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Re: Why would anyone need an assault weapon?

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 5:39 pm
by anygunanywhere
Kythas wrote:
philip964 wrote:Betcha those BP workers wished they had been allowed to have an assault weapon.

Haven't checked into whether Algeria has banned assault weapons all together or whether assault weapons are permitted to be carried or owned by foreigners. But I betcha they were illegal for them to have. Plus even if they were allowed, probably no legal way for them to get them from the US to Algeria.
You can't carry in a refinery here in Texas. You can't even have a gun in your car at work if you work for a refinery.
He was talking about the BP employees held hostage this week in Algeria.

Anygunanywhere

Re: Why would anyone need an assault weapon?

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 5:47 pm
by Jasonw560
TAM, can I post that on another message board I am on? That was fantastic.

Re: Why would anyone need an assault weapon?

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 6:02 pm
by philip964
anygunanywhere wrote:
Kythas wrote:
philip964 wrote:Betcha those BP workers wished they had been allowed to have an assault weapon.

Haven't checked into whether Algeria has banned assault weapons all together or whether assault weapons are permitted to be carried or owned by foreigners. But I betcha they were illegal for them to have. Plus even if they were allowed, probably no legal way for them to get them from the US to Algeria.
You can't carry in a refinery here in Texas. You can't even have a gun in your car at work if you work for a refinery.
He was talking about the BP employees held hostage this week in Algeria.

Anygunanywhere
I was insensitive. Sorry. I have now learned a Texan from Katy may be among the dead. RIP. My prayers to his friends and family. Al Qaeda has killed innocent American's again.

So why do you need an assault weapon: for things that are unexpected and that others are unprepared for.

Re: Why would anyone need an assault weapon?

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 6:32 pm
by A-R
This was posted on arf(d0t)com - linked to by Emily Miller (Washington Times, "Emily Gets Her Gun") via her FB page:
I don’t “need” my AR any more than Rosa Parks “needed” to sit in the front of that bus
:smash:

Re: Why would anyone need an assault weapon?

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 8:38 pm
by Middle Age Russ
We own clothes to keep us warm in the winter (preparation and forethought)
We secure food to nourish our bodies (preparation and forethought)
We buy cars to transport us when needed (preparation and forethought)
We build and own structures to live in to keep us out of the elements (preparation and forethought)
We go to school to learn many things that will be helpful in the future (preparation and forethought)
We make and use tools to help us in a variety of tasks (preparation, forethought and creativity)
We own guns that fire a round and ready another with each trigger pull and hold 30 round (or higher capacity) magazines (preparation and forethought)

I can imagine situations where an unlimited amount of rounds in the magazine would make me feel ill-prepared, so (emotional argument here) how would I feel watching a terrible crime being perpetrated on a loved one that I (or they) could perhaps prevent or stop with tools similar in function to those law enforcement and the military use?

Re: Why would anyone need an assault weapon?

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 10:38 pm
by havoc
Marko Kloos wrote a short article title "Why the gun is civilization". It makes some good points that might help you with your argument. Best of luck.

http://munchkinwrangler.wordpress.com/2 ... ilization/

Re: Why would anyone need an assault weapon?

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2013 10:54 pm
by E10
The first ten amendments to the US Constitution is not a Bill of Needs, it is a Bill of Rights.

The Second Amendment addresses not the individual citizen's Need to Keep and Bear Arms, but the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. The 'need' occurs in the first phrase: 'A well-regulated militia being necessary....'

The founders intended for citizens to arm themselves with weaponry equivalent to that issued to common individual soldiers. In the eighteenth century, it was a Kentucky rifle; in the nineteenth, a lever-action .30-30; in the twentieth, an AR. When somebody invents a Phaser and it's issued to soldiers, that's what we'll keep and bear.