Free: Contests & Raffles.
This isn't a 2A thing, this is to enable our military arms industry to sell guns and land mines and such all around the world. It is a pro business boon plain and simple.
Quote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 05:18:42 PMThis isn't a 2A thing, this is to enable our military arms industry to sell guns and land mines and such all around the world. It is a pro business boon plain and simple.I disagree.There are several elements of that treaty that would trample our 2A rights.Read the treaty - not the articles - and then get back to me if you disagree.
NRA fights for gun manufacturers not Joe schmoe with a conceal carry permit.
Quote from: Dan-o on April 27, 2019, 06:51:52 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 05:18:42 PMThis isn't a 2A thing, this is to enable our military arms industry to sell guns and land mines and such all around the world. It is a pro business boon plain and simple.I disagree.There are several elements of that treaty that would trample our 2A rights.Read the treaty - not the articles - and then get back to me if you disagree. Dan-o is 100% correct. The UN wants our guns, read the treaty!
Quote from: bearpaw on April 27, 2019, 07:00:53 PMQuote from: Dan-o on April 27, 2019, 06:51:52 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 05:18:42 PMThis isn't a 2A thing, this is to enable our military arms industry to sell guns and land mines and such all around the world. It is a pro business boon plain and simple.I disagree.There are several elements of that treaty that would trample our 2A rights.Read the treaty - not the articles - and then get back to me if you disagree. Dan-o is 100% correct. The UN wants our guns, read the treaty! No it's not the UN that wants our guns. Obummer and the libs knew there was little chance in changing our constitution or 2A rights, so they have been looking for ways around it. This treaty was nothing more than a attempt to circumvent the constitution....period!
Quote from: elkchaser54 on April 27, 2019, 09:47:13 PMNRA fights for gun manufacturers not Joe schmoe with a conceal carry permit. Show me another organization the provides Personal Firearms Liability Insurance or supplemental loss insurance like Armscare..... especially at their prices.And it is the NRA that takes on fights all across the nation when states get to wanting to restrict our gun rights.You don't have to like every decision they make, but to say the NRA doesn't fight for Joe Schmoe with a conceal permit.......? I disagree.
Quote from: Dan-o on April 28, 2019, 12:15:36 AMQuote from: elkchaser54 on April 27, 2019, 09:47:13 PMNRA fights for gun manufacturers not Joe schmoe with a conceal carry permit. Show me another organization the provides Personal Firearms Liability Insurance or supplemental loss insurance like Armscare..... especially at their prices.And it is the NRA that takes on fights all across the nation when states get to wanting to restrict our gun rights.You don't have to like every decision they make, but to say the NRA doesn't fight for Joe Schmoe with a conceal permit.......? I disagree.The National Field Archery Association (NFAA) has personal liability insurance as part of the membership. NRA isn't the only one to go to court to fight gun control around the country and anyone could challenge new laws on the 2A, though it would be expensive for an individual. NRA scaremonger tactics and 'more guns' approach to every problem will be their end (along with their trouble with ethics).
Quote from: Dan-o on April 27, 2019, 06:51:52 PMQuote from: SuperX on April 27, 2019, 05:18:42 PMThis isn't a 2A thing, this is to enable our military arms industry to sell guns and land mines and such all around the world. It is a pro business boon plain and simple.I disagree.There are several elements of that treaty that would trample our 2A rights.Read the treaty - not the articles - and then get back to me if you disagree.Save me some time and give me chapter and verse where it says anyone can take your guns. EDIT: Thought you may have meant newspaper articles not treaty articles so I deleted my comment about only reading part not all of the treaty. Give me the location of that trampling language and I'll read it and apologize if you're right. Funny though, not a word about this has come out and the treaty has been in the works for years... maybe it's because both the president and the NRA need a distraction??
Defenders of the ATT commonly argue that the treaty sets a minimum standard that is lower than the existing U.S. standard for arms exports.4“Advancing the Arms Trade Treaty: An Interview with U.S. ATT Negotiator Thomas Countryman,” Arms Control Association, April 1, 2014, https://www.armscontrol.org/act/2014_04/Advancing-the-Arms-Trade-Treaty_An-Interview-With-U-S-ATT-Negotiator-Thomas-Countryman (accessed February 14, 2018). They therefore conclude the ATT will have no effect on U.S. policy. This argument is incorrect. The standards at the heart of the ATT are not set in stone: The definitions of crimes against humanity, IHL, and IHRL will evolve over time. By signing the ATT, the U.S. has committed itself to changing its practices as the standards that define the ATT change. Were the U.S. to ratify the ATT, that commitment would be even firmer. The ATT is, in effect, an escalator: Once you step onto it, you are no longer in control of your direction of travel.For example, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres reportedly intends to start international negotiations to end the “use of explosives in urban areas.”5Tom Miles, “Exclusive: U.N. Chief Plans Major Disarmament Push But U.S. Skeptical,” Reuters, February 7, 2018, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-un-arms-exclusive/exclusive-u-n-chief-plans-major-disarmament-push-but-u-s-skeptical-idUSKBN1FR1SF (accessed February 14, 2018). If these negotiations change the definition of IHL as it is understood by nations, scholars, and lawyers, then the meaning of the ATT will also have changed, as will the policies the U.S. has to follow to implement the treaty. It is important to remember that, at least in intent, treaties are forever. The question the U.S. must always consider is not merely whether a treaty is bad now, but whether it could be used—or could evolve—in ways detrimental to U.S. interests in the future.In fact, progressive activists openly acknowledge that they want to use international law and evolving international norms to change U.S. policy, U.S. law, and even existing interpretations of the U.S. Constitution. In 2012, State Department Legal Advisor Harold Koh, a former Dean of Yale Law School and a renowned progressive legal activist, stated approvingly that “twenty-first century international lawmaking has become a swirling interactive process whereby norms get ‘uploaded’ from one country into the international system, and then ‘downloaded’ elsewhere into another country’s laws or even a private actor’s internal rules.”6Ted R. Bromund, “The U.N. Arms Trade Treaty and the Gun Grab,” Heritage Foundation Commentary, March 5, 2013, https://www.heritage.org/commentary/the-un-arms-trade-treaty-and-the-gun-grab.Under this approach, the U.S. government is not merely—or even not primarily—supposed to transmit the choices of the American people into the world at large: It is supposed to receive the views of the world at large and transmit them to (or enforce them upon) the American people. In the context of the ATT, that “swirling interactive process” could be used to “download” norms that would change the meaning of the Second Amendment or the definition of IHL.