his behavior might have been rational and even moral -- if he hadn't deliberately killed two innocents, that is, as I stated before. And I don't think he was right.
Do you have a problem with the partisan execution of Mussolini during the war? That partisan band after all was not empowered by either Italian regime of the day -- they took the law into their own hands, and acted as "judge, jury and executioner."
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And you still seem to think that an individual has the right to set himself up as judge, jury and executioner. I'm afraid that is wrong in terms of ius gentium. Among the principles of war acknowledged by all law codes (including Sharia) there is the requirement that war can only be declared by a legitimate authority. The man who declares war on any group in his own name is a bandit, or, in beautiful and expressive Latin, a hostis humani generis.
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