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marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 12:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
Okay, sure. So you're saying we need to overthrow the Bush administration by force. Sign me up!


Yes, overthrow any tyrannical administration. It says it in the Declaration of Independence, it's not only ones right, but ones duty to take down an abusive government, & replace it w/ one that is in line w/ the law of the people. Or something to that effect.

gmku 07.16.2008 12:14 PM

Does that include the DMV?

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 12:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
Does that include the DMV?


You'd be surprised my friend, that's all I'll say about that.

gmku 07.16.2008 12:18 PM

Well, I'm not about to go in with guns blazing at the DMV. Or the White House! They may both piss me off but I'm no crazy postal gunslinger.

pbradley 07.16.2008 12:20 PM

I'm only pro-California succession. I could give a fuck about the White House.

Glice 07.16.2008 12:20 PM

The gun argument strikes me as ridiculous, and I don't understand why more people in America don't share gmku's moderate opinion on guns (that is, respect/ admiration/ necessity in context, but not for everyone).

gmku 07.16.2008 12:21 PM

Weed country! Hell, yeah.

gmku 07.16.2008 12:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Glice
The gun argument strikes me as ridiculous, and I don't understand why more people in America don't share gmku's moderate opinion on guns (that is, respect/ admiration/ necessity in context, but not for everyone).


Because most Americans have been brainwashed to fear everything and everybody. The gun argument is based on fear.

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
Because most Americans have been brainwashed to fear everything and everybody. Most Americans are dumb, short-sighted, and immoderate.


I would say, more closed minded.

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 12:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
Because most Americans have been brainwashed to fear everything and everybody. The gun argument is based on fear.


Well, when you have police kick in yr door & rob you, you might think differently. & this truly has happened to me. No joking here.

Toilet & Bowels 07.16.2008 12:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marleypumpkin
Well, when you have police kick in yr door & rob you, you might think differently. & this truly has happened to me. No joking here.


obviously, the answer to a bit of trouble with the police is to start a gun battle with them

gmku 07.16.2008 12:34 PM

I have a little DMV story. So I'm registering my new car this morning for plates etc. This involves going to one building in one part of town to pick up a bill for the property taxes on the car in one office of the building and then walking down a hallway to another office where I pay the bill. That's step one (or 1a and 1b).

After I pay this property tax bill, they give me a receipt to take to the DMV building across town. There I need to show reams of paperwork, of course, not only the receipt but the title, my proof of insurance, a bill of sale, and such. I also have to fill out a new form that copies all the information on these other forms.

Okay, I get this far, wait my turn in line, get to my window, and the clerk questions my bill of sale. She thinks it's a copy and she needs an original. I think, "Aw fuck," and say thank you and leave, and as I get to the car it hits me--no, this IS an original bill of sale, it just looks like a copy because it's all in black ink on a black xeroxed form, but we, the seller and I, filled everything out on the form in black ink. I remember this distinctly now, but I call the seller and confirm this, then walk back in.

I explain what happened to the greeter at the door, and she takes a verrryyy careful look at this piece of paper. "Well, it's really hard to tell," she says. "Could be a copy, or could be an original." I tell her it's an original, look at the ink in my signature, she gives me a new number that puts me at the head of the line.

I get a new clerk this time who doesn't even bat an eye at the bill of sale.

What the fuck.

Glice 07.16.2008 12:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toilet & Bowels
obviously, the answer to a bit of trouble with the police is to start a gun battle with them


There's a guy in work who's giving me a bit of gip. And a policeman stopped me recently to ask tell me I should wear a bike helmet the other day. I'm well gonna gat up their arses.

gmku 07.16.2008 12:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toilet & Bowels
obviously, the answer to a bit of trouble with the police is to start a gun battle with them


Ha ha. Yeah, that will get you real far. I'm sure everyone wins those.

pbradley 07.16.2008 12:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
I have a little DMV story. So I'm registering my new car this morning for plates etc. This involves going to one building in one part of town to pick up a bill for the property taxes on the car in one office of the building and then walking down a hallway to another office where I pay the bill. That's step one (or 1a and 1b).

After I pay this property tax bill, they give me a receipt to take to the DMV building across town. There I need to show reams of paperwork, of course, not only the receipt but the title, my proof of insurance, a bill of sale, and such. I also have to fill out a new form that copies all the information on these other forms.

Okay, I get this far, wait my turn in line, get to my window, and the clerk questions my bill of sale. She thinks it's a copy and she needs an original. I think, "Aw fuck," and say thank you and leave, and as I get to the car it hits me--no, this IS an original bill of sale, it just looks like a copy because it's all in black ink on a black xeroxed form, but we, the seller and I, filled everything out on the form in black ink. I remember this distinctly now, but I call the seller and confirm this, then walk back in.

I explain what happened to the greeter at the door, and she takes a verrryyy careful look at this piece of paper. "Well, it's really hard to tell," she says. "Could be a copy, or could be an original." I tell her it's an original, look at the ink in my signature, she gives me a new number that puts me at the head of the line.

I get a new clerk this time who doesn't even bat an eye at the bill of sale.

What the fuck.

The revolution will free us from bureaucracy!

sarramkrop 07.16.2008 12:39 PM

It's totally obvious that everyone in America feels like killing each other.

gmku 07.16.2008 12:40 PM

They have since the beginning. We're founded in violence.

It might help if we had a queen to give us moral purpose and direction like you guys got.

sarramkrop 07.16.2008 12:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
That's something to look forward to.


they're looking for you, gmku. They don't like you. You gotta go.

gmku 07.16.2008 12:42 PM

You misquoted me. I was responding to pbradley before you posted.

& drop the gmku digs, they're getting old.

sarramkrop 07.16.2008 12:43 PM

I don't care, you gotta go. Your time has come.

Toilet & Bowels 07.16.2008 12:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
They have since the beginning. We're founded in violence.


what countries aren't?

gmku 07.16.2008 12:44 PM

I don't know but I do know there is no country for old men.

gmku 07.16.2008 12:50 PM

I forgot a funny part about the DMV incident: So I go into the little office where I pay the receipt for property taxes, and there's this sign that says they don't take credit OR debit cards. I probably haven't written a real check in a year, but now I'm thinking I'll have to go home to get out my old check book. Yes, the woman says smiling, we take checks. But I get outside and think, hey, I'll just get cash. That's as good as money, right?

I go to an ATM, get the cash, go back to the office, and the woman smiles and says, "Welcome back!" She's nice, so I say "Hi--you do take cash right?"

She waits a beat, then: "Oh, no, sir. We only take cards here."

I'm like, what. "You take cards here. But I was just here and you said you don't take cards, so I went out and..."

And she cracks up. They was messing with me man! They got me good, too.

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 01:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toilet & Bowels
obviously, the answer to a bit of trouble with the police is to start a gun battle with them


These were corrupt cops in street close, so this has nothing to do w/ taking on a police force. It just an example of who are suppose to protect & serve us, w/ guns by the way, are using them in the exact opposite intent purpose. Hence, people should have the right to own guns. Look, my translation of the 2nd Amendment is this, you have the right to form a militia of individuals who choose to pick up arms & fight for a cause, so if the militia consists of American individuals, should they not have the right to individually own a firearm?

Glice 07.16.2008 01:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marleypumpkin
...should they not have the right to individually own a firearm?


This might be an over-simplification, but firearms are pretty dangerous, and aside from their use in sport (you'll note that it's fucking difficult to kill someone with the sort of 'knives' they use in fencing) they don't really serve much purpose other than to stick cunting great holes in things - those things potentially including the category 'people'. There's a strong case for the state needing them when the people, some people, 'overshoot' [ha] their mark [double ha] and step out of line. I think it's a pretty unstable democracy that feels the need to amend its constitution with the aim of potentially preparing its people for bloody revolutions.

pbradley 07.16.2008 01:29 PM

If you honestly think a militia of individuals with even the most powerful weapons on the legal market can stand a chance against the United States military industrial complex, you're a fucking idiot. But I know gun rights advocates don't honestly believe that. Just talk to appeal to libertarian notions in liberals' heads.

The only reasoning for gun ownership aside from hunting is circular. Buy guns to protect your self from people that buy guns to protect themselves from people that, etc.

sarramkrop 07.16.2008 01:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pbradley
If you honestly think a militia of individuals with even the most powerful weapons on the legal market can stand a chance against the United States military industrial complex, you're a fucking idiot


So how did the USA get to be a democracy, then? I suppose that instead of a 'militia of individuals' that rebelled against the order of things and consequently lead to the evolvement of a different way of organising society in a certain way, you simply had a handful of people going ''Yawn, i'm bored with this shit, let's change it to something else instead, shall we?''.

Also, a quick note just to remind you that the States are fastly becoming less and less the only country being able to throw their own weight around like it was possible to do before. Just so you know.

SuchFriendsAreDangerous 07.16.2008 01:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marleypumpkin
Hence the one we have in place today. Remember, Nazi's passed anti-gun laws to disarm the people, & we all know how that turned out.


yeah, we pardoned all of their high ranking officials and scientists as bribery to come work for america and build up our own authoritarian police state. thats why police dogs speak german!



 



 


Quote:

Originally Posted by gmku
Because most Americans have been brainwashed to fear everything and everybody. The gun argument is based on fear.


true:

"Why are you affraid, oh scant of faith?" Jesus Christ

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 01:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuchFriendsAreDangerous
yeah, we pardoned all of their high ranking officials and scientists as bribery to come work for america and build up our own authoritarian police state. thats why police dogs speak german!



 



 


Yes, & recruited their highest eugenicists. Which for those who don't know is the science of creating a so-called, "perfect race". Which means exterminating 80% of the current population.

SuchFriendsAreDangerous 07.16.2008 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marleypumpkin
Yes, & recruited their highest eugenicists. Which for those who don't know is the science of creating a so-called, "perfect race". Which means exterminating 80% of the current population.


yes, but my friend, you can not shoot yr way out of this one! these duppies are bigger then bullets,

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.."

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 02:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SuchFriendsAreDangerous
yes, but my friend, you can not shoot yr way out of this one! these duppies are bigger then bullets,

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.."


Yr wisdom does shine on this one SuchFriends. But, these duppies as you put it, will not sit at a table & speak to generally well meaning individuals who are simply asking for what was promised them.

I just feel each person has different circumstances in life that dictates different decisions in any aspect of life. So, when it comes down to it, whatever a person chooses should be his & his decision alone to make. You don't want a gun, that's A okay. If you do, you should be allowed.

pbradley 07.16.2008 02:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sarramkrop
So how did the USA get to be a democracy, then? I suppose that instead of a 'militia of individuals' that rebelled against the order of things and consequently lead to the evolvement of a different way of organising society in a certain way, you simply had a handful of people going ''Yawn, i'm bored with this shit, let's change it to something else instead, shall we?''.

The Constitution was written in a time with the nation was small enough and the weapons primitive enough that one man, with a gun, could do very little damage alone while a militia of the majority could overthrow a corrupt government.

And then a little thing called World War I came along with the machine gun. And then eventually the Cold War with the hyper development of the military.

All the second amendment provides now is a semi-reasonable excuse for the paranoid like marleypumpkin to shoot up his local post office with an assault rifle.

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 02:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pbradley
The Constitution was written in a time with the nation was small enough and the weapons primitive enough that one man, with a gun, could do very little damage alone while a militia of the majority could overthrow a corrupt government.

And then a little thing called World War I came along with the machine gun. And then eventually the Cold War with the hyper development of the military.

All the second amendment provides now is a semi-reasonable excuse your the paranoid like marleypumpkin to shoot up his local post office with an assault rifle.


I strongly believe in civil disobedience, I don't encourage shooting rampages. You'll see what my argument is being based around if you review what I am saying, I am basically defending a person's right to choose for themselves to own a gun or not. Forgot about guns for a moment, let's talk about medical marijuana. I feel it's the right of ANY individual who has a terminal illnesss to use ANY form of medicine that brings them relief. I simply am defending the choice of people, rather than policies set by higher ups for the rest of the majority.

!@#$%! 07.16.2008 02:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pbradley
The Constitution was written in a time with the nation was small enough and the weapons primitive enough that one man, with a gun, could do very little damage alone while a militia of the majority could overthrow a corrupt government.

And then a little thing called World War I came along with the machine gun. And then eventually the Cold War with the hyper development of the military.

All the second amendment provides now is a semi-reasonable excuse for the paranoid like marleypumpkin to shoot up his local post office with an assault rifle.


haaa haa haaaaaaaaaaaa haeeeeeeeeeeeee

oh this one is my favorite of the day.

--

the fucking reputation. is stuck. please consider it given.

racehorse 07.16.2008 02:39 PM

But if it is as MarleyPumpkins says that people have been brainwashed, how can you trust this brainwashed populace to dispose of that which is brainwashing them? It's illogical. Clearly, then, guns are not the answer here. What is the answer is more difficult. I mean, when was the last time that anybody used a gun for a worthy cause, or a constitutional cause? Citing the 2nd Amendment for this problem is pretty delusional, due to, as mentioned above, the progressions in industrial weaponry, the industrial revolution etc. It's clearly healthier to steer away from an out-dated ideology and take the pragmatic solution by looking at the people killed by guns on the streets of America everyday, and act based on that. Don't act on a logically flawed concept that the "brainwashed" masses will suddenly rise up against their brainwashers...

!@#$%! 07.16.2008 02:47 PM

the hutus and the tutsis used machetes to massacre each other.

power to the people.

well no, not really no, hm, but the mentality in a large part of the united states is that you don't expect the government to provide for your needs-- you provide for yourself.

this is something that europeans and people in large american cities have a hard time wrapping their brains around-- that a lot of the country still has the "pioneer mentality"-- people who want guns, large trucks, no taxes, cheap gasoline, and their own private suburban tract. of course this is all based on a number of convenient fictions, but that's how it goes.

pbradley 07.16.2008 03:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marleypumpkin
I strongly believe in civil disobedience, I don't encourage shooting rampages. You'll see what my argument is being based around if you review what I am saying, I am basically defending a person's right to choose for themselves to own a gun or not. Forgot about guns for a moment, let's talk about medical marijuana. I feel it's the right of ANY individual who has a terminal illnesss to use ANY form of medicine that brings them relief. I simply am defending the choice of people, rather than policies set by higher ups for the rest of the majority.

Your relation to the choice of carrying a firearm to the choice of using marijuana is completely misguided. The choice of buying a gun is both caused by and continues a culture of fear. An armed populace is more comparable to Cold War politics than it is to a Deadhead concert. No, I don't believe the anyone has the right to choose to inspire fear in others in exchange for personal peace of mind.

acousticrock87 07.16.2008 03:40 PM

There are things people can't have the right to choose, and there are things people must have the right to choose whether it's legal or not. People must not have the right to murder, and people must have a right to speak freely. (Not all governments allow free speech, but I still think it's a pretty widely accepted "must".)

But you can't base legalization on the idea that people must be able to choose everything. There are fucked up, ignorant, and careless people out there that need to stay in check (i.e. criminals, for one). Choice has to be monitered to some extent so that everyone's more important freedoms are protected from the people who can't handle it properly.

The problem is in where the line is drawn. Guns are a tough area, because there are strong negatives to legalization and criminalization. I think they should be legal, but I can't base it on "choice".

marleypumpkin 07.16.2008 03:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acousticrock87
There are things people can't have the right to choose, and there are things people must have the right to choose whether it's legal or not. People must not have the right to murder, and people must have a right to speak freely. (Not all governments allow free speech, but I still think it's a pretty widely accepted "must".)

But you can't base legalization on the idea that people must be able to choose everything. There are fucked up, ignorant, and careless people out there that need to stay in check (i.e. criminals, for one). Choice has to be monitered to some extent so that everyone's more important fredoms are protected from the people who can't handle it properly.

The problem is in where the line is drawn. Guns are a tough area, because there are strong negatives to legalization and criminalization. I think they should be legal, but I can't base it on "choice".


I do agree that regulation & control is a much better choice than prohibition. If that's of any worth.

pbradley 07.16.2008 04:23 PM

Regulation and control can only give guns to people that can potentially become criminals. Owning a gun can only increase the chance of crime or accidental crime. There aren't two human species; Homo Criminalus and Homo Lawfules.


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