Author Topic: The Myth of Mandatory Training  (Read 476 times)

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Offline FWiedner

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The Myth of Mandatory Training
« on: March 17, 2009, 02:29:36 AM »
Rights activists are shooting themselves in the foot whenever they advocate for mandatory training for concealed carry, and they’re shooting themselves in the foot a lot lately.  There is absolutely no question that all gunowners, especially those who choose to carry in public, need to take their responsibilities seriously and seeking out quality training is just the beginning of the responsibility. 

But legislating training is a seriously bad idea. 

If it is reasonable and prudent to mandate training for concealed carry, why would it not be reasonable and prudent to mandate training for open carry?  If that is reasonable, what about mandating training for anyone wishing to even own a firearm, and mandatory training for anyone who lives in a home with a firearm?  If mandatory training makes sense, then what is the argument against mandatory storage requirements?  The bottom line is that firearm safety is a matter of personal responsibility and that responsibility can not and should not be legislated by government.  Personal responsibility is, by definition, personal.

The idea of mandatory training stems from the huge and disturbing assumption that the people have no common sense of their own and must be led to sensible behavior by the government.

http://www.firearmscoalition.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=360&Itemid=37

Note:  Remember that the favored technique for infringing on human and Constitutional rights is incrementalism.

A gesture of good faith becomes volunteering, volunteering becomes expected, expected becomes required, required becomes mandatory, mandatory becomes law, and law becomes unlawful.

When "do-gooder" pro-gun people give ground to "do-gooder" anti-gun people, they ALWAYS lose ground, not just for themselves, but for all gun owners.  When the enemy dictates the terms, they always dictate surrender.  There is no such animal as "reasonable regulation",  there is only regulation.

 ;)
They may talk of a "New Order" in the  world, but what they have in mind is only a revival of the oldest and worst tyranny.   No liberty, no religion, no hope.   It is an unholy alliance of power and pelf to dominate and to enslave the human race.

Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: The Myth of Mandatory Training
« Reply #1 on: March 17, 2009, 10:52:15 AM »
where i live we have to have traning and pass a test . It has alot of law in the class . I consider it time well spent . We also have to go to class and pass a test to hunt , also not a bad idea as it also has alot of law . You pass a test to drive , to work etc. I don't know about you but i have met quite a few who have little common sense and don't mind them getting a bit of education . If nothing else it takes the " I DIDN"T KNOW " out of their excuse when the screw up .
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline neophyte

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Re: The Myth of Mandatory Training
« Reply #2 on: March 20, 2009, 02:04:56 PM »
 It has already passed the House with massive support. The Senate is Next. Anyone figure the cost of such an effort ? Get out your wallets ! Will we voice our opinions AFTER it becomes LAW ? As a "nation of sheeple" we probably will.

Let's see an "OBAMA YOUTH" Corps  Something familiar about that...at least in a German historical context. Of course we have named it with a PC Acronym calling it the  "GIVE Act"


This is from another source:

"The House passed a bill yesterday which includes disturbing language indicating young people will be forced to undertake mandatory national service programs as fears about President Barack Obama’s promised “civilian national security force” intensify.

The Generations Invigorating Volunteerism and Education Act, known as the GIVE Act, was passed yesterday by a 321-105 margin and now goes to the Senate.  Under section 6104 of the bill, entitled “Duties,” in subsection B6, the legislation states that a commission will be set up to investigate, “Whether a workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement for all able young people could be developed, and how such a requirement could be implemented in a manner that would strengthen the social fabric of the Nation and overcome civic challenges by bringing together people from diverse economic, ethnic, and educational backgrounds.”

Section 120 of the bill also discusses the “Youth Engagement Zone Program” and states that “service learning” will be “a mandatory part of the curriculum in all of the secondary schools served by the local educational agency.”

“The legislation, slated to cost $6 billion over five years, would create 175,000 “new service opportunities” under AmeriCorps, bringing the number of participants in the national volunteer program to 250,000. It would also create additional “corps” to expand the reach of volunteerism into new sectors, including a Clean Energy Corps, Education Corps, Healthy Futures Corps and Veterans Service Corps, and it expands the National Civilian Community Corps to focus on additional areas like disaster relief and energy conservation,” reports Fox News.

The Senate is also considering a similar piece of legislation known as the “Serve America Act,” which also includes language about “Youth Engagement Zones”.

Fears about Obama’s plans to create involuntary servitude were first stoked in July 2008, when Obama told a rally in Colorado Springs, “We cannot continue to rely on our military in order to achieve the national security objectives we’ve set. We’ve got to have a civilian national security force that is just as powerful, just as strong, just as well funded.”

Despite denials that Obama plans to institute a mandatory program of national service, his original change.gov website stated that Americans would be “required” to complete “50 hours of community service in middle school and high school and 100 hours of community service in college every year”. The text was only later changed to state that Americans would be “encouraged” to undertake such programs.

In addition, Obama’s Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel, publicly stated his intention to help create “universal civil defense training” in 2006.

“The bill’s opponents — and there are only a few in Congress — say it could cram ideology down the throats of young “volunteers,” many of whom could be forced into service since the bill creates a “Congressional Commission on Civic Service,” reports Fox.

“We contribute our time and money under no government coercion on a scale the rest of the world doesn’t emulate and probably can’t imagine,” said Luke Sheahan, contributing editor for the Family Security Foundation. “The idea that government should order its people to perform acts of charity is contrary to the idea of charity and it removes the responsibility for charity from the people to the government, destroying private initiative.”

Lee Cary of the conservative American Thinker warns that Obama’s agenda is to, “tap into the already active volunteerism of millions of Americans and recruit them to become cogs in a gigantic government machine grinding out his social re-engineering agenda.”

CFR luminary Gary Hart hit back at critics, claiming in a Huffington Post piece that, “Resistance to expanded public service programs can be expected from the ideologically sclerotic, those who occupy the negative ground between government as the problem and government as our enemy.”