Threats
to our safety come from two sources: external and internal—those outside the
nation and those within. People who clamor for gun registration and cry that we
should deny gun ownership have naively ignored the potential for the internal
threats to our well-being that make private ownership of weapons an absolute
necessity. Multiple sources exist for these threats, from native born terrorists,
thieves and rapists, to those who violently discriminate or act out grudges.
Internal threats can also come from a government run amok.
Those
who would “protect us” by taking our guns have failed to see that those we
trust. whether they be neighbors, those
struggling with their own demons, or government officials and agencies, sometimes
betray us. Gun restrictions, including registration of gun owners, invite our
victimization by internal forces. Surely this is like protecting your property
from mountain lions while ignoring the wolves in the front yard.
The
following excerpts from Promises of the
Constitution: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, pp. 232-233 explain the threat
from internal forces.
Every successful, prosperous nation
must defend itself against enemies, including those within the government. A
major part of our protection comes from the Second Amendment, which reads:
“Because a well-regulated state militia is
necessary for the security of a free people, the right of the people to keep
and bear arms shall not be infringed by the federal government.”
The Senate Subcommittee on the
Constitution, in its 1982 report entitled The Right
to Keep and Bear
Arms, investigated
and reported the intent of the Founding Fathers on this topic. The subcommittee
states: “The conclusion is thus inescapable that the . . . Second Amendment . .
. indicates that . . . [the] individual right of a private citizen to own and
carry firearms in a peaceful manner” is our constitutional right.
If the government takes weapons from
peaceable citizens, it leaves them at the mercy of criminals and despots.
History demonstrates that a nation sliding into despotism typically forces gun
registration, then provokes an incident that
“requires” the confiscation of weapons. George Mason, [a] drafter of the
[Constitution and the] Virginia Bill of Rights, accused the British of having
plotted ‘”to disarm the people—that was the best and most effective way to
enslave them.”
History
begs us not to forget that we bear arms to protect ourselves from enemies
without, and within. The lessons of
history, forged in ancient and modern nations across the globe, warn us: Citizens,
be alert! Let watchfulness be your cry!
- Pam
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