What would you propose as a better system?
Are you suggesting no government and some wild west style free for all where everyone only looks out for themselves?
Yes, I'm suggesting no government, which provides no services that cannot be provided more effectively, more efficiently, and all around better by a system based entirely on individual rights, largely property rights, and privatized institutions. I'm an anarcho-capitalist. The fundimental truth that taxation is, and cannot be explained as anything but, theft and that the state functions as nothing more than a group that claims the monopoly on the use of force and funds itself through theft and extortion means that it is not merely preferable to replace it, but morally necessary. Of course, pragmatically speaking, I understand this requires a long period of time and so instead simply, in the short term promote a gradual reduction in state power to the point that, eventually, it can be simply eliminated and no one will even seem to notice.
Incidentally, the story of the wild west is a funny one. Despite the popular image,
it was actually largely no more violent or 'wild,' and violence that did erupt has links more to government policy than anything.
I really dislike this false dichotomy of state vs wildness, because anarchy means no rulers, not no rules. The state, given it flagrantly disregards the law and protects some from consequences so much we use that very idea as the butt of jokes, is no more a defender or icon of 'law' than of anything. People work together, people cooperate, people form agreements and contracts and arbitrate disputes without a state holding their hand all the time.
Were you not attempting to shore up the ridiculous notion that firearm ownership serves as a defense against tyranny?
Actually, I was making the point that of the sort of arms necessary for an insurgency, the population is not outgunned. IE: literally read exactly what I wrote. Literally, it's
explicitly what I wrote, and what
you quoted.
The fact that arms are a defense against tyranny is its entirely own animal, linked but distinct.
Interesting. Do you consider the 2nd amendment to be an example of government regulation?
Only in terms it is a regulation against which the government CANNOT do a thing, because explicitly it's about a list of rights people have that the government cannot infringe upon legally or morally. And, further still, those rights are explicitly stated to be things people have that are ENUMERATED but not GRANTED by the constitution.
Incidentally, driving on roads you don't own is regulated. Possessing firearms in a society you don't own should be regulated as well.
This is literally a nonsense statement. Driving on roads you down own is regulated, because logically, you are operating on the property of another entity.
Society is not property. Society is an abstract concept that does not exist. This entire argument is comparing operating a vehicle on lands owned by someone else to possessing an object inside an abstract concept.
Further, logically one could say a government can regulate driving laws because they own the land, they do not own the concept of
society.
Incidentally, there are things I would not want to see for sale to the general public because "buying property is a right". Firearms belong on this list imo.
Yes, it's well established you're an authoritarian who can't back up their view with a rational argument, I know. You don't believe in individual rights, because if you did, this entire argument would collapse, because it requires arbitrary distinctions in rights. Frankly, there are plenty of things I wouldn't want to see folks own, or for general sale, but I recognize the fact that
I have no moral or ethical right to dictate my desires onto other people.
Incidentally, possession of a firearm does not equal self-defense.
Of course not, firearms are merely the most effective tool for it, broadly speaking, and that has more to do with a right to carrying. The right to property is about purchasing or otherwise possessing a firearm.
Incidentally, declaring gun ownership a "human right" is absurd on many levels.
None of which you bother to enumerate, once again failing to make any sort of argument to back up your claims.