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- Path: sparky!uunet!digex.com!dougnews
- From: dougnews@access.digex.com (Doug Humphrey)
- Newsgroups: dc.talk.guns
- Subject: Re: Gun control
- Date: 4 Jan 1993 04:02:07 GMT
- Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, MD USA
- Lines: 116
- Distribution: usa
- Message-ID: <1i8crvINN7du@mirror.digex.com>
- References: <1314@ottawa.opl.com.opl.com> <1i2fatINN3k0@mirror.digex.com> <1993Jan2.185928.20721@clsi.COM>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: access.digex.com
-
- In article <1993Jan2.185928.20721@clsi.COM> kevin@clsi.com writes:
- >
- >In article <1i2fatINN3k0@mirror.digex.com>, dougnews@access.digex.com (Doug Humphrey) writes:
- >>
- >> [Points 1-3 deleted]
- >>
- >> None of this is a good situation to be in, but frankly if you get to
- >> the point where the people are so pissed at the government that they
- >> are willing to risk death to get them out of power, the odds are good
- >> that the military, or more correctly the individuals in the military,
- >> are also of the same point of view.
- >>
- >
- >So, is your conclusion that civilians don't need guns to defend themselves
- >against the government ?
- >
- >Kev.
- >--
-
- No.
-
- The original post concerned military involvement making the private
- ownership of guns moot.
-
- In a situation where the government vs. the populace happens, the
- military can:
-
- 1) back the government - odds are good that they could suppress the
- entire country for a while, though it could be ugly in the long term.
-
- 2) back the people - the government is easier to overthrow than the
- people, since it is nicely centralized, and not tenacious.
-
- 3) Sit out the fight - the military may decide to confine to barracks
- and just sit it out. There is historical precedent (though not in the
- US). There is also the possibility that the military itself would be
- divided, and that due to it's own internal fights it would effectivly
- be sitting it out, at least until it got the problem resolved.
-
-
- In all cases, an armed populace is in a better place to 1) fight for
- its freedom and individual rights, and 2) negotiate its terms when
- the shooting is over. Even in the case of a military assisted win
- by the people, that will be an uncertain time (to say the least) and
- an armed populace will have more say than an unarmed.
-
- You can not deal with these issues in the context os January 1993, and
- all is peaceful and fine. You have to deal with these things in the
- context of some other time (February 1993?) when things suck so bad
- that people feel that they have to risk their lives to fight for their
- rights. If you can't put yourself into that perspective at least a bit,
- then you will really have difficulty making decision that will effect
- that type of situation.
-
- -------
- On another note, an observation about the balance of power in
- the domestic US. Comments are welcome.
-
- I just spent a lot of time pointing out that the actions
- of "the government" do not always cause or control the actions
- of "the military". This is an important concept, because if the
- military were a machine which automatically backed up what the
- civilian government did, no matter how horrible, then personal
- arms in the hands of the people would indeed seem pretty useless.
-
- If, however, you are in a country where the civilian authorities can
- only count on the civilian law enforcement establishment, then it is
- completely a different story. Personal arms, an armed populace, are
- a serious threat to civilian authority if the majority of the people
- decided to move in a single direction. That is just as it should be!
-
- As long as the government is doing basically the will of the people,
- plus or minus some percentage, then the only opposition that the
- civilian authorities will encounter will be sporadic, and they are
- set up to deal with that. They are NOT designed to force the populace
- to do things that it, in the majority, does not WANT to do. Again,
- this is as it should be. They are not there to force you and I to
- do things, they are there to enforce the rules that we together have
- agreed to abide by, and to take care of rare situations where someone
- decides that they want to disobey one of those laws.
-
- So, I think that this all makes the perfect case for the armed populace.
- IF the point of the country is that the PEOPLE are in ultimate control,
- then there must be the three things extant:
-
- 1) civilian authority that is strong enough to enfoce laws that the
- majority favor, but is not strong enough to force the populace to
- do something that the majority objects strongly to.
-
- 2) military authority that is able to step in and deal with serious
- threats, but which is independent in its thinking and control,
- and which is made up of the people, and not of a seperate "caste"
- of favored elites. Thus the military, through its people, is subject
- to the same conditions that the general populace is subject to.
-
- 3) civilian capability to make the threat of throwing out a government
- real. Remember, it need not be a sure thing; too many people these
- days are looking for the "sure thing". The threat must be real, so
- that someone elected to a powerful position realizes that they may
- be voted out, and if they disregard the vote, the populace will
- risk life and limb (theirs and his or hers!) to throw them out.
- As an exercise, imagine the Bush administration refusing to honor the
- vote, and announcing that it was suspending the electoral process, and
- staying in power.
-
- I hope that this has made my position much clearer.
- think that through a lack of clear explaining on my part someone
- had gotten the wrong idea.
-
- Doug
-
- --
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