Vigilante
Cherry 7-Up is still the best
What I meant was that modern dictatorship involves lulling the people to sleep so they have no desire for rebellion... and I feel it's kind of happened already.
Truer words were never spoken.
Tell that to the US military. The rebellion in Iraq, one consisting almost entirely of small arms and home-made bombs, has created nightmares for them. It continues to be a nightmare and will be for the foreseeable future. These are simple civilians with simple arms using simple tactics. Most of modern warfare's truly great advances--nukes and submarines, for instance--aren't even relevant in dealing with civilian rebellion. The vast majority of Uprising VS State conflict involves rifles, handguns, grenades, and other small arms. And by virtue of America's possession of a vastly larger civilian population, we would pose an even greater threat than the Iraqis. Armed civilians are truly the sleeping lion. Prod the lion enough, suffer his wrath.The idea of armed citizens to protect the people from a potential dictator is IMO not a bad one. However as far as I can see:
-The imbalance between the force available to the state and the people nowadays would render a rebellion ineffective
Wide-spread firearm availability is only devastating if private, responsible citizens don't take advantage of their ownership. It is cliche to say that criminals will purchase guns illegally. This is a problem that every single country in the world has. If criminals purchase are able to purchase guns through legal avenues as well, this presents an even great problem. The problem begins to reverse itself, however, when responsible citizens start arming themselves.-The side-effects of wide-spread firearm availability have been so devastating the remote possibility of firearms being useful in a dictorship context no is longer a sufficient justification
As the rate of gun ownership among law-abiding citizens goes up, the risk involved in committing a crime goes up. As the risk involved in committing a crime goes up, the amount of people willing to commit that crime goes down. As the rate of people willing to commit crime goes down, fewer crimes will be committed. In effect, an increase in firearm ownership on the part of law-abiding citizens leads to a decrease in crime. To illustrate:
Ten men live on an island. One criminal owns a gun, the other innocent nine are unarmed. The innocent nine survive by collecting fruits, vegetables and coconut milk. The criminal must choose between collecting those same foods and using his gun to attempt theft from one of the innocent nine. The criminal will find it preferable to commit crime.
Ten new men live on an island. One criminal owns a gun, but now the other innocent nine brandish firearms. The innocent nine survive by collecting fruits, vegetables and coconut milk. In their spare time, they shoot rotten coconuts for target practice. The criminal must choose between collecting those same foods and using his gun to attempt theft from one of the innocent nine. The would-be criminal will find that digging for carrots ain't so bad after all.
This is just basic economics as expressed by the law of diminishing marginal utility. If you object, I invite you to disprove this 150-year-old theory.
If I'm not mistaken, the US has more privately owned firearms than any country in the world. (129 million in 1997 according to the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. The number is probably higher now.) You would expect with a number that high to see a great deal of instances of self-defense. And you do. I will repeat the statistic I offered earlier:
To erase lawful ownership of firearms would be to erase those 2.5 million instances of self-protection. Every instance of an unlawful use of a firearm is regrettable, and there are many, but it is absolutely imperative to remember that those instances are far outweighed by the instances of legitimate self-protection. Every action contains a cost and, the actor hopes, a benefit. These are indisputably true categories of action as expressed by action's praxeological axiom. To ban firearms in the US would be to destroy the benefit and place the cost on a virtual podium. It simply doesn't make sense."Firearms are used defensively roughly 2.5 million times per year, more than four times as many as criminal uses. This amounts to 2,575 lives protected for every life lost to a gun."
Obviously, the statistics I cited refer to America. Every country has its own problems involving guns. If you'd like to shrink yours, I'd invite you to promote the private ownership of firearms.
I recommend Sig-Sauers.
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