Please Fuchs, answer the question. Do you believe in natural rights?
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Essentially, but it also directly taxes their ability to act. For instance, without a guy in Washington to stick up for them, it's difficult for the ATF to get US Attorneys to hand out warrants or to do so in a timely fashion. Straw buyers face hilariously small penalties, and the burden of proof against them is insanely high--prosecutors have no real incentive to go after them.
Why would the NRA oppose prosecution of gun criminals? They were very great supporters of Project Exile as related last week by Slap.
I suspect, given my small knowledge of the way bureaucracies work, there are probably many other things at play when it comes to not vigorously enforcing existing laws. Fashion trends you might say. For example, at the place I worked, if money was requested for going after drunk drivers or drugs, it fell from the skies. Anything else, not so much.
Don't always agree with Lind but sometimes the guy really nails it.
http://www.marylandthursdaymeeting.c...al.Marxism.htm
Slap:
That was good. I always wondered why people like that were for the Communists, say in Vietnam, even though the Communists killed innocents by the millions and allowed no rights at all. It seemed logical that they were for one side vs. the other, humanity be damned, but the why eluded me. That piece puts it together nicely.
I start with Kopel, The Natural Right of Self-Defense - Heller's Lesson for the World (Syracuse Law Review, 2008).
Kopel primarily looks to "natural law" in this article, but also deals with some statutory law - e.g., the 1689 English Declaration of Rights (aka "English Bill of Rights"; actually a Royal-Parliament Compact). That important document (a partial model for the Declaration of Independence) was interpreted differently in the UK and the "US" prior to the American Revolution. That divergence has only increased after that; not only re: gun control, but also with respect to the limitations of legislative power.
The American interpretation re: self-defense speaks of "right", not "privilege". E.g., Kopel, p.5, from Gray v. Combs, 30 Ky. (7 J.J. Marsh) 478, 481 (Ky. 1832):
In our "modern" times, "cases of necessity" are easy enough to find.Quote:
... the right of necessary defence, in the protection of a man’s person or property, is derived to him from the law of nature, and should never be unnecessarily restrained by municipal regulation. However proper it may be for every well ordered community to be tender of the public peace, and careful of the lives of its citizens, there can be neither policy or propriety in extending this tenderness and care so far as to protect the robber, the burglar and the nocturnal thief, by an unnecessary restraint of the honest citizen’s natural right of self-defence.
Sir Matthew Hale, in speaking on this subject, says, “the right of self-defence in these cases is founded in the law of nature, and is not, nor can be superceded by the law of society. Before societies were formed, the right of self defence resided in individuals, and since, in cases of necessity, individuals incorporated into society, can not resort for protection to the law of society, that law with great propriety and strict justice considereth them as still, in that instance, under the protection of the law of nature.”
However, Kopel's view is certainly contested by Vera Bergelson, Professor of Law and Robert E. Knowlton Scholar, whose background is:
Ms Bergelson is well-rooted in Russian jurisprudence, which is not close to that of the US.Quote:
Professor Bergelson earned her diploma in Slavic languages and literatures with distinction from Moscow State University and her Ph.D. in philology from the Institute of Slavic and Balkan Studies in Moscow, Russia. She earned her J.D. cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where she was on the Law Review and was named to the Order of the Coif.
Professor Bergelson has been a lecturer at Moscow State University, the Polish Cultural Center, and the Literary Institute in Moscow. Before joining the Rutgers faculty in 2001, she was an associate with Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton in New York for six years. She is fluent in Russian and Polish and has a reading proficiency in Bulgarian, Belorussian, and Ukranian.
Kopel quotes her at p.13n.55:
Needless to say, police states anywhere in the World are happy enough to see that public officials act as a matter of right, and that their people act as a matter of privilege. One should recall Dr Zhivago's rebuke: "That law gives you the power, not the right."Quote:
All public officials - a policeman performing a valid arrest, a sheriff taking possession of the debtor’s property pursuant to a court judgment, or an executioner giving the prisoner a lethal injection in accordance with the execution order - act under the right to act that way. In contrast, people acting in self-defense, or pursuant to necessity or parental authority, act merely under a privilege.
As we shall soon see, Ms. Bergelson's view is one shared by the UN and most (all ?) European countries.
cont. in pt. 2
We now turn to a subject discussed often enough at SWC, especially in the context of Africa.
We start with Kopel et al., Is Resisting Genocide a Human Right ? (Notre Dame Law Review, vol. 81:4, 2006):
Without even reading the article (or abstract), I would have thunk that the answer to the question "Is Resisting Genocide a Human Right ?" would be "yes". But, I would have been wrong - at least so far as the UN is concerned.Quote:
Abstract:
Closely examining the Darfur, Sudan, genocide, and making reference to other genocides, this Article argues that the genocide prevention strategies which are currently favored by the United Nations are ineffective. This Article details the failures of targeted sanctions, United Nations peacekeepers, and other anti-genocide programs. Then, this Article analyzes the Genocide Convention and other sources of international human rights law. Because the very strong language of the Genocide Convention forbids any form of complicity in genocide, and because the Genocide Convention is jus cogens (meaning that it prevails over any conflicting national or international law), this Article concludes that the Genocide Convention forbids any interference, including interference based on otherwise valid laws, against the procurement of defensive arms by groups which are being victimized by genocide.
We turn to Barbara Frey, Special Repporteur, Prevention of human rights violations committed with small arms and light weapons (2006):
Thus, the Kopel position is expressly quoted and rejected by Ms Frey.Quote:
II. THE PRINCIPLE OF SELF-DEFENCE WITH REGARD TO HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS COMMITTED WITH SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS
19. This report discusses and recognizes the principle of self-defence in human rights law and assesses its proper place in the establishment of human rights principles governing small arms and light weapons.[13] Those opposing the State regulation of civilian possession of firearms claim that the principle of self-defence provides legal support for a “right” to possess small arms thus negating or substantially minimizing the duty of States to regulate possession.[14] The present report concludes that the principle of self-defence has an important place in international human rights law, but that it does not provide an independent, legal supervening right to small arms possession, nor does it ameliorate the duty of States to use due diligence in regulating civilian possession.
A. Self-defence as an exemption to criminal responsibility, not a human rightQuote:
[13] Because of the severe limits on space and the breadth of issues that need to be covered in this study, the author does not attempt here to undertake a full legal discussion of the principle of self-defence in international law. For an authoritative discussion of this complex topic, see Antonio Cassese, International Criminal Law (2003). In addition, the legal concepts discussed herein assume a non-conflict setting. Situations of mass human rights abuse and armed conflict involve international humanitarian law and security law principles that require an extended if not completely separate set of legal and policy considerations. For the Special Rapporteur’s findings and recommendations regarding role of small arms and light weapons in violations of human rights and international humanitarian law in armed conflict, see her progress report (E/CN.4/Sub.2/2004/37).
[14] David Kopel, Paul Gallant, and Joanne Eisen, “Is Resisting Genocide a Human Right?” Notre Dame Law Review, vol. 81, No. 4 (2006), p. 1 (“… The Universal Declaration of Human Rights affirms the existence of a universal, individual right of self-defense, and also a right to revolution against tyranny … Taken in conjunction with Anglo-American human rights law, the human rights instruments can be read to reflect a customary or general international law recognizing a right of armed resistance by genocide victims”.).
20. Self-defence is a widely recognized, yet legally proscribed, exception to the universal duty to respect the right to life of others. Self-defence is a basis for exemption from criminal responsibility that can be raised by any State agent or non-State actor. Self-defence is sometimes designated as a “right”. There is inadequate legal support for such an interpretation. Self-defence is more properly characterized as a means of protecting the right to life and, as such, a basis for avoiding responsibility for violating the rights of another.
Instead, she invokes the "protective State" - no surprise:
To advance these objectives, we have "The Checklists" (pp.22-41) - they are the laws that Ms Frey wants to be in effect. They are remarkably similar to "gun control" measures suggested in the US.Quote:
41. States must take effective measures to reduce the need for people to arm themselves by ensuring an atmosphere of public safety supported by law enforcement that is committed and trained to protect the rule of law and to prevent illegal acts.
42. States must also take effective measures to minimize violence carried out by armed private actors. States are required to enforce criminal sanctions against persons who use arms to violate the law. States are further required, under the principle of due diligence, to prevent small arms from getting into the hands of those who are likely to misuse them. Under the due diligence standard, international human rights bodies should require States to enforce a minimum licensing standard designed to prevent small arms from being used by private actors to violate human rights.
43. Other effective measures consistent with due diligence include the prohibition of civilian possession of weapons designed for military use; the sponsoring of effective amnesty programmes to decrease the number of weapons in active use; requirement of marking and tracing information by manufacturers; and incorporation of a gender perspective in policies regarding small arms. States have an affirmative duty under international human rights law to protect groups that are most vulnerable to small arms misuse, including victims of domestic violence.
I don't think these differences (illustrated by Kopel and Frey) can be bridged: A "right" is too much different from a "privilege"; a "duty" is too much different from a "choice".
Regards
Mike
I googled a bit in order to find some websites detailing the NRA's behind the scenes stuff against enforcement, but it proved impractical to find non-partisan sources within my time budget. Too bad everything goes partisan in the U.S..
I found some (in part quite old and thus not affected by the recent debate) items, though:
http://www.potowmack.org/enffable.html
http://www.bradycenter.org/xshare/pd...est-friend.pdf
(I didn't read them fully, as it's quite late. In case you think they're too partisan on the 'other' side, keep in mind it's not advisable to avoid cognitive dissonance by consuming friendly partisan's products only.)
Concerning your assumption of NRA consistency and non-hypocrisy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNUDJuC4Bc4#!
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Sometimes I wonder why lobbyism in the U.S. is so very little subtle.
There's a lot of lobbyism everywhere, and to be expected everywhere, but the U.S. keeps producing a lot of extreme examples.
Maybe it's the importance of money in politics, maybe it's because they get away with it, maybe it's simple poor lobbyist professionalism?
We have a couple of lobbyism scandals per year in Germany, but in my opinion they're about relatively subtle methods - save for a few usual suspects.
There's no lobbyism organisation with a central and overtly powerful role like NRA or AIPAC in Germany. The Catholic and Protestant churches, the labour union top organisation and the car driver club probably come the closest, but they couldn't keep a single major politician from being re-elected (might work with unknown backbenchers maybe).
RegardsQuote:
"Please walk in front, sir," when there's trouble in the wind.
Not all aggression is criminal;
A defense reaction is for the human race,
What the wind is for navigation;
The result depends on the direction.
The most moral violence is that used in legitimate self-defense,
The most sacred judicial institution.
"Please walk in front, sir," when there's trouble in the wind.
I don't need a weatherman to tell me which way the wind is blowing.
Mike
1) Kipling
2) V.V. Stanciu, Reflections on the Congress for the Prevention of Genocide, in 7 YAD VASHEM STUDIES ON THE EUROPEAN JEWISH CATASTROPHE AND RESISTANCE 185, 187 (Livia Rothkirchen ed., 1968).
3) Univ. of Michigan SDS
The Brady Campaign is alive and well in 2013 at its website, Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence. You can even donate to its cause - thereby, offsetting my life membership and donations to the NRA. :)
The term "lobbyist" is really an anachronism for organizations such as the Brady Center and the NRA. As you should know, the approval ratings for Congress (which represents the two political parties) have been roughly 5-15%. Of course, individuals do much better - President Obama hit 54% today. Generic Congressional Ballot: Democrats 45%, Republicans 37%.
Rasmussen runs a good polling service, What They Told Us: Reviewing Last Week’s Key Polls.Quote:
On What America Thinks this weekend, former U.S. Senator Jim DeMint says, “Both parties have failed the country.” DeMint, who recently resigned from the Senate to serve as president of the Heritage Foundation, expressed strong view about his own party’s leadership. “"Republicans [in Washington] don't stand true to their beliefs, or at least what they talk about. I found that when I ran on reforms that ... party leaders were not nearly as interested in the reforms as they were in getting earmarks for everybody and redistricting to hold power and raising money. So I think the public has every reason to be disenchanted.”
Given the default of the two political parties, we have what could be called "special interest groups", or perhaps better, "mini-political parties" (there are thousands of them - I belong to about a half-dozen). Technically, an arm of each group has to be legally registered as a "lobbyist" - if it "lobbies" government; other arms do not (lots of "5xx orgs").
I think you have a lot to learn about the U.S.A., its politics and people. These links are given as a good faith effort (a one timer). Your choice - no duty.
Regards
Mike
Mike,
Greatly appreciate the informative/educational breakouts as always.
Just finished a marathon/binge drama-a-thon regarding American political culture via apple tv and netflix. Found it to be an interesting commentary on perception, reality, and poll numbers.
House of Cards (U.S. TV series), From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_o...U.S._TV_series)
Meanwhile, out in the field...
2013 Edelman Trust Barometer Finds a Crisis in Leadership, Less Than One in Five Trust Leaders to Tell the Truth, http://www.edelman.com/news/2013-ede...in-leadership/
Today: four stores, no 9mm, and only one box of .38 to be found...:eek:
John Wayne on how to handle Political Correctness!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-a7K...ture=fvwp&NR=1
This is even better just listen to how all the politically correct arguments just fall completely apart but brain washed female liberal just can't handle it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84ptFVq22PY
Outstanding article by retired Marine Office Michael D. Wyly on Fourth Generation Warfare, Gun Control, the Constitution , and how it concerns all Marines......actually All Americans. This was the best copy I could get which unfortunately is attached to several blog comments which are NOT part of the article but the main article is still very distinct.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/825219/posts