Toby
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Registered: Jul 2000
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Posts: 3034 |
quote: Originally posted by Rob
I think you are missing my point. Advocating resistence (armed resistence no less) without specifying what 'particular thing' they are justified in resisting makes no sense.
No, I didn't miss that. I just think it's manufactured from whole cloth. I never advocated armed resistance to anything.quote: Let's look at the quotes again: Let's.quote: "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." --Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennyslvania, 1759
In this case, Ben warns against giving up "essential liberty", not ANY liberty (e.g. everyone SHOULD give up the freedom to arbitrarily kill anyone they want) Your freedom to swing your fist ends just before it comes into contact with my nose. Other than that, swing away.quote: "The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive." --Thomas Jefferson
Note he says "on certain occasions". He didn't say "resist the government in all things at all times" Nor did I.quote: "And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. ... The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." - Thomas Jefferson
Again, "from time to time" people should take up arms to 'refresh' the 'tree of liberty'. Not all the time, and presumably not without some good reason(s). That should've gone without saying. I'm not sure where you're drawing these assumptions about what I think from.quote: So I ask again, do you want everyone to feel more rebellious and resist the government in all things? No, but I'm not sure why this is relevant.quote: In whatever it is they personally dislike, regardless of whether it is just or not? That depends on the circumstances and methods.quote: The problem with these quotes is that they can be applied too broadly, since they lack an explicit context and target no specific injustice. No, that's the problem with people applying the quotes. They were definitely said within a certain context. I'm not a history teacher, though, so I've not the time to get into it.quote: Timothy McVeigh could use these quotes to justify the Oklahoma City bombing (for all I know, he DID quote Franklin and Jefferson). AAMOF, he was wearing a t-shirt with the Jefferson tyrants quote on the back (and "Sic semper tyrranis" on the front).quote: I doubt that these founders intended their words to be applied haphazardly or generically. They surely didn't. However, they also didn't intend for the populace to roll over and beg for a Patriarchal system of government.quote: At the time, the liberties they were trying to protect involved things like taxation (and other restrictions) without representation. Ironic considering D.C.'s situation, eh?quote: Their heated rhetoric grew out of a context of what they considered tyranny and oppression from the remote British crown. Is our situation in the U.S. today analogous to their situation? In some respects, it might be.quote: Do we face the same threats, the same tyranny and oppression from the federal government? Ask some of the people of Arab descent who've lost habeus corpus.
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