"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
I am just curious what does this convoluted sentence mean to you?
Many people seem to act as if there is a hidden if somewhere in there and read it as "if a militia is necessary to the security of the country then people can keep some guns. But, since it isn't you can't have guns."
I find two fallacies in the above view. One, there is no if. The founders were certain that arming the people was needed. Two, people read Arms as if it means guns. It doesn't. Arms means weapons.
So where did the "IF" come from? Where did the limitation from weapons to guns come from?
			
			I am just curious what does this convoluted sentence mean to you?
Many people seem to act as if there is a hidden if somewhere in there and read it as "if a militia is necessary to the security of the country then people can keep some guns. But, since it isn't you can't have guns."
I find two fallacies in the above view. One, there is no if. The founders were certain that arming the people was needed. Two, people read Arms as if it means guns. It doesn't. Arms means weapons.
So where did the "IF" come from? Where did the limitation from weapons to guns come from?
				
		
			