13583788:MALEPRIVILEGE said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			Comparing the freeing of slaves to banning guns is quite a stretch my friend. One grants freedom the other infringes on it. Not a good example.
		
		
	 
I was not actually comparing the freeing of slaves to banning guns.  My argument was to show that the Constitution is not infallible and this is due to its obvious inclusion of slavery and creating a lesser status of human being.  It is not our ultimate moral compass and it has been very wrong in the past.  The Constitution should be a reflection of sane policy in every present generation.  And to do that, we need to be able to call into question 200 year old laws pertaining to muskets and militias.
	
		
			
				13583795:Wis_Skier_23 said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			The second amendment is absolutely as vital today as it was 200 years ago.  I can guarantee you the Jews in Nazi Germany would have wished they could have owned weapons.  If Jews had legal access to firearms they wouldn't have been rounded up and slaughtered.
I can't for the life of me understand why people are so hung up over guns.  If YOU dont want to own a gun then don't but don't remove MY freedom to own a firearm.  I am a firm believer in more freedom not less, any infringement upon my right to own semiautomatic firearms is a joke.  My guns must be the laziest guns in the world as they've never gotten up on their own and killed anyone.  Until they do its society you should focus on.
		
		
	 
If you honestly think that if the Jews in Nazi Germany were all armed then they would have prevented the Holocaust then you completely mistaken and have been drinking the NRA cool-aid for far too long.  Even if all able bodied men, women, and children had assault rifles, a light resistance is all that would result.  A resistance that would have ultimately been defeated by the better trained and far better equipped Nazi army.  Seriously, if the SS knew that a bunch of gun-wielding Jews were holed up in a building, they would just blow up the building or roll tanks in or use some other vastly more powerful weapon that they had access to.  Jews with small arms would not have prevented the Holocaust.
Now where I will agree with you both is in our personal right to self-defense.  I call attention to the applicability of the 2nd amendment because it is hopelessly outdated and does not reflect the modern world we live in.  What the 2nd amendment should reflect is our right to personal self-defense and as a result of this truly human right is the ability to own a gun.  I am not and never have been a proponent of banning all guns.  In a violent world, we need to be able to protect ourselves, our loved ones, and our property from bad people and as of this moment that means being able to own a gun.  On this point I agree with both of you.
In so far as we have a personal right to self-defense, we should be able to own weapons that reflect this right and need.  Right now this means being able to own certain guns, but if we were to invent a phaser-like weapon that fully incapacitated an attacker without killing him then the argument for owning a gun fully disappears.  But, obviously, we are not there yet.  Guns are still the best solution we have for personal self-defense.
I also fully agree with you that guns are completely harmless pieces of metal that will cause no wrong on their own.  They all require the will of a human being in order to be tools for good or tools for bad.  But given the destruction that guns are capable of producing, there ought to be more training, background checks, mental health exams (pre and post sale), gun registration, and safety classes that all gun owners should be made to attend.  This should be akin to something like a pilot's license, because after all it is a very serious piece of weaponry that requires a certain knowledge and training in order to effectively and safely use.  When untrained and unable citizens are free to own destructive weapons, it will be like the wild west- a society that modern people will not want to live in.  However, when trained and able citizens own destructive weapons, then that is much more acceptable and encouraged for (hopefully) obvious reasons.
I am all for owning a gun, but with obvious and rational restrictions.  In this day and age, I do see them as a viable way to defend one's self.  As such, they should not all be made illegal.  But to think that the 2nd amendment (in its current form) is applicable today as it was in 1776 is misguided.  What we need is to keep our personal right to self-defense and right now this means being allowed to own a gun.  When a better/safer weapon emerges that can stop an attacker without killing them comes into existence, then the need to own a gun ceases to exist.