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Kelly J
12-11-2008, 11:43 PM
By Jeff Knox
Page 4

http://www.firearmscoalition.org


Copy this short article and paste it into every firearms related forum and every blog you can find!
Watch the media - both the gun media and the LameStream media - and pound them every time they use the word "allow" or other language that turns your rights into privileges. The word "allow" is the most obvious offence, but any language which requests permission rather than demanding that infringements be stopped, is part of the problem.
Every day that we allow the media and pundits to minimize the Heller decision by making it about something which is "allowed," rather than the rights we possess, we are losing ground and making the job of regaining rights more difficult.
Here is the pertinent section of the original article:
What really bothers me about the word ‘allow’ is the way it is so commonly used in the fight for gun rights; a CCW allows one to carry a gun, we should be allowed to carry in National Parks, the Post Office does not allow guns in their buildings, etc. The problem with these statements and their use of the word ‘allow’ is that they imply authority and privilege and shift the burden of proof in the debate.
The burden of proof in any argument which contains the word ‘allow’ falls on the side of the one seeking the allowance. If a group seeks to ban guns in libraries, the burden of proof is on those seeking the ban; it is incumbent upon them to prove that guns should be banned. Opponents of the ban retain the position of strength defending the status quo.
If the opponents of the ban make the mistake of arguing that guns should be allowed in libraries, they lose the advantage and the burden of proof immediately shifts to their side of the scales, requiring them to justify the presence of firearms in libraries.
Instead of defending an existing right, the word ‘allow’ places rights advocates in the position of requesting a special privilege. It is impossible to effectively demand to be allowed to exercise a right. The demand must be that rights be unimpaired or that existing restrictions or impingements on rights be removed.
The Second Amendment does not allow citizens to own guns. The government does not allow me to worship as I please. The President does not allow me to own property…
The Second Amendment expresses my right to own guns. The government recognizes my right to worship. And the President may not unduly restrict my right to property.
Rights can never be allowed and anything that is allowed is not a right.
Why is this important? Because through use of the word allow, gun rights advocates have allowed themselves to become supplicants seeking favors rather than holding the high ground as the guardians of liberty that they should be. This one word devolves a right into a privilege, a citizen to a supplicant, and shifts the burden of proof from those seeking to restrict rights to those trying to expand privileges. What’s worse, it becomes an invisible trap that makes us believe that we’re moving forward when we’re actually just positioning ourselves for a rapid decent down a slippery slope of our own making.
Consider the following statement: Citizens should be allowed to carry concealed handguns without having to get a permit.
What that functionally says is that the government should grant citizens the privilege of carrying concealed handguns without a documentation process. Is it a privilege or a right?
What that statement should say is: Government requiring a permit for concealed carry is a violation of rights and a waste of resources.
In the mid 1970’s Howard K. Smith presented an editorial on the 60 Minutes television show pointing out the mistake of journalists using the word ‘credit’ when referring to terrorists claiming responsibility for their acts. Smith rightly pointed out that ‘credit’ implies value and journalists should never give any such suggestion of value to the actions of terrorists. From the date of that broadcast to the present, the word ‘credit’ has almost completely disappeared from reports on terrorism.
Let us similarly remove the word ‘allow’ from the vocabulary of the gun rights movement except where it is used to question why we allow government to infringe on our God given and constitutional rights.
The first step toward that goal is to educate each other by widely reposting this article!


http://www.firearmscoalition.org

jlb300
12-12-2008, 09:21 AM
we neet to be careful of language that is in any bill or idea that this next 2 years and maybe beyond will be introduced through our government

Kelly J
12-12-2008, 10:48 AM
we neet to be careful of language that is in any bill or idea that this next 2 years and maybe beyond will be introduced through our government


The Difference between Stipid, and Ignorant

Stupid: The inability to learn, (IE The Government)

Ignorant: The lack of Knowledge (IE The Government)