I view the licensing of a right or taxation to exercise it as a serious infringement to that right and one that should not exist on constitutional grounds.
I do not view my fellow citizen's ownership of ANY weapon falling under the "small arms" classification to be a threat to my person.
I view people who tell me how I should exercise a right to be tyrants who are the antithesis of the preservation of a free state. A person who will dictate to me how many rounds my firearm can shoot in a given time frame, how many rounds it can hold, what sort of devices can be attached to the muzzle, what configuration the stock is in, and what color the gun is, is a person who will also tell me what I should and shouldn't say, what thoughts are socially acceptable for me to think, what religion is tolerable for me to follow, what I can and can't put in my mouth, who I can copulate with, and so on. And that is not freedom or liberty. That is subjegation.
I would rather live in a United States where you can buy a full-auto Thompson, MP-5, or whatever, carry a handgun concealed or out in the open for all the world to see wherever you want to carry it, have as much ammo as you want, and so on than the United States I live in now, where people are all too willing to usurp my liberty for their self-centered sense of security.
As long as my fellow American doesn't threaten me with a loaded machine gun, how is his or her ownership of that gun or even bearing it in public a threat to my liberty, pursuit of happiness, or personal safety?
Whatever the individual weapons of the common military service person is in this country, I should be able to buy them, keep them, and bear them, anywhere within this country's territotial limits, without having to ask permission from the government, beg government for a license, or pay government some additional punitive taxation for the "privilage" of exercising a right.
The way this is supposed to work is that even if a minority think the common citizen should be allowed to keep and a bear a full-auto MP-5, their right to do so is protected from the feelings, attitudes, and beliefs of a majority who do not agree. That is the difference between capricious "democracy" and republican democracy predicated on the rule of law, rather than the rule of current public opinion.
JP