Importance of the Second Amendment

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It’s one of the most controversial topics at the moment. Each side of the argument has valid concerns, but at what point do we drop our own personal fears and allow a parent to protect their child, a woman to protect herself on the way to her car after a hard day of work, or a proprietor to stop a robbery? Do we say that honest men and women can’t legally own a gun, and take the guns away from law-abiding citizens, but not from the criminals? To carry a gun or not should be a personal choice, and one that should not be taken lightly, because it is in fact, a deadly weapon. The legal right to carry a weapon should always exist. That right shouldn’t be taken away from the millions of Americans who have been following the laws for decades, because of the handful that want to abuse the freedom. But the right to carry a weapon, which our Founding Fathers found so important that they wrote it it as the second amendment to our Constitution, should be preserved for this generation, and the next. Those first ten amendments, known as the Bill of Rights, are there to protect our freedoms from a tyrannical government, so why now, after all of the wars fought to protect those rights, are we going to surrender those rights? Do we tell the hundreds of thousands of American soldiers who died preserving our freedoms that they gave a good effort, but that we’re just going to disregard their bravery, and their life that was lost? I agree that not just anyone should be able to carry a gun, I think that there should be limitations, just as there are with any law. Gun owners should be trained in safety, and pass criminal and mental background checks. There are those who think that passing laws to restrict gun ownership will cause those disregarding th... ... middle of paper ... ...e, the food that so many Americans place on the table for their families, it pays for medical advances through tax dollars, and it pays for those life saving medical advances through a salary. Gun shop owners and gun owners alike are not “bad” people, they’re merely Americans exercising their right that we should all, and always have. The same rights that we were given over two hundred years ago; the right to bear arms. Works Cited "9/11: Events of the Day." 9/11. National September 11 Memorial & Museum, n.d. Web. 24 Nov. 2013. Gorner, Jeremy, and Peter Nickeas. "Chicago Police Confirm 'tragic Number' of 500 Homicides." Chicago Tribune. N.p., 28 Dec. 2012. Web. 19 Nov. 2013. "Second Amendment." LII. Cornell University Law School, n.d. Web. 20 Nov. 2013. Templeton, Tom, and Tom Lumley. "9/11 in Numbers." The Guardian. N.p., 17 Aug. 2002. Web. 20 Nov. 2013.

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