L
LongingSoul
Guest
To me this dramatically exposes the vastly different way radical Americanism conceives of human existence. This attitude in my opinion is more reflective of deism and the rejection of a sense of universal brotherhood that is represented by the phenomenon of organised faith both religious and secular (Universal Declaration of Human Rights and United Nations) in general.The right to bear arms,in regard to natural law,does not depend on the service of inalienable rights,it is based upon the fact that guns are legitimate items of property. It is not always possible to make a fair judgement as to how the ownership of something affects the common good. Gun ownership by decent people certainly discourages criminals,and it also makes it more possible that unintentional or unjustified killings and woundings by decent people will happen. So gun ownership can affect the common good both for the better and for the worse. But even when the worse happens,it may not be fair to deprive the people of their rights. In a society where people are supposed to have individual freedom,the deprivation of rights by the government which claims it is protecting society is insulting and sometimes tyrannical. The common good includes individual rights and freedoms,not just the general safety and well-being of society.
I believe the founding fathers were strongly influenced by the English deist movement of that time in conceiving of the constitution but as Catholics and Christians we are obliged to put the common good of all above our individual rights.