What if buying a car was like buying a gun? The Truth About Guns answers the question, at least for Californians.
With the national debate of gun control again rearing its head, let’s do a quick comparison. Since vehicles kill or injure roughly three times more people a year than guns, let’s suppose we applied the same standards to vehicle operation that we do to guns. We will use California for example. Let’s start with purchasing a vehicle. You need a full background check, must be a citizen or legal resident and have no prohibiting factors in your history. Now you’re going wait 10 days to pick up your vehicle. If you’re buying used, you and the individual selling the vehicle must both go to the dealer for the transfer. Don’t forget the dealer’s fees; after all he has to make money too . . .That's just the beginning. There's more. A lot more. Read the whole thing.
This is easy so far, inconvenient but easy. Your 10 days is up, time to pick up your vehicle and drive off. WRONG! Now you must have your vehicle transported to your home in an enclosed and locked trailer and stored in a locked garage. Your 10 gallon fuel tank must be EMPTY during transport, and you better make sure all your garage entrances are childproofed. Keep in mind you have now legally purchased a vehicle and stored a vehicle, your rights are not infringed at all.
No politician would ever dream of proposing such onerous regulations for car ownership, because their constituents would never let them get away with it. Americans love their cars.
But here's the irony. Driving on public roads is not a right. It's a privilege. It's certainly not explicitly protected by the Constitution.
Gun ownership, and the carrying of said guns, is a right explicitly codified in, and protected by, the Second Amendment of the Bill of Rights of the US Constitution.
Amendment IIMerriam-Webster's Dictionary defines "infringe" as follows:
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
in·fringe (verb) \in-ˈfrinj\California's gun laws clearly do not obey or follow the highest law in the land - the US Constitution - and they wrongly limit or restrict Californian's Second Amendment Rights. California's gun laws, then, infringe the right of the people of California to keep and bear Arms.
: to do something that does not obey or follow (a rule, law, etc.) ( chiefly US )
: to wrongly limit or restrict (something, such as another person's rights)
California's politicians proposed and passed those laws with the support of the majority of Californians. That means that a majority of Californians would fight tooth and nail to keep their non-Constitutional privilege to drive, but paid politicians handsomely (politicians like the gun-trafficking Leland Yee) to violate their Constitutional right to keep and bear arms.
The same is true of voters from other states that similarly infringe on Second Amendment rights.
Crazy, isn't it?
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