Long rant. Beware of eyestrain.
First, Simon: Your duplicity astonishes me and should be obvious to you. You insist that America's affinity for guns is a sign of barbarism but at the same time think it's just great that Crete and Switzerland are full of them.
No worries Mr Tweedy, but please... Since I think my argument continues to hold water, and my view of armed-barbarism still stands, I'll just argue you point by point rather than try to defend myself from accusations of "duplicity"... And I'll get back to the topic of Switzerland later in this post.
Do you not take into account the significance of guns in our culture? Our heritage is being a rebel colony. Our heritage is being pioneers. Our heritage is sending soldiers around the world to defend liberty many times in the last century.
...
Need I remind you that the only reason the United States exists is because an armed populace offered organized resistance to an oppressive government?
Pull the other one, it's got bells on.Every country is allowed to have its national-founding myth, however preposterous they may sounds to those not indoctrinated in it. French schools are allowed to teach a history of the first modern European constitutional republic (actually it was
Poland), Greece's education is allowed to dwell heavily on the ancient civilisation that existed roughly where their country is, while avoiding all mention of
The Turks, British monarchists are permitted to discuss at length 1066 as if the founding of the royal bloodline were the starting point for the habitation of these islands (it's always baffled me that Magna Carta plays a bigger role in the American national narrative than it does in the British). These national narratives are convenient shorthand for teaching children your cultural values, and they make very good movies... But they are national founding myths. And the older and more inflexible they are, the staler they become.
Almost every country in the world has, at some point or another, had a large scale revolution/major exchange of power (I'm rather fond of Britain's Glorious Revolution of 1688, and the radicals of the English Civil War were a pretty impressive bunch too). I think it's fair to say that the Eastern Europeans who overthrew communism, the Africans who overthrew colonialism and the Indians who kicked out the British have every bit as much right to claim a
rebel heritage (did I mention we kicked out The Romans? No, because it isn't relevant.). I don't want to get into an argument that smells of Anti-Americanism, so lets stop this one here... Suffice to say that I regard the
pioneer people/broke the nefarious British 200+ years ago argument as intellectually bankrupt.
Guns are a part of our culture just as much–I would expect more–than Crete or Switzerland
Switzerland is unique (although it is becoming less so, and more like the legendarily work-shy German army)... Up until 2003 it had a full-blown citizens militia but this was deemed expensive and inefficient. Now they have conscription for all men for an initial training period of 150 days followed by 1/3rd of the male population of becoming reservists for the next 15 years, with a small professional army of officers... Reservists have to do 10 15-day repeater courses after this to remain reservists, and reservists are loaned a semi-automatic gun by the local arsenal, invading Switzerland is done at your own risk. The main social benefit is keep Switzerland mixing (the Swiss cantons are very separate entities with different cultures, languages and mountains isolating different communities), and conscription forces them to get along (this section was written under advisement from a Swiss friend).
Thus I don't think there is any comparison with treating guns as a consumer product for the purpose of
protection.
Rifle ownership is common in many, many countries. Hunting, target shooting, etc... I'm not sure this is sensible either, but I think it's fair to make a distinction between rifle ownership and treating handguns as a consumer good, as you did here:
As for why America is the biggest market for guns: America is the world's biggest market for almost everything. Do you take that into consideration? How does our disproportionate purchasing of guns measure up against our disproportionate purchasing of cars of computers or microwave ovens? We like to buy stuff. I know several people who own dozens of guns just for the sake of having a collection. That makes them barbarians?
Ahem.Second, Czhorat: Chodon and I are only to happy to agree to disagree, but you are not. You are the one who wants to make it so we can't buy guns. You want to control us. We, on the other hand, support your right to do whatever you think best.
This attitude to guns is having a distinct, definite, negative effect on the lives of people who also live in your society... The patient has cancer doctor, what is the best way to deliver a cure?
Sunset Clauses?
Fourth: This idea that you have to control the capital is ridiculous. I live 1000 miles from Washington DC. If a tyrant came to power in Washington, we in Illinois could resist and hold our own quite well, if we were armed and organized, that is. Illinois could be entirely self-sufficient, if it came down to it, as could a hundred other regions of America. The idea that I have to bow to whoever rules in Washington is just more of that acquiescent helplessness I was talking about earlier. If the people have power, then they have the option to give their capital the finger if they choose. That's the whole point!!
Your comparing the United States the Soviet Bloc in 1989 is absurd. Fact is, a situation like that in the modern United States is unprecedented and no historical example exists to illustrate how things might turn out if we had a revolution here. The logistics are unique.
Fifth: The talk of "peaceful revolutions" is foolish. Peaceful revolution works under two circumstances: 1.) When the state is about to die anyway (collapse of the Soviet Union) or 2.) when the state is good and decent enough to refrain from mass murder (peaceful resistance to the British in India).
This argument is, to be frank, preposterous. A Swiss-style citizen's militia may, just, act as a form of check and balance on the government. A Turkish-style interventionist military may act as a similar check and balance on the government (and does, although the EU fiercely disapproves). Randomly owned guns with no formal national training and the majority of the guns held in the hand of the most paranoid individuals does not, in any way, constitute a check and balance on the government, and I'd like to see a single occasion where it has acted as one. So, let's first remove any suggestion that the presence of guns, at the moment, is in any way playing a role in restraining the decisions of government.
Next, some
hypothetical tyranny... In discussing the idea of
responding to tyranny with some people on this board, I've tried to use genuine examples of tyrannical regimes and how they've been overthrown to illustrate that it is far, far more complicated than "The Russians have taken over Washington, lets form a team called the Wolverines and take over the backwoods of Colorado" (I love that movie, very, very, much). There are countless, countless factors in each and every tyranny. Under Milosevic a large proportion of the Serb population supported the government's actions, but it was still a tyranny. I have personally stood by as the government and the armed forces came down and crushed the uprising in Andijann, The Uzbek government had the upper hand, and no amount of passion, armed resistance or revolutionary fervour could stop the army (which keeps a standing military checkpoint at the entrance and exit to every town and hamlet) crushing them.Tyranny is a graded progress, that usually starts far more subtly than it becomes... Your hypothetical Illinois Revolution would only occur is the people of Illinois were in agreement (I suspect they would be divided), they acted in an organised fashion, and they were able to hold off the might of the rest of the country... That's a hell of a lot of ifs, and that's without even mentioning the flavour of the
hypothetical regime. In Britain we have extremely heavy gun control laws, and our police are gun-less, I think we'd be on a pretty level pegging with Americans if it came to taking Downing Street. The guns are an irrelevance, a fantastical device that has been added to the national myth of self-sufficiency... A hangover from a pioneer mentality that no longer bears any relation to reality.
It's not a check and balance, and your dealing in fantasies with your
hypothetical tyranny...
Now that's finished, let's move onto the things I agree with you about:
Harry Turtledove wrote an excellent story called "The Last Article" that addresses that topic. In a hypothetical history, the Nazis win WWII and move in to take over the British colony of India, where they clash with Mohandas Gandhi. The non-violent resistance that was so effective against the British is a distrous failure against the Third Reich because the Nazis have no decency. Whereas the morality of the British compelled them to tolerate non-violent resistance, the Nazis simply mow the protesters down with machine guns and execute Gandhi is a back alley.
Adolf Hitler: "The one means that wins the easiest victory over reason: terror and force." Non-violence does not work if the oppressor is both strong and ruthless. This should be blindingly obvious. To cherry-pick historical examples of times when tyrannies that were weak or soft-hearted were peacefully defeated only proves my point. Find me an example of a time when a real iron-fisted bastard was taken down without bloodshed.
Milosevic. Next question. But still, I do agree with you... While I'm a big fan of Gandhi he was a canny operator, and one should never forget he was a trained lawyer. There is a famous essay of his called "If I were A Czech" about how the people of Czechoslovakia should resist Hitler using satyagraha, a farcically naive viewpoint from a man who wasn't in the least bit naive. I view this as lawyerly propaganda, where Gandhi was manipulating his image of saintly non-violence to get extra leverage over the British. But, even assuming you couldn't take the
hypothetical regime down with non-violence, it's false to equate gun-less with defenceless. The classic weapon of urban insurgencies is the bomb, not the rifle... And before we get into
that let's move on.
Sixth: All this banter about death rates and crime is largely superfluous. Even it were true–which it isn't–that guns equal violence, I would still want Chodon to have his gun.
The goal and purpose of gun ownership is ultimately not to reduce overall death rates. It is ensure freedom by keeping power in the hands of citizens. "Give me liberty or give me death" is not just a slogan: Some of us take it seriously. If my freedom is secured by maintaining an armed populace, then I am more than willing to sacrifice a degree of my safety for it. If I had to pick between a state of anarchy where there was a real chance of getting shot every time I went outside or a totalitarian state where I was physically safe but not allowed to go outside, I would pick anarchy hands down. I have two daughters, and I would much rather they live in a place where they are free to live as they choose and have a small possibility of being murdered than in a place where they are guaranteed to live to be decrepit old ladies but have no say over what kind of lives they will have.
And I will keep on maintaining that in terms of keeping power in he hands of the citizens, an armed populace is an irrelevance. I don't think anyone here is likely to argue in favour of tyranny
duh, but most of us realise there are a lot more factors in this than guns. For some reason you have convinced yourself that guns form a check and balance, and I see absolutely no support whatsoever for this argument.
woh, that was a lot of work