Posts tagged guns

A prediction.

The NRA represents the interests of gun manufacturers, not gun owners. This will become increasingly clear as those manufacturers begin to feel threatened by 3D printers. The NRA will start behaving like the RIAA. It will go after its own members. It will alienate those on the cutting edge of gun culture. It will repel anyone under 40. As the remaining membership becomes even whiter, angrier and older, it will get more dangerous. Then it will implode. 

We need to let those who will come in the future to represent us [know] that we are serious. The 2nd amendment means nothing unless those in power believe you would have no problem simply walking up and shooting them if they got too far out of line and stopped responding as representatives. It seems that we are unable to muster that belief in any of our representatives on a state or federal level, but we have to have something, something costly, something that they will fear that we will use if they step out of line.

If Only Lincoln Had a Gun

Saw Taylor Ferrera perform this Beatles-esque number last Friday @ UCBEast. Clever lyrics and good music.

It will get stuck in your head. 

The shifting meaning of the Second Amendment

jkottke:

Ezra Klein asked Akhil Reed Amar, a constitutional scholar, about the Second Amendment. Amar responded with two artworks that illustrate how the meaning of the Second Amendment has shifted over the years.

In a nutshell, almost everything ordinary Americans think they know about the Bill of Rights, including the phrase ‘Bill of Rights,’ comes from the Reconstruction period. Not once did the Founders refer to these early amendments as a bill of rights. We read everything through the prism of the 14th amendment — including the right to bear and keep arms.

The Fourteenth Amendment has a lot of parts, among them the definition of citizenship, Civil War debt, due process, and equal protection. Amar wrote more about the interplay between the 2nd and 14th Amendments for Slate in 2008.

But the 14th Amendment did not specifically enumerate these sacred privileges and immunities. Instead, like the Ninth, the 14th invited interpreters to pay close attention to fundamental rights that Americans had affirmed through their lived experience-in state bills of rights and in other canonical texts such as the Declaration of Independence and landmark civil rights legislation. And when it came to guns, a companion statute to the 14th Amendment, enacted by Congress in 1866, declared that “laws … concerning personal liberty [and] personal security … including the constitutional right to bear arms, shall be secured to and enjoyed by all the citizens.” Here, in sharp contrast to founding-era legal texts, the “bear arms” phrase was decisively severed from the military context. Women as well as men could claim a “personal” right to protect their “personal liberty” and “personal security” in their homes. The Reconstruction-era Congress clearly understood that Southern blacks might need guns in their homes to protect themselves from private violence in places where they could not rely on local constables to keep their neighborhoods safe. When guns were outlawed, only outlaw Klansmen would have guns, to paraphrase a modern NRA slogan. In this critical chapter in the history of American liberty, we find additional evidence of an individual right to have a gun in one’s home, regardless of the original meaning of the Second Amendment.

I don’t like guns and this information doesn’t help my cause at all. But it’s absolutely worth reading. Do it. 

This is an obvious connection, but I still felt compelled to physically connect the two in a single image. I’d love to infect Google search results with this image and others like it. 
Rick Perry image by Rodger Mallison, AP 
“Rick Texan” first appeared in a Simpsons episode directed by Wes Archer. 

This is an obvious connection, but I still felt compelled to physically connect the two in a single image. I’d love to infect Google search results with this image and others like it. 

Rick Perry image by Rodger Mallison, AP 

“Rick Texan” first appeared in a Simpsons episode directed by Wes Archer. 

This is Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL). In the last election, her Republican opponent, Robert Lowry, campaigned against her by shooting a gun at a target labeled with her initials. 
Lowry told the Sun-Sentinel that he did not write her initials on the target, but that he did know they were there when he chose to shoot at it. [+]

This is Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL). In the last election, her Republican opponent, Robert Lowry, campaigned against her by shooting a gun at a target labeled with her initials. 

Lowry told the Sun-Sentinel that he did not write her initials on the target, but that he did know they were there when he chose to shoot at it. [+]

G