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And many of those white people in small towns in mainly rural areas are salt of the earth. They are good people. I met some of them in Tomah, Wisconsin. I like those working poor and working middle-class people far more than I do the poor, middle, and rich in the cities like Milwaukee, Chicago, New York and so on.What is hard for a European to understand is how culturally divided the US is with respect to guns. People in places like New York City call for gun control because of massacres and then people in rural areas feel that they’re being called whackos by the ‘liberal elite’. Which is not completely hard to understand. And then there’s the Second Amendment.
What the New Yorkers can’t understand because they are immersed in their environment is that just about all of them are “bad people.” From the bankers to the cops. There is a very thin line between them and the hoodlum on the street.
Excellent point. That never occurred to me.What is funny is that the same people (e.g. many Republicans) who say they need guns to protect themselves against tyranny usually support things like the Patriot Act, that give the federal government more and more surveillance rights. Not all of them do – like Ron Paul supporters – but many do.
I don’t buy the idea either. This is not the 1700’s.I don’t get the protection from tyranny argument that much myself. Let’s say some officials from the Federal Government show up and want to arrest your spouse for no particular reason. You have a lot of guns. At what point would you start shooting them?
U.S. Marines went building to building, room to room, battling armed opponents in the City of Fulajha in Iraq in a stunning, audacious plan of urban warfare in my opinion. It will go down in military history I think, as a textbook example beside Stalingrad. Had that been Israel and the IDF they would have simply bombed the entire city to rubble.
My point being here is that one or two households with guns are no major deterrent for the U.S. Government. Technology has changed and they - in conjunction with state and local governments - own a monopoly on well trained, organized militias.
However, in Milwaukee both the mayor and police chief are calling for city and national increased gun control laws. The police chief is a big critic of Wisconsin’s new concealed carry while at the same time having replaced the shotguns in squad cars with rifles that I think maybe fall under the category of assault rifles or battle rifles (I don’t know much about that stuff or really know what differentiates one from the other). I just find that all interesting. The police chief while a big critic of the NRA seems to share in their paranoid reasoning, but only as it applies to cops, just like many citizens like myself use the same paranoid reasoning as both law enforcement and the NRA use, as it applies to ourselves as civilians.
Basically the reasoning for all goes like this: Potentially someone has a gun, therefor me and mine need a gun.
One notices police departments do not arm their cops with .22 caliber pistols. It’s due to the same reasons a civilian arms himself with a .45 caliber pistol.