[TheForge] Criminal Background Check: way OT
Schade
schade at acegroup.cc
Mon Feb 2 08:59:14 EST 2009
I know I know I can use my delete key and I am but I am getting
seriously tired of all this bullshit.
Go away please.
Bob
____
On Feb 1, 2009, at 9:57 PM, Wesley Marquart wrote:
> Good evening Peter,
>
> Something we need to address here...
>
> Andrew is Militia, I am Militia and YOU are Militia as well...
>
> That is assuming that you are a loyal citizen of the USA. But then
> again,
> you may not be a citizen of the USA or you might even be a
> [democrat]...
>
> If you are a citizen have you been performing your duty? According
> to the
> USC (United States Code) TITLE 10>Subtitle A>Part 1.Chapter 13 all
> of us are
> the Militia.
>
> § 311. Militia: composition and classes
> (a) The militia of the United States consists of all able-bodied
> males at
> least 17 years of age and, except as provided in section 313
> of title
>
> 32, under 45 years of age who are, or who have made a
> declaration of
> intention to become, citizens of the United States and of female
> citizens of the United States who are members of the National
> Guard.
>
> (b) The classes of the militia are—
> (1) the organized militia, which consists of the National
> Guard and
> the Naval Militia; and
> (2) the unorganized militia, which consists of the members of
> the
> militia who are not members of the National Guard or the
> Naval
> Militia.
>
> If you have not been taking this part of your citizenship seriously
> you have
> been shirking your duty. Either that, or drinking the latest (Obama)
> flavored cool-aide the democrats have been dishing out for years.
> If we
> don't defend our country and prepare for the worst (while hoping for
> the
> best) the slide into Socialism will be rapid.
>
> Me, I've been part the second class of the Militia (the unorganized
> militia)
> ever since I finished off my IRR (individual Ready Reserve)
> component of my
> two separate enlistments with the US Army.
>
> Yes, I am a proud American and I hate to see the soft heads out there
> degrading this nation every day.
>
> Either you are a Proud American ready to defend our constitution or
> you are
> a candy-a***d civilian.
>
> 'nuff said.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net
> [mailto:theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Peter Hirst
> Sent: Sunday, February 01, 2009 10:32 AM
> To: Blacksmithing List Sponsored by ABANA
> Subject: Re: [TheForge] Criminal Background Check: way OT
>
> ANdrew:
>
> You are militia? Well regulated? Really? What unit? How often
> does your
> unit train? What is its commission? Who is your CO? Who is your
> CinC?
> How often do you muster and drill? Where is your amory? What armor
> and
> artillery do you keep? When were you last called out? Where can I
> read these
>
> regulations? What arms do you keep and bear?
>
> No, sorry, nice try, but you are NOT part of a well regulated
> Militia. You
>
> may be Militia in the ancient, organic sense, but you are not
> regulated *as*
>
> a militia. You are regulated to death, perhaps, but *not* as a
> militia.
> There is not one organized militia in this country today. Scalia's
> recognition of the militia clause goes no further thsaying that it
> was ONE
> reason the right was recognized in 1789. That absolutley does *not*
> mean
> that the court has to recognize that the same reason would apply
> today.
>
> And are correct that the court did not rule that the clause would
> not serve
> today, because it was not necessary to the decision of this case.
> What I am
>
> saying is that Heller sets up that ruling to be decided in a future
> case
> when it is at issue: when some poor shlub brandishes his M-16
> because he
> thinks he is protected by the Militia rationale.
>
> BTW your observation that the modern validity of the Militia clause
> ws not
> decided in Heller is *exactly* what I am saying about the Militia
> weapon
> issue in Miller. It was not decided there that ANY militiaweapon is
> OK
> because it was not necessary to decide the case. But you are saying
> it was
> implicit in the case. If the guyhad been carrying Thompson, say or
> a BAR,
> then the court would have had to decide whether the US could ban or
> regulate
>
> civilian possession of a military weapon in the face of the militia
> clause..
>
> But it only the clearer cae of a clearly prohibited weapon before
> it, so it
> didn't have deal with that. But it did set up the argument you
> suggest.
> But it did not reach the balancing test that woulso have been raised
> testing
>
> just how far the Militia clause protects what kind of weapons, and
> what kind
>
> of reasonable restriction the feds could put on weapons not
> actually used
> by an organized militia..
>
> WHich is also a question Heller leaves open. All I am am saying here
> is that
>
> since the Militia clause now does not either limit or expand the
> meaning of
>
> the operative clause, it will not in the next case protect the
> poor schlub
>
> who claims a right to a weapon that the feds want to ban. ANd that
> will not
>
> be the disingenuous case: it will rely directly on the language you
> have
> cited making the operative clause independent of the precatory
> clause: it
> will reduce the Militia clause to its modern meaning, which will
> turn out to
>
> be zilch. If there is any disingenuity here -- and oh yes I agree
> there is
> plenty -- it is in Heller: the complete severing of the operative
> clause
> from the militia clause. You will be free to defend yourself in
> your home
> from a burglar, a case which will probably never arise, and you will
> be
> powerless to defend yourself from the tyranny of the state and federal
> government, a case which arises every minute of every day of your
> life.
>
> You think I'm wrong? Fine, go get yourself a mark-19, a couple
> pounds of
> c-4 and a SAM-7. You think those four so-called conservatives are
> going to
> accept your argument that you are Militia protected by the second
> amendment?
>
> Just where they will draw the line is anybody's guess. Mine is that
> the
> issue will focus on something closer to an M-16 than a Mark, and
> that the
> line will be drawn somehwere south of full-auto, just like it is now.
>
> Anybody want to be the test case?
>
> Anybody?
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Andrew Vida" <osan at netlabs.net>
> To: "Blacksmithing List Sponsored by ABANA" <theforge at mailman.qth.net>
> Sent: Sunday, February 01, 2009 8:42 AM
> Subject: Re: [TheForge] Criminal Background Check: way OT
>
>
>>
>>
>> Peter Hirst wrote:
>>> ANdrew:
>>>
>>> First, I meant Heller,blow not Miller
>>>
>>> You quoted the cite yourself. the key words are
>>>
>>> "1. The Second Amendment protects an *individual* right to possess a
>>> firearm *unconnected with service in a militia*, and to use that
>>> arm for
>>> traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense within the home
>>>
>>>
>>> "UNCONNECTED WITH ANY SERVICE IN THE MILITIA"
>>
>> Yes, and it is clear by the language of the ruling that the right
>> applies to BOTH. An *individual* right SUBSUMES the collective
>> right.
>> That is, if I hold a right as an individual, that right still holds
>> as
>> part of a group such as a shooting club, a coffee clatch, a
>> business, a
>> MILITIA.
>>>
>>> Sure they cited the organic definition of Militia, but they did
>>> NOT rely
>>> on
>>> it as support for the individual right.
>>
>> That is because the first clause fails to limit or expand the
>> meaning
>> of the second. They are not making things up - they are making them
>> clear.
>>
>>> Scalia specifically and
>>> emphatically disconnected it from the Militia clause. If you read
>>> your
>>> quotes carefully, you will find that Scalia uses the Militia clause,
>>> which
>>> he calles "prefatory" only to establish the historical context,
>>
>> Context? No.
>>
>>> or
>>> rationale for the decision to protect a purely individual right.
>>
>> Closer - depending on how takes "rationale". It is A purpose.
>> One of
>> potentially several legitimate reasons to protect the innate
>> right. It
>> is SUFFICIENT reason *alone* to protect it. If there were no other
>> legitimate reasons in existence, this single one would be enough to
>> recognize, protect, and guarantee the right against government
>> infringement.
>>
>>> He has to
>>> do this because the premise of that clause no longer exists.
>>
>> Eh? Your comment makes no sense at all. The ruling is clear as
>> distilled water that the militia clause is valid.
>>
>>> He is
>>> acknowledging, if not ruling, that a well regulated militia is no
>>> longer
>>> necessary to the security of a free state.
>>
>> Nowhere is this asserted or even implied. To the contrary, the
>> ruling
>> states rather emphatically that the militia retains its validity in
>> full
>> force.
>>
>>> The Militia may exist as a
>>> theoretical entity, but the clause refers to a "Well regulated
>>> Militia,"
>>> something that no longer exists and is is no longer a support
>>> for the
>>> operative clause.
>>
>> I am the militia. I am well regulated. QED.
>>>
>>> I never said Heller says the SA doesn't guarantee the right to
>>> throw off
>>> tyranny. It says that the RKBA is independent of that right.
>>
>> Then you are saying two contradictory things... or are not being
>> clear.
>> I agree with your last sentence, above. RKBA is independent of the
>> militia clause. So what? Independence does not invalidate the first
>> clause. It only renders moot the arguments of groups such as HCI/VPC
>> who assert that it is ONLY a collective right (and there are no such
>> things as collective rights, but that is for another day).
>>
>>> That is waht
>>> sets up the argument that was not at issue in Heller: do we have
>>> the
>>> right
>>> to keep and bear arms sufficent to defend against tyranny. Heller
>>> is
>>> silent
>>> on that issue, but I am telling you that the first poor sumbitch
>>> that
>>> marches down mainstreet with a LAWS rocket -- or any other weapon
>>> the
>>> feds
>>> don't want you and me to have -- claiming that he has a right to it
>>> because
>>> of the Militia clause is not going to win.
>>
>> There is no way to tell from Heller what will happen in such a
>> case.
>> The Heller ruling was completely unexpected by me. I was surprised
>> that
>> they even agreed to hear the case - that they rendered a correct
>> decision, however narrowly, threw me - but I am happy with it.
>>>
>>> OK one more time on Miller. It most certainly does *not*
>>> establish the
>>> right to any weapon "useful to militia purposes", because no such
>>> weapon
>>> was
>>> at issue there and a court's ruling can only apply to what is at
>>> issue.
>>
>> I'd have to go back and reread Miller, but at the very least the
>> strong
>> implication was there. Is a sawed off shotgun a useful militia
>> weapon?
>> They said no, but had the militia question been invalid or otherwise
>> moot, they would have almost certainly said something like "because
>> the
>> right to form a well regulated militia does not rest with individuals
>> but with government only, the question at hand is irrelevant." And
>> the
>> case would have been tossed on its ear.
>>
>>> There you had a weapon that the court ruled was not useful for
>>> milita or
>>> any
>>> other lawful purpose and therefore could be banned. As a matter
>>> of law,
>>> that does not mean mean that the contrapositive is true, that any
>>> weapon
>>> useful to the militia may be kept. it may be ytought to grasp that
>>> distinction, but I assure you that's how a court ruling works.
>>
>> Heller cites the history of the Second's wording and acknowledges
>> the
>> first clause as being there due to legitimate fear of the rise of a
>> tyrannical government - sorta like what we have these days. :)
>> Sure, in
>> a future ruling they can say anything they want. They could decide
>> all
>> black people can be denied their rights and shipped off to Africa.
>> There is NOTHING in principle from stopping them. What does bound
>> them
>> is precedent and reason. As long as the court is concerned with
>> their
>> credibility above concerns of power politics, they are constrained
>> not
>> to too far, lest they incite the militia. :)
>>>
>>> The ruling that the prefatory clause does not limit or expand the
>>> interpretation of the operative clause does *not* support your
>>> argument.
>>> All of these quotes, from that to the end of your piece, establish
>>> exactly
>>> what I am saying: that the Court has established a pure individual
>>> right
>>> which is in no way dependent on the Militia clause.
>>
>> Such an interpretation in the future by a court would be
>> disingenuous
>> at best.
>>
>>> that was abso;ute;ly
>>> necessary to its ruling, because even Scalia would not argue that
>>> a well
>>> regulated militia is still necessary to the security of a free
>>> state.
>>
>> I think you are reaching here. Establishing the relevance of a
>> contemporary militia is not necessary or relevant to the case at
>> hand.
>> Why would they address it? The court is, in fact, careful not to
>> expand
>> rulings beyond the relevancies of the cases at hand. What had to be
>> established, and it was, is that the right is individual. To believe
>> that this right disappears once two or more people come together to
>> train in the use of arms is absurd on its face. There are rulings
>> that
>> have clearly stated that rights do not alter or diminish with
>> circumstance for free men.
>>
>>> that
>>> Clause only serves to interpret what the framers did in 1789. it
>>> clearly
>>> does not apply today because not one state has any such militia.
>>
>> Wrong. We are all the militia, BY DEFINITION. Every state has a
>> militia, and some of that is pretty damned well regulated.
>>
>>> So we are
>>> left with a pure individual right, comp[letely stripped of either
>>> limitation
>>> by *or the support of * the Militia clause.
>>
>> I think your reasoning is fatally flawed - you would have to do a
>> far
>> better dance than this to convince me. I AGREE that a court could
>> devolve into such invalid sophistry and shenanigans, but their
>> credibility would be pressed past the breaking point for anyone
>> with any
>> brains. That doesn't render us safe from such a case, I agree -
>> but let
>> us not for a moment suggest that any such position could be
>> defensible
>> by anything other than fallacious reasoning and the acceptance of
>> absurd
>> premises.
>>
>>> this is all that I am saying:
>>> that the next time some weapon owner tries to justify keeping or
>>> bearing
>>> a
>>> weapon that the state or feds don't want him to have -- even if it
>>> is
>>> common
>>> in the infantry -- he we lose and lose badly if his argument is
>>> based on
>>> the
>>> Militia clause, i.e. if his only proposed "lawful activity' is to
>>> defend
>>> against the tyranny of the federal government.
>>
>> I agree he will lose, at least up front. As to appeals... that
>> is a
>> crap shoot in any event. But the Heller ruling does not leave that
>> door
>> wide open as you suggest. It leaves it ajar perhaps 0.00001" such
>> that
>> anyone attempting to go through it would have to expose themselves as
>> frauds in a most obvious and egregious fashion. Given what is at
>> stake,
>> it may not make a difference to them. The only way we will know is
>> to
>> find out one day. In the meanwhile, keep your powder dry.
>>>
>>> None of this is refuted by your quotes.
>>
>> Actually it is, but it is clear you and I see these things
>> differently.
>> I see no open door, but a capillary.
>>
>>> The Militia ratioanle
>>> existed then, but it doesn't exist now.
>>
>> Says who? Not the court.
>>
>> Only the right exists, and the
>>> right is limited to what is seen today as a lawful purpose, and
>>> sorry,
>>> but
>>> protection against the feds or even the cops is not one of your
>>> lawful
>>> purposes.
>>
>> Once again, says who?
>>
>>> If your state actually had a well-regulated militia maybe you
>>> could keep a full auto m-16 without a federal permit. But it
>>> doesn't,
>>> and
>>> you can't.
>>
>> I don't need a permit. I need a TAX STAMP. These are NOT the
>> same -
>> they are not even close. The end result is similar, but the courts
>> would blow the legislative and execs out of the water, were they to
>> try
>> to limit those weapons on a rights basis. They tried and failed.
>> THAT
>> is why NFA34 reads as it does - it perverts the commerce and taxation
>> clauses of the Constitution as an end-run on the 2nd.
>>>
>>> This can only play out in a case that raises it. Here's how to
>>> test it.
>>> USMC recon humvees in Iraq carry a few pounds of c4, typically,
>>> as well
>>> as
>>> a shoulder fired SAM. Someone pick up a couple of pounds under
>>> one arm
>>> and
>>> a LAWS rocket under the other and keeps it in the car, just in
>>> case the
>>> FBI
>>> invades and tries to take over the local government. Could happen.
>>> Perfectly lawful and plausible in 1789, with some tech advancements.
>>> Then,
>>> when BATF picks him up, he argues that under Heller, he is keeping
>>> this
>>> stuff for the lawful purpose of protecting against federal tyranny.
>>> Perfectly legit under the Militia clause, right. Want to bet on the
>>> outcome
>>> of that case under this Court? That's all I'm saying.
>>
>> This is far more clear than what you stated above. We have already
>> agreed on this, so there is no more discussion required on this
>> point.
>> I will say, however, that nobody knows what the court would rule - we
>> don't know that a defense lawyer would argue based on Heller,
>> except to
>> use it as supporting case law. Methinks there are probably other
>> rulings that would better serve a defendant in such a case.
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