As usual Mark has got to the heart of the matter.bennedose wrote:I don't live in the US but I believe that US laws are very strict, for all the liberal gun laws. For example a person who has a concealed carry permit, if stopped by the police, must declare that he has a concealed carry permit and show it. In other circumstances that law allows an offcier to shoot if he feels he is under threat from a person carrying a gun.Mark wrote:Personally I do not believe that a person undergoes some great increase in intelligence OR morality when they assume a position of power and authority. This goes for the entire planet.
As for a person legally carrying concealed, whether they have to automatically declare possession to law enforcement, depends on the laws of the state where the stop is made. For example, in Minnesota, there is no duty to inform on being stopped but if the Officer asks you, you have to tell him the truth. In some states, you automatically have to tell the cops that you are armed if you are stopped.
If an officer is faced with deadly force, he has the right to respond in kind. In general, if you don't threaten an officer with a weapon, you will most likely survive the encounter. I have been pulled over a few times and am still around to talk about it.
Actually you will be surprised at how minimal the training of some officers is, especially their firearms training. Many citizens are better trained in handling firearms, especially where accuracy is concerned. Any citizen of the US has the right to self defense. If he is unlawfully threatened with deadly force, he has the right to respond in kind. Citizens also regularly kill armed men threatening them. The US citizen even has the power to make a citizens arrest. Remember, in the US, the cops are civilians too.To me this means that a great deal of responibility is vested in police officers in the US. Those offciers go through rigorous training and presumaby psychological assessement before they actually are allowed to prowl about with weapons. And police in America regularly kill armed men presumed to be threatening the police, making it perfectly clear to the public that they do not have the same powers as the police do.
There are way more guns in the hands of US citizens than all the police forces combined. The US Armed Forces may have more powerful firepower than the average citizen but they are prevented by law from performing law enforcement duties on US soil. Remember also, that only about one percent of citizens have served in the US armed forces today.In all societies through history it was the goons with the greatest firepower that ruled. In democracies the goons are elected and given the firepower they need to rule. That firepower is necessarily higher than what the ruled can bring to bear on the rulers. The US police and armed forces necessarily have much more firepower than the entire civilian population. So legal systems even in the most "free" models ensure inequality in weapon armament in favor of government, with the unstated conclusion being that government really is more responsible in its decision to use arms than the lay public.
The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 says:
As GBM said, the founders of the USA, tried very hard to think of all the situations where goons could take over and run the country as has happened elsewhere.From and after the passage of this act it shall not be lawful to employ any part of the Army of the United States, as a posse comitatus, or otherwise, for the purpose of executing the laws, except in such cases and under such circumstances as such employment of said force may be expressly authorized by the Constitution or by act of Congress; and no money appropriated by this act shall be used to pay any of the expenses incurred in the employment of any troops in violation of this section.......
Generally if you break the law in the US, you will get caught. If you get caught you will face punishment, regardless of who your daddy is. You cannot buy your way out of it. A law enforcement official taking a bribes is a very rare thing. That keeps the vast majority of people honest. In India, with the number of law enforcement officials being so low (per capita), it is easy to break the law and not get caught. In India, if daddy is a powerful person or very rich, you can use influence or buy your way out of the situation in some cases. For example, do you want to stop indiscriminate celebratory firing at weddings? All you have to do is to stake out a few weddings at random, and when they fire into the air, confiscate their guns, arrest the individuals responsible and make them serve jail time. Do this enough times and people will get the message and this behavior will stop.