Are you seriously missing the point that badly?vision wrote:Cool story. How's that working out for you? You and your friend's ready to take on some battleships with your rowboats? Nice "deterrence."Will Robinson wrote:The purpose of the 2nd wasn't to guarantee successful revolution of the whole nation. It was to provide deterrence to thug like governors and the ability to defend against such a tyrant.
Here is a real world example of how deterrence worked just recently. Even when it is employed by losers against all odds for poorly justified reasons...it works.
A bunch of heavy handed federal agents went to put their boots on the neck of some rebellious rancher who was refusing to cave in to the regulations. Now regardless of whether the rancher was in the wrong, which I believe he may have been, the federal agents decided to show him the we-are-the-Feds-and-you-cant-stop-us routine to teach him a lesson. They showed up in force and began seizing his property and destroying it.
A bunch of armed citizen supporters showed up and the Feds pulled back. The Feds were always going to win the fight if it broke out, at least eventually, but the prospect of the carnage was enough to make the political leadership call off the dogs. The politicians know that they can win the fight and still lose the war. I'm pretty confident the Fed will prevail in the courtroom eventually and the rancher will lose but the over zealous thuggery was shut down with.....wait for it...
Deterrence.
Without it the Feds would have destroyed all the cattle they wanted to, they would have seized all the equipment they wanted to, etc.
Completely irrelevant response to the point you challenged. Posting a recipe for banana pudding would have been no less relevant.vision wrote:Fun Fact: You don't actually need to take up arms. The rest of your statement actually proves my point, thank you.Will Robinson wrote:Typically people rise up in protest and take up arms to prevent their dissent from being squashed by the tyrants and THEN, when some opportunistic military leader recognizes the groundswell of potential support for his efforts does he step in to claim a role in forming new leadership...
I'm not kidding you. You are kidding yourself with your lack of knowledge on the subject.vision wrote:Are you absolutely kidding me? George Washington fought for the British Army.Will Robinson wrote:The 2nd Amendment was written by those armed citizen individuals who had just been there-done that! Not by some British army deserter turned revolutionary!
Yes, he did serve in the military for the British....at one time... but he retired from their service ten years before the revolution started.
He was farming for years as a civilian before the fighting broke out and he held off for another two years after that before he, a civilian with a gun (and no role in the military), came into the fight.
That was long after the hundreds or thousands of other everyday armed citizens started the resistance. And he didn't write the Declaration or the Bill of Rights did he?
So your original point, that revolutions are only started by military defections is still wrong. And George Washington did nothing like you are trying to lead the readers of your post to believe he did!
You failed completely to refute my point, on all fronts. You failed to overcome the facts. Facts are tough like that...