You still need to really THINK about what you are saying, FN.
You are totally correct that criminal have guns, maybe at a higher rate than law-abiding people and everone wants them arrested or do you. If a criminal is walking down the street in VT with a gun fully exposed does a LEO have the right to ask him if he is a criminal before he goes in the gas station to rob it or does he have to wait untll he robs it and shoots the clerk?
There are two errors in your statement, FN. The first is that an LEO in VT can not stop someone walking down the street. An LEO can LEGALLY stop anyone for any reason. However, to do so without some probable cause would probably result in a very short career for that officer. Second, felons are very reluctant to attack victims that they suspect may be armed. The result? Vermont has one of the lowest (again) PER CAPITA violent crime rates in the nation. I, like many others, believe that this can be atttibuted in a large part to the friendly self protection laws in VT.
I find that most people favor the rights of the individual and say that until the criminal robs the store the LEO can't do anything.
Well, if the individual carrying is a felon and they get stopped for anything that results in their identification being checked (i.e. littering, speeding, etc.) then they will be arrested for felony gun possession and spend a few more years in prison. As far as the rights of the individual, then yes, I believe that. If you are a fan of "the greater good" above individual liberty, then you should press for a more socialistic government. The People's Republic of China is a very good example of the type of system that you espouse. Communism, in and of itself, is a beautiful idea. However, the human reality is that the system naturally gets corrupted by human beings. The result of this corruption is despotism. Nothing against any communist or socialist; if that is the system that they choose, more power to them.
However, OUR system protects the "everyman" (or woman :redface
by insuring that individual rights are respected. It results in a slower bureaucracy, but a much fairer society in the long run. Think of it like this: In the U.S. you are innocent until proven guilty. Say that rascal MaybeJim accuses me of some nefarious deed. He will have to show enough evidence that the state agrees that there is some malfeasance, and then they will have to prove it to a jury of people just like you and me. In China, you are guilty until proven innocent. That means that if the state says that you did something, it is up to YOU to prove that you did not. Now think of the last time that you were at home all alone reading a book. If someone down the street is victimized and the state decides that you are the one that they want to punish, how do you prove that you weren't?
Yes criminals have guns but it seems that many people say that it is OK for them to have the guns until they use it.
Again, felons CAN NOT legally be in possession of a firearm. It is not "OK" for anyone with a history of violent crime to own a gun. NOBODY that I speak with, ESPECIALLY the people on this forum, thinks that it is OK for violent criminals to own firearms. However, one thing that you might consider is "what do you consider a criminal"? This is one argument that some of the anti's out there want to explore. At what level, FN, would YOU determine the cutoff point? Rape, murder, armed robbery? Those are easy. How about fraud? Ever bounced a check? Then you're guilty. Reckless endangerment? That excludes everyone who has ever driven more than twenty miles an hour over the speed limit. How about tax evasion? I can't tell you how many ways it is to very easily fall into that one.
Ultimately, I guess, is the one point that every patriot must ask themselves: Is freedom worth the cost? That is because, FN, we risk paying for freedom with our very lives. That is the price we pay for liberty. Unfortunately, as people are beginning to learn in places like Great Britain or Australia, taking away firearms (or as George Washington called them, the "teeth of liberty") has made them less secure, not more secure.
Keep thinking, FN. It gets easier with practice! :wink:
Also, I really think that the two books I posted earlier would be great books for you to check out.