gdanaher wrote:The proposed treaty would regulate the sale of weapons to nations in crisis both militarily and in terms of human rights. The UN concern is that every minute, someone in these various countries, largely Africa and the Middle East, dies from violent combative gun fire. The goal is to prevent the sale to and distribution of weapons to those nations. Unless you are in the business of selling AK's to Somalia, you probably don't have much to worry about here.
I don't worry about this treaty with regard to the U.S., but I still think it is evil. Aren't these same restrictions aimed at preventing the victims from being able to arm themselves against the predators? If the UN and this proposed treaty had been in existence in the late 18th century, it would have been against international law for France to ship arms to the American colonies, while it would have been perfectly legal for the crown to send German mercenaries and German weapons to the colonies to suppress the revolution.
About half of the extra-legal killings in third world nations are done either by organized crime/narco-traffickers and/or tribal internecine conflicts (Rwanda). Most of the rest are done by repressive governments seeking to wipe out a religious minority (Darfur). If the UN bill passes and is accepted and enforced worldwide, those that already
have the guns will not stop killing those that don't........but it sounds like you're in favor of that status quo if you support this treaty.
OldCannon wrote:Perhaps you're forgetting that China has clearly stated that our prolific gun ownership is a huge human rights issue?
Next objection?
And if I recall correctly, is not China now a permanent member of the UN Security Council?
Here's the truth underlying all of this....... The UN regards itself as the natural heir of world government, and most of its energies in the past 20-30 years have been directed against the idea of national sovereignty, and in favor of the primacy of international law, and in favor of the UN as the natural choice to administer and enforce those laws. It views its own international deliberative body as having greater legitimacy and sovereignty than those of its member nations. Thus, it promotes treaty after treaty after treaty, all aimed at constraining its member nations, and the intent/effect of these agreements is to further tread on human rights rather than promote them.
Here is a corollary: The U.S. is nearly unique among all of the member nations by having a right to keep and bear arms enshrined in its Constitution. Here in the U.S., gun owners rightly and correctly make the argument that the answer to crime isn't to disarm lawful gun owners, but rather to
enforce existing laws against those who use guns in crimes, and actually
punish them for such use, by means of a punishment so severe that most such criminals would never want to commit such a crime again. Thusly, the right of the people to keep and bear arms remains uninfringed, and criminals are rewarded their just deserts. We also maintain that if we disarm law-abiding gun owners then only law-breakers will have guns.
We maintain these truths to be self-evident. We believe this so strongly that we assert that anyone who cannot accept this fundamental truth is living in a state of denial.
So if this is a fundamental truth which is self-evident, then
why on earth is it any less true in Rwanda or Darfur than it is in Poughkipsie or Houston? And yet, the ultimate aim of this UN treaty is to cut guns off at the source so that law-abiders in the world's trouble spots will no longer be able to lawfully defend themselves against predators, and otherwise peaceful civilians of one religious tradition will no longer be able to defend themselves against a predatory government of people from another religious tradition. Hutus will be able to slaughter Tutsies until the end of time, and Tutsies will no longer have access to the weapons that will give them parity and the ability to protect their families.
Furthermore, when the UN succeeds in outlawing the sale of guns into troubled regions, then the UN alone will control the flow of guns to where they are most needed. If the UN were to actually act justly, it would reprimand those member nations whose governments practice genocide, boot them out, and punish them by
encouraging the flow of guns to rebel forces. Instead, it accepts them as members of the UN's own High Council on Human Rights. And this is the same UN that you want to entrust with gun control?
Like most "well-intentioned" pieces of legislation, this UN treaty has gravely irresponsible consequences, and it is thus, evil. As they say, the road to Hades is paved with the bones of the well-intentioned.