My dialup is too slow for me to go back several pages in this thread to find out who said that America's citizens were armed to prevent England's government from staging a modern invasion. I'm sure you were kidding. Our armed citizenry is to protect us from OUR government.
An interesting article from Geoff Metcalf in the Federal Observer:
Snippet from "Freedom Isn't Free":
"The first three battles of the American War for Independence (our Revolution) were not fought over taxation without representation, separation from an abusive clueless King, or nationalism. The first three battles of our American Revolution were fought to resist gun control.
"General Thomas Gage, military governor of Massachusetts sent a force to confiscate weapons and capture patriot leaders.
"When the British confronted Captain Parker and his militia in Lexington, they arrived to confiscate powder and ball. They met resistance and the negative consequences of collecting ammunition (one round at a time…)."
(
http://www.federalobserver.com/archive.php?aid=10783)
Regarding gun control: Why do so many anti-gun people always use child gun deaths as their main argument?
I know that child gun deaths always seem to make the news, but how common are they really, compared to child deaths by other causes? I can't find much in the way of accurate figures, because they keep grouping them with gang-related deaths, which really skews the figures.
If someone can find some accurate figures, compare them against some of the following causes of death of children and young people:
*Deaths in motor vehicle accidents, the #1 killer of kids;
*Deaths from falls in the home, the #2 killer of young children;
*Deaths from being beaten or abused to death by their parents;
*Deaths from pregnancies in girls under 15 yrs of age;
*Deaths (eventually) from STDs acquired from unprotected sex;
*Deaths from smoking, starting at the age of 9;
*Deaths from recreational drug use.
Yes, it's unfortunate that they die, but I don't see anyone crusading for the abolishing of automobiles, stairs, balconies, etc.
Sue