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DM Says No Powergaming?
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<blockquote data-quote="MNblockhead" data-source="post: 8872686" data-attributes="member: 6796661"><p>"Broke the pattern" may be stretching it a bit. The first amendment was an attempt to codify what many of the founding fathers understood as a right protected under British common law. That was one of the grievances of the colonists. They were not being afforded the same rights as British citizens and felt they had an inherent right as Englishmen to keep and bear arms. The English Bill of Rights of 1689 declared certain "true, ancient and indubitable rights," including: "That the subjects which are Protestants, may have Arms for their Defense suitable to their Condition, and are allowed by Law." Putting the colonies under martial law and attempting to disarm them, were among the main grievances that led to the Revolutionary war. </p><p></p><p>Whether to subsequent constitutional protections in the American consitution broke a pattern, I don't know. History is long and complicated. Aristotle and Circero both wrote of the need for free citizens to be armed, not only for self-defense but as a protection against tyranny. To what extent those rights were ever codified in Greek city states or the Roman Republic, I don't know.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MNblockhead, post: 8872686, member: 6796661"] "Broke the pattern" may be stretching it a bit. The first amendment was an attempt to codify what many of the founding fathers understood as a right protected under British common law. That was one of the grievances of the colonists. They were not being afforded the same rights as British citizens and felt they had an inherent right as Englishmen to keep and bear arms. The English Bill of Rights of 1689 declared certain "true, ancient and indubitable rights," including: "That the subjects which are Protestants, may have Arms for their Defense suitable to their Condition, and are allowed by Law." Putting the colonies under martial law and attempting to disarm them, were among the main grievances that led to the Revolutionary war. Whether to subsequent constitutional protections in the American consitution broke a pattern, I don't know. History is long and complicated. Aristotle and Circero both wrote of the need for free citizens to be armed, not only for self-defense but as a protection against tyranny. To what extent those rights were ever codified in Greek city states or the Roman Republic, I don't know. [/QUOTE]
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