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When Rights Are Surrendered
by Susanne Edward - Sunday, March 28, 2021
Right now, just three countries on the planet mention the right to own arms in their constitutions: The United States, Mexico and Guatemala. The latter two, however, have chipped away at their constitutional rights so much they’ve been reduced to almost no right at all. (Something similar could be said for parts of the U.S., where Second Amendment rights have been eroded into outright infringement.)
But it is important to note that, not so long ago, there were six other nations that had the right to own a gun. In 2019, The New York Times reported that Bolivia, Costa Rica, Colombia, Honduras, Nicaragua and Liberia all had protections inspired by the Second Amendment of the U.S. Bill of Rights, but that those six nations had all mostly eradicated this fundamental right.
So what happened?
Full article at:
by Susanne Edward - Sunday, March 28, 2021
Right now, just three countries on the planet mention the right to own arms in their constitutions: The United States, Mexico and Guatemala. The latter two, however, have chipped away at their constitutional rights so much they’ve been reduced to almost no right at all. (Something similar could be said for parts of the U.S., where Second Amendment rights have been eroded into outright infringement.)
But it is important to note that, not so long ago, there were six other nations that had the right to own a gun. In 2019, The New York Times reported that Bolivia, Costa Rica, Colombia, Honduras, Nicaragua and Liberia all had protections inspired by the Second Amendment of the U.S. Bill of Rights, but that those six nations had all mostly eradicated this fundamental right.
So what happened?
Full article at:
An Official Journal Of The NRA | When Rights Are Surrendered
These countries once had the right to bear arms. Giving up their rights didn’t bring them security.
www.americas1stfreedom.org