They say that Louis XIV had the inscription Ultima Ratio Regum cast into all the cannon of the French Army. It means “The Ultimate Argument of Kings,” and that always struck me as one of the most honest and up-front things any ruler or would-be ruler ever said. “We can dress it up prettier than this, but when it comes down to the unvarnished truth this is what it’s about: You’ll do as I say or I’ll send my goons to kill you.”
I thought about that for a long time. If there’s an ultimate argument, it seems only logical that there must be an ultimate answer. For years I thought the ultimate answer must be the bullets in my rifle, but it never seemed quite right. I’ve got bullets – he’s got frigging Cannon Balls. I mean, if there were three hundred million rifles throwing bullets at him, then maybe. But we all know that’s not going to happen. So if there’s an ultimate answer to his ultimate argument, it sure as hell ain’t bullets.
It finally came to me – and that’s when I abandoned the city and most of my stuff, and gave all that was behind me a good stiff Randian Shrug.
The ultimate answer to kings is not a bullet, but a belly laugh.
Stupid Cow. Surrounded by twits.
Actually, there’s no great issue with ‘background checks’ per se. Nobody wants to think that they’re selling guns to criminals (except other criminals, which is a definition now-days).
The issues are:
(a) the expense of having to go through a dealer;
(b) the delays and other inconveniences of going through a dealer;
(c) the ipso facto registration of firearms when serial numbers are ‘shared’;
(d) the ignominy of becoming criminals when we don’t kowtow to the clueless politicians;
(e) the insult of a government which automatically assumes we’re all crooks;
(f) the disappointment in a government which ‘assumes’ that Criminals will obey an onerous law.
Other than that .. yeah, sure, I’m fine with that whole “Universal Background Check” thingie.
Hell, if they just deleted the need to include the firearm identification and had a simple online (unmonitored) website where any citizen could check to see if a potential buyer had a flag on firearms purchases, I wouldn’t mind having the resource.
And here I was thinking that people are having to spend WAY too much time asking for permission for every little thing at every turn. Not as in “Mother, may I” – but confronted with the complete spectrum of monopoly of force.
Just who gets to keep and compile this dossier on who has permission to do what and how, and when. Would the use of this dossier absolve one the responsibility to rely on common sense above any other standard? If we voted on it – would that change your mind?
What’s your opinion?