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A Kind Word and a Gun (Part Two)

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Editorial Director’s Note:

Well, you broke the record. “A Kind Word and a Gun (Part One)” received the largest outpouring of feedback of any Taipan Daily piece thus far... and that’s clearing a pretty high hurdle, as there has been no shortage of passionate response to any number of issues touched on this past year.

Now Jim is back with the promised part two – and he wants to know how you feel about the Second Amendment (among other things). As always, speak your piece and I’ll faithfully deliver: justice@taipandaily.com



A Kind Word and a Gun (Part Two)

By Jim Amrhein, Contributing Editor, Taipan Daily

The first installment of "A Kind Word and a Gun" set a new record for passionate reader response. Now Jim Amrhein is back, and he wants to know how you feel about the Second Amendment (among other things).

“I don't believe gun owners have rights.”
– Sarah Brady, 1997

“...the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”
– excerpt from The Second Amendment, 1787

I know you’ve all been waiting for the second installment of this series, in which I promised to give you my personal firearms recommendations — plus share with you some revelations about how you may be able to make money from the modern boom in guns and ammunition...

But before I get to that, I’ve just got to take this opportunity to respond to the extensive feedback that part one of this series garnered from the Taipan Daily readership.

Nothing gets me revved up like passionate responses to something I’ve written — be they good, bad or ugly. Remember, I read and carefully consider every piece of feedback I get, whether it’s a subject-line-only e-mail or the most detailed multi-page dispatch (some of your responses rivaled my article in length). And it would feel wrong to me if I simply launched right into a bunch of analysis and recommendations without acknowledging, thanking or admonishing the large number of readers who took the time out of their busy days to write to me...

So I’m going to shoehorn an extra piece into this series to address this feedback, and use it to put even more flesh on the bones of the pro-gun, pro-Constitution position.

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If you think you’ve got the nerve for this tip, make reservations at the Four Seasons now - because it could easily make you $14,400 richer by 9:30 a.m. next Friday.

Also, it’s worth mentioning that beyond simple gun-talk, the volume and tenor of your feedback proved that my “evergreen” point — that the care and feeding of liberty is at least as important to your bottom line as the investments in your portfolio — rang true with a huge number of Taipan Daily readers...

Of course, I figured it would. But a commentator never knows how a new audience will react to his core tenets (or hers — yeah, I know) until a few weather balloons have been launched overhead. So, many thanks to the reader in the Carolinas, who summed up the sentiments of a large number of others when he wrote:

“Yes, it is good to get financial advice but other things matter just as much!”

Also thanks to the Oklahoma woman who told me:

“Put my vote down on the side of the readers who DO want political commentary with our investment info.”

And to the westerner who so eloquently summarized:

“Finally someone understands the simple truth that making money is meaningless without the freedom to protect yourself... Investment advice is pointless in a society that isn't free.”

Of course, thanks also to:

  • Those who wrote in with recommendations of your own on what kind of firepower should be in every self-respecting American’s arsenal
  • Those who relayed true tales of how a gun saved yourself or your family from harm (the lady who wrote in with the hilarious story about how she sent some would-be robbers fleeing in a panic with her AR-15 was priceless)
  • Those who were reprinting or forwarding this series to their friends, family, elected officials — and most importantly, people they knew it would anger
  • Those who replied with certain mostly unprintable (but no less valid) criticisms about folks that don’t see the need for guns — and about the sorry state of the “America” we’re trying to defend ourselves in, and from
  • Those who wrote in to take me to task, call me names, and even wish death upon me — you give me grist for my mill, fuel for my fire, and a reason to write.

How’s that for irony? For exposing a bit of the little-told truth about guns in America, I get death wishes from those who claim to abhor the violence and bloodshed they believe guns are responsible for. Here’s exactly what one of these kooks wrote in response to my opening essay of this series:

“For Amrhein: If there are enough of you macho gun-loving paranoiacs, maybe you will kill each other off, an outcome that sounds good to me.”

Nice, huh? To that particular reader and all like him, I say this:

When you’re cowering in a pistol-whipped heap, pondering your ignominious death behind a dumpster in a dark alley, peering into the unblinking black .38 caliber eye of the Grim Reaper himself, realizing that the street value of your life is the $12 in your wallet, you’ll be praying for one of us “macho gun-loving paranoiacs” to come along and save your helpless, whimpering self...

And based on my 22 years’ worth of experience with gun owners, most of them would do it, even at their own peril — and even knowing how much you despise them.

Gun nuts are nice like that.

The Four Self-Evident Truths Upholding Gun Rights in America

I could’ve made a career out of writing solely about guns and gun politics. Want to know why I didn’t?

Because I always figured that any minute, the anti-gun argument would for once and all be crushed under the weight of the accumulated data. The longer time goes on, and the more liberal the gun laws become in some areas, the more undeniable becomes the truth that guns in the hands of civilians are of overwhelming net benefit to American society...

I also figured that at any minute, all the journalists, educators, lawyers, judges and politicians would wake up and realize that it makes no sense to hold that Americans don’t have every right to own and carry whatever “arms” they can get their hands on...

Why? Because four things are inarguably true with regard to the Second Amendment, which reads:

A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

Here they are...

1) The Second Amendment does not contradict the Bill of Rights — The overarching purpose of the Bill of Rights is to strictly limit the federal government’s power over citizens. In order for the phrase “well-regulated militia” in the Second Amendment to mean what the anti-gun lobby claims — that the Framers were calling for federal regulation of private gun ownership — it would mean that Amendment 2 would stand in stark defiance of The Bill’s whole raison d’etre. That’s just not tenable.

2) “Well regulated” does not mean “overseen by The Feds” — Since it can’t mean “governmentally controlled” and be consistent with the Bill of Rights’ intent, the phrase “well regulated” in the Second Amendment can only have one meaning: “to make regular.” To be a unit of citizen soldiers suitable for defending a free state, all those who stand united must be similarly armed. A militia makes a poor fighting force when one man has a musket, the next a pitchfork, another an axe, the next one a slingshot, and so forth. Therefore, the Second’s “well regulated” means that it’s every American’s duty to possess and be proficient with the very latest in weaponry, so that an adequate defense of liberty can be mounted. This is the only interpretation that makes contextual sense.

3) “Militia” does not modify “the people” — Before it was twisted by the media into a synonym for “domestic terrorist,” the definition of militia was: “The whole of the able-bodied citizenry eligible by law for military service.” The anti-gun crowd uses this definition to claim that the Second limits the right to keep and bear arms only to those who are fit for soldiery. They then use this flawed premise to buttress their claim that the Framers envisioned regulation of private firearm ownership. However, the Amendment only uses the “militia” angle as a justification for what, at that time in history, was a revolutionary (no pun intended) concept: The total democratization of gun ownership among all classes of citizens. And the language of the Second makes it clear that the right to keep and bear arms applies not simply to that militia, but to “the people.” That means old, young, poor, rich, black, white, gay, straight, God-fearing or Allah-loving, so that ALL may be ever vigilant. The phrase “shall not be infringed” proves this.

4) “Arms” does not mean “slingshots” — A lot of gun-haters use the fact that the Second Amendment does not explicitly define “arms” as a justification for regulating our right to guns, or as a reason to deem certain types of firearms as off-limits to citizens. These folks are clearly in need of a history lesson. It wasn’t until relatively recently that the citizenry didn’t have far more advanced weapons than did the regulars in the standing army. In the Revolutionary War and War of 1812, whole companies of soldiers used their personal guns, ultra-accurate Pennsylvania and Kentucky long rifles, to devastating effect at more than double the effective range of the regulars’ muskets. In the Civil War, lots of Union soldiers used their own money to privately purchase 16-shot Henry repeating rifles for use in battle, since they far outperformed their regular issue muzzle-loading rifle-muskets. In the settling of the west, U.S. civilian scouts carried their own Winchester lever-action repeaters, while the Army was equipped with single-shot, breech-loading “trapdoor” Springfields, which were nothing more than modified Civil War-era guns. Even the legendary Thompson submachine gun was available to civilians first (in 1921), 17 years earlier than they were adopted by the military. So the idea that the American citizenry shouldn’t be AT LEAST as well armed as the government is a revisionist concept, and without much precedent in our country’s history.

Now here’s the gauntlet, all you gun-haters that have written to me before: I DARE you to dispute the logic and correctness of these four assertions, in print...

It’s one thing to call names and issue threats — but quite another to duel it out, fair and square, man-to-man and barrel-to-barrel. I promise, if any of you provides anything like a cogent and valid refutation of any one of these four points, you’ll see your words in print in the next installment of this series, along with my concession.

If you can’t, then open your mind and shut your mouth. I’ve got better things to do than read your empty threats...

The Second Amendment, Translated From Marxist PC Spin to Plain English

Taking all of the factors I’ve just outlined into account, it’s clear that there’s a huge gulf between what the mainstream powers-that-be would have us believe the Second Amendment means, and what it actually means.

Here’s what they want us to think it means...

A domestic army and human-aid force directed by a benevolent centralized authority being necessary to the nurturing of an open-borders welfare state in which all are dependent on the government, the right of American citizens to keep and bear arms shall be pared down, phased out or restricted until ineffectual against the central planners.

But what it actually means is this...

Because it’s the duty of all Americans to be ever vigilant against enemies of liberty, whether foreign invaders, common criminals, or despots of our own election, every citizen of sound mind should have the latest arms at their constant disposal.

Now, here’s what I don’t get: If a sparsely educated, marginally literate half-redneck rube like me understands all of this, why don’t the journalists, judges, lawyers, professors and politicians we’re all listening to? It seems like the longer these people go to school or hold office, the more wrongly they interpret the most important part of the U.S. Constitution...

Which makes me wonder: Is the problem that the Second Amendment is ambiguously drafted and flexible in its meaning, as the gun-haters would claim? Or is the problem that the major institutions of influence in this country (courts, schools and government) have an anti-Second Amendment agenda that we common folk aren’t privy to?

What do YOU think?

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Coming Soon: Gun-Play for Protection and Profit

Folks, these Taipan Daily essays are typically around 1,200 words or so, and I’m pushing 2,000 here. What can I say? This issue, and your thoughts on it, warranted additional commentary.

However, I have not forgotten my promise to make some specific recommendations to you of not only the right firearms for every purpose, but some ideas about how to perhaps turn a legal buck from the current gun and ammo craze...

Plus how to avoid losing your money by doing what some in the alternative investment advice community are suggesting you do to play this boom for a profit.

And I will do exactly that in the third and final installment of this series. But a word of warning: My suggestion may be the opposite of what you think. Also, be forewarned that my analysis of the state of “all things gun” in the U.S. may surprise a lot of you — and seem in stark contrast to what you might expect to come from me.

I’d ask only that you keep an open mind, resist the urge to be knee-jerk offended, and above all things, to be objective...

Unlike the people and institutions that run our country, make and interpret our laws, and teach our children.

Always firing for effect,

Jim Amrhein
Contributing Editor, Taipan Daily

P.S. Folks, keep your comments coming — it only improves the quality of your Taipan Daily. Also, keep forwarding these essays to those you know will read, discuss and disseminate them. Or just for fun, to those who will get their panties in a bunch. Who knows? Maybe they’ll embrace truth and reason instead of the mainstream dogma...

Other Related Topics: Jim Amrhein

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Comments (13)Add Comment
The right to drink while armed?
written by Smith, May 06, 2009
I've read your last three columns, and here's the conclusions I've drawn from them: You are a "barely educated redneck" who likes to argue politics in bars... while armed with the latest in automatic hand guns.

I have to say that while I don't much care for intrusive government, I thank God that the State is keeping a cell clear for the inevitable day when you shoot some poor fool who - while exercising his own right to free speech - made the mistake of disagreeing with an armed, drunken, bully.
Point 3 Rebuttal
written by Sara Nunnally, May 06, 2009
It might be a strong leap to be absolutely sure that "the Amendment only uses the 'militia' angle as a justification for what, at that time in history, was a revolutionary concept: The total democratization of gun ownership among all classes of citizens."

Do you believe that the Framers would have allowed slaves to own guns?

Your definition of militia - the whole of the able-bodied citizenry eligible by law for military service - does "modify" which people the Framers had in mind that could own guns.

Further, the Amendment qualifies the need for a militia, or for the people to keep and bear arms, as necessary for the defense of a free State... You might argue that the defense of your home or person furthers the freedom of the state, but that is certainly not the Amendment's literal translation.

In the preamble:

"The Conventions of a number of the States, having at the time of their adopting the Constitution, expressed a desire, in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of its powers, that further declaratory and restrictive clauses should be added: And as extending the ground of public confidence in the Government, will best ensure the beneficent ends of its institution."

One could certainly argue that had the Framers intended everyone to have the right to bear arms, they would have said so, without the modifying term "militia" or the qualifying terms of "being necessary to the security of a free State."
...
written by George Galletti, May 07, 2009
The gun haters who use their crazed interptetation of the constition to support their cause only make fools of themselves. I think they would be better served if they accept the obvious and try to change the constitution.

Their irrational behavior fosters irrational behavior on those who want guns.

I believe in sensible gun control aimed towards reducing the misuse of guns and enabling the proper use of guns.

I would continue the ban against machine guns. Be pretty free about rifles but reduce the firepower of anything that can be easily hidden. Example, Glocks with large clips.

Firearms should be present and controlled by responsible teachers in all schools. They could be under lock and key and when opened a silent alarm would alert the police.

I think the so called "gun nuts" are the far more resonable group on this argument. I don't like guns but feel it is my resposibilty to own several, wish there was no real need for them. Unfortunately, there is a need for guns to protect ourselves from those who mean us harm including the government.

GJG
Rebuttal to the above silliness from the 1st and 2nd posters
written by Mitch, May 08, 2009
To the 1st guy. Get real. Pull your head out and read. Every single place that concealed carry has been introduced crime has fallen. The leftist wingnuts predicted during the fights for concealed carry the exact thing you describe. But guess why with millions of privately toted guns legal in over 80% of the states hardly any incidents have occurred...well other than the regular use of said guns to thwart bad guys that the press won't tell you about.
Seriously, get a clue.

2nd wingnut:
Your first point is foolish and unfounded speculation.
Rather than impose such idiocy on the rest of the world why not do some historical reading and see how very wrong you are. Militia meant pretty much everyone who could handle a gun.
Your 2nd point is specious;
The status of the slave (white or black) at the time of the writing is absolutely irrelevant. (not to mention the fact the many black men did in fact fight in the revolutionary war with their own guns).
The reason the "argument" is pointless is that the very same Constitution you are appealing to as the authority was changed to include those who were not at first. Hence your non-point is mute even if it were correct.
And 3rd
Again you miss the point...twice. The thing we are to protect is the freedom NOT the state. The individual state was where the framers left every single right and power with the very few and limited ones specifically spelled out in the constitution. The framers warned again and again in their writings of the dangers of the federal gov't being allowed to get too much power. This was, in fact, the paramount reason for the 2nd Amendment.
We are warned that if we fail to control the power of the gov't we will very likely have to again fight and die for those freedoms which are granted by GOD.

SOME QUOTE ABOUT GUNS - FREEDOM - AND GOVERNMENT

“The right of the citizens to keep and bear arms has justly been considered,” he said in his Commentaries on the Constitution, “as the palladium (safeguard) of the liberties of a republic.” James Madison, the author of our Constitution.

"An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it.“ Jeff Cooper

“All of us denounce war—all of us consider it man’s greatest stupidity. And yet wars happen and they involve the most passionate lovers of peace because there are still barbarians in the world who set the price for peace at death or enslavement and the price is too high.” —Ronald Reagan
MORE GUOTES
written by Mitch, May 08, 2009
"Any single man must judge for himself whether circumstances warrant obedience or resistance to the commands of the civil magistrate; we are all qualified, entitled, and morally obliged to evaluate the conduct of our rulers. This political judgment, moreover, is not simply or primarily a right, but like self-preservation, a duty to God. As such it is a judgment that men cannot part with according to the God of Nature. It is the first and foremost of our inalienable rights without which we can preserve no other." —John Locke

"[T]he American state is still inhibited by the moral habits and legal traditions of Christian civilization. There are some things we can usually be sure our rulers won't even try to do to us, though the old restraints are weakening alarmingly and the law is increasingly the plaything of the strong. It's another bad sign that the decay of law is called 'progress' and 'democracy.' In a sense, of course, government—the power of the strong—should be limited; the individual should be able to defend himself against it. But government will never control its own power, and we only confuse ourselves by talking as if it would or could. We can only try to divide its power, keep it as local as possible, and prevent its consolidation in a single center... The victory of the North over the South was actually the victory of the Union over the 'free and independent states' affirmed in the Declaration of Independence and reaffirmed in the Articles [of Confederation]; it denied the right of the states to secede under any circumstances whatever. After the Union victory, the Constitution was changed to weaken the states further, especially by the Fourteenth, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendments. More recently we've seen the evisceration of the Second, Ninth and Tenth Amendments, and lately, in the Kelo case, the Fifth. What some call the advance of 'progress' and 'democracy' is really the long, sad story of the increase of the government's power over us." —Joseph Sobran

"[T]he simple truth—born of experience—is that tyranny thrives best where government need not fear the wrath of an armed people. The prospect of tyranny may not grab the headlines the way vivid stories of gun crime routinely do. But few saw the Third Reich coming until it was too late. The Second Amendment is a doomsday provision, one designed for those exceptionally rare circumstances where all other rights have failed—where the government refuses to stand for reelection and silences those who protest; where courts have lost the courage to oppose, or can find no one to enforce their decrees. However improbable these contingencies may seem today, facing them unprepared is a mistake a free people get to make only once." —Federal Appeals Judge Alex Kozinski

"It is better by noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to half the evils we anticipate than to remain in cowardly listlessness for fear of what might happen." —Herodotus

“Every collectivist revolution rides in on a Trojan horse of ‘emergency’. It was the tactic of Lenin, Hitler, and Mussolini. In the collectivist sweep over a dozen minor countries of Europe, it was the cry of men striving to get on horseback. And ‘emergency’ became the justification of the subsequent steps. This technique of creating emergency is the greatest achievement that demagoguery attains.” —Herbert Hoover

"Most of the major ills of the world have been caused by well-meaning people who ignored the principle of individual freedom, except as applied to themselves, and who were obsessed with fanatical zeal to improve the lot of mankind." —Henry Grady Weaver

"Next to the right of liberty, the right of property is the most important individual right guaranteed by the Constitution and the one which, united with that of personal liberty, has contributed more to the growth of civilization than any other institution established by the human race." William Howard Taft

"Liberty has never come from the government. Liberty has always come from the subjects of the government. The history of government is a history of resistance. The history of liberty is the history of the limitation of government, not the increase of it." —Woodrow Wilson

"Freedom is always wise." —Alexander Meiklejohn

"It is not the fact of liberty but the way in which liberty is exercised that ultimately determines whether liberty itself survives." —Dorothy Thompson

"The object and practice of liberty lies in the limitation of government power." —General Douglas MacArthur
classic bogus debating technique
written by Smith, May 08, 2009
Mitch:

You didn't repond to any point I actually made, just to one you wish I had made. I wrote not of generalized crime stats, but rather of the fear of a specific man who brags that he likes to drink, argue and shoot things.

On a more serious level, all you 2nd amendment folks: do you honestly believe that the government is scared of you?

You're armed now, and they don't seem to be changing a damn thing.

What you want seems to be the right to accept the largesse of the majority (water, roads, electricity - and quite frankly security) when it pleases you and reject its will (taxes and a certain level of compliant civility when driving about) when those demands chafe you.

There are places without such centraly imposed wills: no one collects onerous taxes in the Sudan, nor will they tell you not to carry a handgun. In fact, it is most hardily suggested.

You might also care to bring your own food and water.

In the past
written by John Searcy, May 09, 2009
I grew up in a rural southern state and our house had a loaded doubled barreled Fox shotgun over the back door and a loaded single shot 22 over the front door. We were taught as children never to touch them until we were probly 16 or 17. The do right strap was allways close by if we didnt follow instructions. I never kept a loaded gun in my home except a couple of pistols in my bed room and have never had a problem with a child or grandchild using any.

America Love for Guns is "irrational"
written by Gary from Canada, May 09, 2009
As an non-American who is not emotionally attached to this debate, this is how I read the second amendment if it were handed to me without all the biases that the two sides of this issue bring to the debate. It is important to also to note what those words meant at a certain time in history as the meaning of words do change. Also in any law if a drafter of the law put in certain words then every word must have a purpose in mind.

1. It starts with a "Well-regulated Militia," - what does that mean?? If it is the same as "people" then why use "Well-regulated Militia", why not just say "the people" since it uses "the people" later on or why doesn't it just start with "The right of the people to keep and bear Arms,".

If Militia is not "the people" then who is the Militia? If any group of people that is formed can be the Militia then it must be well-Regulated. What is "well-regulated"? Since we are talking about a government setting out some constitution law, the context would suggest that that regulations mean "a government" decree. Maybe not the Federal Government but probably a State Government. I doubt any government at that time would have allowed it to mean that any bunch of rules a farmer group wanted to draw up.

2. After "A well-regulated Militia" there are more words "being necessary to the security of a free State,". These describe the purpose of the Militia, which is the security of a free State. What is a State?? Is it the separate States that form the United States and their right to be free of any cental government if it gets out of control?? In the context of the time in history it probably made sense at time after the American revolution, the States did not want the Central Government to have all the power. The words also refer to something at the macro level "the security of the State" it doesn't say anything about the security of one's property. It is a real stretch to say because "my land" makes up "the State" it is synonomous with "the State". The State at the time was already well-formed unit of government.

3. The last words "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms," follow right after all the previous words regarding Militia, security of the State, etc. so there is a context to the words otherwise why not just start the whole second amendment with "The right of the people to keep and bear Arms".

4. Arms is not defined either but at the time it was a "musket", not an AK-47 with a 30 round magazine. To take your argument to the extreme, i.e. it means any advance weaponery that even a government might not possess, then any U.S. citizen ought to be able to buy and bring into the county a nuclear missile since a missile is an "Armament" used by the Regular army and any such right shall not be infringed by any government. Try that one with Customs to see how far you get.

Like a previous writer said, it would be ludicrous to suggest based on those words it meant the drafters of the amendment would have allowed a group of slaves to band together, buy a bunch of guns and use it to defend themselves and argue that they were a Militia out to secure the rights of free State. Your intrepretion would have suggested exactly that.

In the modern context you wouldn't want a home-grown all-American terrorist group to buy any AK-47s, tanks, missiles, bombs for whatever purpose they desire. Yet in order to accept your argument in totality, you would have to say "they have that right". To which the drafters of the amendment would have said that is Nuts and not what they meant.

As a further note, if anyone thinks that just having a gun and thinking that you will be able to defend yourself in a real situation when the bullets really fly, you should watch the 20/20 segment on "If only I had a gun". Without constant real-life training like the police receive, you're more liable to be a "deer in the headlights" freezing up totally, shooting yourself, or shooting an innocent party.

STAY IN CANADA...
written by gr8guy, May 10, 2009
"GARY from CANADA"??? STAY IN CANADA!! WHAT IN "HELL" DO U KNOW ABOUT FREEDOM!! 2/3's OF U LIVE NEAR THE U.S. BORDER, and POLLS SHOW ROUGHLY THE SAME AMOUNT WOULD GIVE THEIR LIFE FOR THE OPPORTUNITY TO BECOME AMERICAN CITIZENS, IF THEY COULD!!

GARY in CANADA: U HAVENT A CLUE WHAT UR TALKING ABOUT. MUCH LIKE UR LIBERAL BUDDIES HERE, AS WELL.
Classic response when you don't have a reasoned response, Be Offense!!!
written by Gary from Canada, May 10, 2009
To Gr8guy....

Is this the best you can do? Go on a rant in ALL CAPS about staying Canada and Freedom. Hey these are the words about your Constitution rights about arms not Freedom. It's in plain English and not hard to understand. No wonder your country is so screwed up if there are people like you who when they can't refute or answer any of the points raised, just scream and change the subject - like what my nine-year child does. When you don't have a defence just go on the offense. That in itself shows me that what I'm saying is probably right and you can't acknowledge it. "Go ahead, make my day"

And No, 99.9% of Canadians don't want to be Americans, otherwise we would've done it by now. With murder rates 10 times ours, no health care, racial problems, shooting rampages, and trillion dollar national debt. No thanks, we're quite happy with our liberal freedom in Canada.
Urban Lifestyle Shrinking Mind?
written by Heath, May 11, 2009
If you live in a place where your neighbors could hear you scream, or, in a place where a simple 911 call would have the police at your door in five to twenty minutes, and you're anti-gun, you really haven't thought this thing through have you? America is a vast RURAL area.
...
written by AL, May 12, 2009
Mr. Amrhein...Great information. Now here is some for you....check out WWW.FRONTSIGHT.COM for the very best gun training in America.
Health care in Canada?
written by Phillip Sprowls, May 31, 2009
Gary in Canada,
That was a pretty good comeback until you mentioned health care. Do you honestly believe Canadians receive better health care than Americans?

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+2.67 (0.25%)    
3 NASDAQ 2,112.44
+7.12 (0.34%)