Vindicarre wrote:
I can understand your confusion, as there are multiple factors that are contributing to and exacerbating it:
1) You are attempting to create a parallel between exercising 1st Amendment rights by committing an abuse against someone (libel), with exercising 2nd Amendment rights by owning a gun. The difference there is rather obvious. A person owning a gun harms no one. A person committing libel harms the person being defamed (as intended).
Yeah, except I'm not. I'm discussing the fact that all rights have limits on them, and some of those limits are dictated by our laws.
Vindicarre wrote:
2) You are ignoring the fact that I explicitly stated that the legitimate exercise of one's rights only extend so far as they don't impede the legitimate exercise of another's.
Nope, not ignoring that, I'm just not commenting on it specifically because I think we both agree that it falls under the title of "no ****".
Vindicarre wrote:
3) You are mistakenly conflating our duly elected representatives codifying where one person's exercise of their rights infringes on another's, with private citizens thinking they are entitled to say who can exercise their rights and to what extent. In the case of libel, our representatives have codified where one person's speech is deliberately causing harm to another. You have the right to be free from malicious false attacks, you do not have the right to be free from someone purchasing a gun.
I'm curious how you think that laws begin? Or how our government works. I seem to recall something about "of the people, for the people and by the people". Point being that laws are created because there is need (real or imagined) by the people and they work through their elected representatives to make it happen.
It should also be noted that there is no right in the Constitution to be free from malicious false attacks. Your perception of that right comes from the fact that our government decided to limit the 1st Amendment.
Vindicarre wrote:
4) You are deliberately taking one sentence out of context and attempting to create a conflict where none exists.
Perhaps, but there really isn't much context to take your sentence out of. The rest is just the usual gun advocate diatribe that they are for freedom and gun control people are evil.
Vindicarre wrote:
The idea that some people think they are entitled to say who can exercise their Constitutional Rights, and to what extent, repulses me. Gun control advocates use their fear in an attempt to limit or remove those rights for others, but in many cases, have no problem exercising those very rights for their own benefit. Gun rights advocates, on the other hand, attempt to protect those rights for all.
My entire point is that all rights have boundaries. Some of those are the obvious yours end where mine begins, but there are others that are placed in different places by our society.
Vindicarre wrote:
It would be more conducive to ask, seeking clarification, about things that cause you confusion rather than making declamatory statements, that come off as an attempt at snark; if you are interested in clearing up what confusion you may have.
A fair point. I get frustrated with the "but it's the 2nd Amendment" argument because it gets held up as a sacred cow and a cursory review of all the other rights in the Constitution and comparing them to our legal system will show that EVERY Amendment has limitations put on them, based on centuries of society tweaking the laws to what we thought was "right".
Now, you can absolutely argue your case that you think such a ruling like limits on magazine size is stupid, wrong, misguided or otherwise. (Like I have done, I might add) But coming out with some blanket appeal to the 2nd Amendment is more or less the equivalent to pulling a Godwin's as far as I'm concerned.
All that said, you do a better job than most at least trying to understand the opposing viewpoint and you deserve better. I'll endeavor to remember that in the future.