[Home]History of Gun Politics

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Revision 5 . . (edit) October 5, 2001 1:22 am by Jimbo Wales
Revision 3 . . (edit) October 5, 2001 1:14 am by Jimbo Wales [First little revision]
  

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Changed: 1c1,7
Guns, and in particular the private ownership of guns, is a contentious political topic around the world, but perhaps especially in the United States.
Guns, and in particular the private ownership of guns, is a contentious political topic around the world, but perhaps especially in the United States, where the Second Amendment guarantees that "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed".

In both the United States and around the world, debates about firearms policy centers on the role of privately owned firearms in crime and crime prevention, as well as on the role of these firearms in the balance of power between governments and the people. See [/Crime and Crime Prevention]? and [/Balance of Power]?

In the United States, the debate is also heavily centered on historical and other claims about the exact meaning of the Second Amendment. Federal courts since 1939 have fairly consistently ruled that the right protected is not an individual right, but a broad consensus of scholars appears to be that this interpretation is novel and not historically accurate.



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