JD>and they want to impose their notion of the "right" way on JD>all of us.
n
order to do that, they have to get our guns.
GG> National Firearms Act of 1934. Is that how it started,
GG> or were they already
GG> at it before that? How on earth did Roosevelt get that
GG> one through Congress I wonder?
Very much the same way as they got through most gun laws of the past 20
years.
Create a black market with prohibition of substances people will produce,
distribute, and use regardless. That results in organized crime, which has
o
establish its own law enforcement out of inability to rely on cops, and
competitive techniques not exactly rooted in lawfulness.
The citizens get scared enough by peripheral violence as to be willing to
tolerate other infringements of liberties.
A good propaganda campaign makes people miss the point that it's the laws
creating the black market which enable all the things resulting in the
violence,
and not the firearms which were around long before and long after alcohol
Prohibition.
Now we have the same scenario, different substances, and the same results of
black market competition. We even have the NRA promoting violation of rights
to
religious use of spiritual drugs, and privacy rights, and in doing so
encouraging a larger situation which proliferates a vicious cycle of need for
defensive tools and calls to ban them as offensive needs also spiral up.
It's simple to end the problem. This time we don't even need a 21st
mendment
to repeal the drug laws. We have so many politicians and large organizations
making 95 million dollars for every 5 million organized crime makes from the
black market that lots of mainstream appearance perpetrators of fraud can't
stand to give up their pretend war, by design unwinnable which is the best
possible kind for preserving an ongoing power and money base.
RTKBA is just a secondary casualty.
Terry
--- Maximus 2.01wb
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* Origin: The more laws there are, the more crime there is. (1:141/1275)
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