I don’t have any use even for a Humvee, much less a 70 ton $9M Abrams. But my point is that the purpose of the constitutional protections to bear arms, or the protections preventing the standing army from engaging in domestic law enforcement, the protections ensuring due process in a variety of areas, freedom of speech, the right to assemble, and so on… all serve one purpose, which is to limit the power of our government.
Given the incessant inclination of governments to try to increase their powers, and to grow in size and bureaucracy over time, I believe that we should be very cautious about repealing our own rights. I am not in favor of suspending the right to gun ownership in order to solve a policing problem, any more than I am in favor of suspending habeas corpus to make it easier to hold and question people for which there is insufficient evidence to do so.
As Benjamin Franklin wrote to the Pennsylvania assembly in 1755: “They who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety”
I also feel that as we continue to methodically eliminate the middle class in the US, then the propensity for radical change to be demanded by the populace will increase. As this happens, there will be a tendency by those in power to continue to try to restrict civil rights and accrue every more power to the government. Because this trend continues at a very slow pace, and other rationalizations are used (ie. terrorism, or firearm usage…), people generally don’t recognize the trend, and sometimes they actually favor it. See Franlkin’s quote above.
I have long felt that compulsory military/government service is a good idea. If everyone served the country for a few years, then the perspective on government would change, and many career bureaucrat jobs would be eliminated. Most of the work in the government and the military do not require a career employee. As it is now, the military is in a mess, having to spend 50% of its budget on health and retirement benefits. This will only worsen. But back to the responsible gun ownership / gun control question. I believe that a person who is properly trained in the use of a weapon is less likely to use it improperly. Perhaps the better answer to the problem is compulsory firearm training for the population. Countries like Switzerland do this.