The Supreme Court does not want to rule on issues like this because it sets a precedent from which there is no return. A good example is Michael Newdow's attempt to have the words Under God and In God We Trust removed from the pledge of allegiance and our currency, if they decide on this it will have serious effects either way it goes. On the one hand it could make this a conflict with our constitution regarding the separation of God and state. On the other hand if it went the other way it could mean the removal of the word God from most every thing in public.
Want a good chuckle? Check out Dumb Laws. Now here are some law that need changing!
Exactly where in the Constitution is the separation of God and state, or even church and state, mentioned? The only thing I can specifically come up with is the First Amendment, which simply states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;" regarding the topic. The major mention of this kind of separation is usually drawn from a letter written by Thomas Jefferson to a group of churchmen as an explanation of why the Government wouldn't act to shut down a specific branch of the church. (I think the clergy in question actually wanted the government to act in this case, but I can't recall offhand.)
I'll have to check out those laws at some point; those kinds of lists are always humorous.
How would products be shipped across the country without trucks? How would people get to work without cars and schools without buses? Economy would fail.
Most products wouldn't be; a few could be shipped by plane, I suppose, although then you'd have to have farms (or buggy stops?) built exceedingly close to the airports, or else airports built close to the farms. I suppose an alternative would be to go back to mass rail transit for cross-country details. Still, the vast majority of such goods, especially perishables, would have to be used in the same locality as they were raised/made.
In this day and age, a large number of jobs might be able to continue from home (note: Not all of them, and some of those that can't are critical [manufacturing for example]), with the internet or similar local networks serving the company infrastructure.
And as to schools, we'd have to go back to the era when most students went to local area or neighborhood schools, instead of being bussed to the other side of town. [<sarcasm>Oh, horror!</sarcasm>] We ought to do this one anyway; it's a useful way to build pride in one's neighborhood and local surroundings. Schools would probably get better treatment if most of those who lived near them had a personal incentive [again, local pride] to keep them in good condition.
The NRA were pretty gay. Like I've said this whole thread, watch Bowling For Columbine. Michael Moore actually confronts the president of the NRA about why he went to the town of Columbine the same week as the shooting.... and if you'll watch, he's very hesitant to answer questions and doesn't really have a logical explanation for anything. He's very rude. I mean I know people love guns, but that guy is obsessed.
From what I've read, Michael Moore basically ambushed Charlton Heston about the issue early one morning, without letting Heston even have a bit of knowledge as to what was going on before the assault began. And the evidence I've seen also seems to indicate that the footage in Bowling was edited.
By the way, have you looked at Heston's outfit in the speech segment yet?
Animal rights? Animals can't vote -- they have no rights!
Not voting isn't the reason animals don't have rights. In human terms, it's because the animals themselves do not (and cannot) stand for such rights themselves. Or do you suppose that the elk a pack of wolves brings down tries to reason with them that they shouldn't kill it because of its right to life? Human Beings are the only creatures with the rational capacity or inherent nature to understand and respect rights. (Note: This doesn't mean that all of us* do respect them, merely that we're capable of it.) Humans may have a native duty to protect animals (and plants) from abuse or mistreatment, but this duty on the part of humankind does not translate into a right on the part of the plants or animals in question.
Oh, the ones we have now work? Is this a definition of work I'm not familiar with?
Work: Take your pick.
As long as you reinterpret the words and the meaning away from what the Founding Fathers meant. They aren't defending the 2nd. They are twisting the 2nd and fighting for that twisted reinterpretation. It's identical to a religious argument...
And you, I presume, know exactly what the founders of this nation meant by their written statements? Or were you present, perhaps, at the discussions that surrounded these amendments? As to the 'religious' component of your argument, I'd argue that the 'no guns anywhere' side has more of a religious component than the 'guns where needed' side does; they require a faith that guns are the source of problems (as opposed to the individuals who use them) and a faith that everyone will gladly give up their guns when asked to do so. (Which the criminal class will not, naturally...a honed or innate 'rejection of standard law' outlook is pretty much a part of the job description for 'criminal'.)
It should also be noted that one of the major reasons that governmental bodies attempt to disarm their citizens or subjects is that it increases a form of power disperity. For example, slaves weren't permitted to bear arms in early America, or the Jews under Hitler's Germany.
And on the 'National Guard == militia' argument, the National Guard is a portion of the Federal Armed Services. Its charter (or at least the parts I've seen) indicate that it serves at the behest of Congress. As such, it is not a citizens militia. The purpose of a citizens militia is to protect the citizens of the State from abuse or assault by the government of the State (In this case, the Federal Government of the United States of America). I fail to see how a body that is officially a part of the federal military, with a clear chain of command culminating in the head of state (in the role of CiC), could also serve as a line of defense against the federal government. There would seem to be a conflict of interest at that point.
*I'm at least assuming everyone reading this is human...