GreyICE wrote: The goal of gun control legislation is to indirectly drive down the number of illegal firearms and illegal uses of firearms by reducing the number of legal firearms.
That theory only does so much. It's very easy to get illegal firearms on a thriving black market, and so long as
any firearms are available legally (and for a long time afterwords, given that they don't spoil like produce), there's going to be a black market for them. Even if all gun shops were closed tomorrow and all factories shut down and all guns declared illegal, there's still many millions of firearms out there. So total gun control isn't a practical option, even if many consider it to be something of an idealistic one.
It's always been about where to draw the line. To get a little semantic: the 2nd Amendment doesn't say a thing about guns - it talks about a right to bear arms. But flamethrowers are arms. So are grenades and artillery pieces and nuclear missiles. And there are some individuals who could no doubt afford to own even the most destructive arms. I don't think even the most "freedom-loving" pro-gun NRA nut would think it's a good idea for someone like Bill Gates to be able to buy himself a ballistic missile submarine complete with a few dozen D-5 nukes just because he can. Along the same lines, should I be able to purchase a rocket launcher or a flamethrower? I'm sure I could afford them. But the answer should be no. This is where semantic thought has to end, and realism has to take over. Letting people own their own rocket launchers is a ridiculously gratuitous interpretation of the 2nd Amendment. So, how about assault rifles? Also a little loony, but there's some grey area there. How about handguns? Not so ridiculous, that's a real debate. For self-defense purposes, that's about where the "bearing arms" line is for civilians today. And the reasons for this line are based on the history of the US, and for that matter, the history of North America.
This brings up the discussion about why that line in the US is where it is, with much more lenient gun ownership laws than many other advanced nations. The 2nd Amendment was drawn up at a time when there was a wild frontier, no professional police forces in the cities, and when some farmers with muskets could make a real dent if they went up against a professional army; a legitimate concern given how weak the young US was compared to other major powers. None of these things are really true today. This bring up the other part of the 2nd Amendment text that the NRA doesn't really like to mention as much as the "right to bear arms", the necessity of a "well-regulated militia". There are some other parts of the Constitution we've recognized as obsolete and unrealistic (the 3/5 Compromise, voting rights for women, etc.). I'm not advocating repeal of the 2nd Amendment, but why is it so hard for so many Americans to be modern and realistic about what it really means?
Anyway, I'm just rambling a train of thought. And Ted Nugent is an idiot.