Ron Paul sponsors Second Amendment Protection Act

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Support Second Amendment Protection Act
Contact: John M. Snyder, St. Gabriel Possenti Society, Inc, 703-212-9863, info@possentisociety.com


ARLINGTON, Va., Mar. 8 /Standard Newswire/ -- John M. Snyder submits the following for publication, and is available for comment:

One of the most important elements in the ongoing private gun ownership controversy involves the right to self-defense as an underlying reason for the right to keep and bear arms.

From a philosophic perspective, the right to keep and bear arms is a guarantor of the right to self-defense, of the right to life itself. This is probably the major reason defenders of private gun rights regard the Second Amendment as so significant. It is a guarantor of other human rights, especially the right to self-defense, of the very right to life itself.

In recent years, gun grabbers have attempted to undermine this philosophic and often very practical rationale for Americans' gun rights. They have introduced the concept of "sporting use" or "sporting purpose" as a substitute for the right to self-defense rationale for the right to bear arms. Under this substitution, the right to keep and bear arms somehow depends on whether or not there is "a sporting purpose for a firearm," rather than on whether or not an individual's right to self-defense in and of itself is sufficient reason for a right to keep and bear arms.

In addition to the philosophic obtuseness of the argument, on a practical note it simply ignores the millions of times firearms of various types are used each year in the United States for legitimate defensive purposes.

To combat directly this erroneous "sporting purpose" legislative approach, Congressman Ron Paul of Texas recently introduced a measure that would repeal provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and the federal criminal code distinguishing firearms used or suitable for sporting purposes from firearms generally.

The Paul bill would do much to eliminate the "sporting purpose" rationale from the equation and restore the right to self-defense rationale to its rightful place.

Titled the Second Amendment Protection Act of 2007, the bill, H.R. 1096, has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee and in addition to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

Even though the powers that be in the U.S. House of Representatives at the present time are not favorably disposed towards the right of self-defense rationale for the right to bear arms, House leaders should realize that tens of millions of law-abiding American gun owners see matters from the same perspective as that contemplated by the Paul bill.
 
Ron Paul is a fine man, but he is not the right guy to deal with foreign policy. And he is an advocate of the ridiculous isolationist policies embraced by the libertarian party.

He voted against the war in Iraq. He's also unwilling to confront the threats that Iran poses, and he'd be unwilling to use force there.

I will not support him for the Presidency and I'd recommend others do the same.
 
Dr. Paul has no real chance of winning the nomination anyway. What I hope is that his leadership in Congress will spur Republicans to avoid nominating gun-control advocates like Giuliani, while at the same time encouraging people like Newt to run on a platform that includes gun rights.
 
I'm not convinced that Gulliani is as liberal as some would like to make him out to be. I grew up in New York. I remember getting in very heated debates while I was in grade school supporting his run against Mayor Kock and David Dinkins.

At the end of the day, he's a strong executive that uses what ever tools are available to him. But he is a constitutionally minded conservative. But if ridiculous gun laws are in place, he'll use those laws to his advantage.

He supported Bush, if elected he'll nominate guys like Alito and Roberts to the court, and he knows how to deal with a very adversarial press. He's not perfect, but I'm leaning in his direction. But I've also been following him for about 20 years.

Gingrich probably isn't running, I'm also not sure what the fallout from his admission he was cheating on his wife during the impeachment will have on a potential run. He might have been clearing out the dirty launder to preempt the story.
 
I'm not convinced that Gulliani is as liberal as some would like to make him out to be. I grew up in New York. I remember getting in very heated debates while I was in grade school supporting his run against Mayor Kock and David Dinkins.

At the end of the day, he's a strong executive that uses what ever tools are available to him. But he is a constitutionally minded conservative. But if ridiculous gun laws are in place, he'll use those laws to his advantage.

He supported Bush, if elected he'll nominate guys like Alito and Roberts to the court, and he knows how to deal with a very adversarial press. He's not perfect, but I'm leaning in his direction. But I've also been following him for about 20 years.

Gingrich probably isn't running, I'm also not sure what the fallout from his admission he was cheating on his wife during the impeachment will have on a potential run. He might have been clearing out the dirty launder to preempt the story.

I'm convinced he's a liberal. He used the gun control laws to his advantage instead of attempting to help out the gun owners. There is no indication that he would veto any gun legislation passed by a liberal Congress, nor would he actively attempt to repeal gun legislation already on the books, which badly needs to be done.

He is pro-abortion, and I have no confidence that he would appoint strict constructionist justices who would strike down Roe v. Wade, which sorely needs to be done.

Lieberman supported Bush, so what? I wouldn't vote for him no matter what. He's a card-carrying liberal, although more liberal than Giuliani.

Newt's personal life hasn't been as bad as Clinton's, or Clinton's cabinet for that matter. What we need to do is revive the old "what somebody does in their personal life is nobody else's business" line and pound it down the left's throats.
 

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