| > To fight an insurrection of its own populace? Right, so the government has all the tanks and bombs they need to blow up their own bridges and structures. Insurgencies don't have separate infrastructure. They use yours. Blowing it up hurts you more than it hurts them. > This has precedent. See Tianamen, Soviet Union sending the tanks to its satellite republics, the Turkey failed coup. Rolling in tanks is purely an intimidation tactic. They're designed to be hard targets that can destroy hard targets, but insurgents don't have hard targets. They use secrecy rather than fortification. To kill them with a tank you would have to know where they are, but if you knew where they were then you could go arrest them rather than doing anything whatsoever with a tank. And even the intimidation value can be one hell of a footgun. Everybody has seen the photos from Tienanmen square of the man standing in the way of the tanks. That kind of iconic imagery is a massive fiasco for government and a major PR win for the opposition. > The only time the federal government can be stopped is to wait 4 years and electing a new president. It's not just about overthrowing the government. It's about making oppressive policies more difficult to implement. It makes it more dangerous for corrupt police to sneak around like criminals without announcing themselves or outright lynch people in the streets, because it leaves people more ability to defend themselves against petty local tyranny as well. Also notice that there is a large racial disparity in who gun control laws restrict from having firearms. > Allowing individuals to own AR-15 has no bearing on 'freedom' from federal attacks. In the case of an outright insurgency it's not about defense, it's about offense. It's about capturing soft targets for their resources. Twenty guys with rifles may not be able to take on an army base, but they can take on car dealerships and hardware stores and chemical plants and then drive off with their stuff. And the obsession with the AR-15 is wholly misplaced. It's used by some bad people because it's used by a lot of people in general. It's popular. That doesn't make it different in any meaningful way from most other rifles, and the attempts to distinguish it immediately devolve into cosmetic differences like whether it has a pistol grip or certain types of mounts for ancillary equipment. |
Isn't this coming back to your point? If you are fighting an insurrection, and start acquiring resources by force, you are losing the will of the people. At some point, your insurrection is just thuggery, returning to the point that guns only benifit criminals.
> It makes it more dangerous for corrupt police to sneak around like criminals without announcing themselves or outright lynch people in the streets, because it leaves people more ability to defend themselves against petty local tyranny as well.
History shows the police murdering people in the street because they happen to have guns. But since they fire dozens of shots against sleeping targets, having guns for defence never helps, and gets you branded as cop killer.
> And the obsession with the AR-15 is wholly misplaced. It's used by some bad people because it's used by a lot of people in general. It's popular.
Completely agree, it's just an example. A gun is a gun.