So North Vietnamese couldn't afford food or clothing but they all maintained an arsenal?
Do you history?
Because what it really proves is that you do not need a heavily armed populace. You only need to be able to arm a populace quickly if/when the situation arises.
And lol on your Russian history. When Germany invaded Russia, Russia had 5.5 million in it's standing army. They were not average citizens who brought their own weapons, they were average citizens enlisted during a crisis and armed by the government.
I'll start with the bold; are you saying we would be better off with no arms in the populace, and if we had to fight our government then they'll provide us arms to do so? No? - then WTF are you talking about? It has no applicability to your argument, my comment regarding superior numbers of armed fighters that is the strategy of the 2A origins, and how the U.S keeps getting their ass handed to them by grossly inferior forces.
They (the VC I’m referring to) actually didn't have an arsenal and NV had little industrial base; Russia & China backed their campaign with China's border being a conduit the U.S. could do nothing about. So yeah, they were even lesser still than what you imply. The NVA being military were better equipped & organized, but the U.S. was even then the premier military on earth; that’s the point. Both forces were inferior in every way but were fighting on home soil against a restrained Western foe.
Perhaps you suggesting it's a better idea to be unarmed and revolutionaries solicit help from Russia and China to thwart a rogue U.S. government? Gee, why didn't the framers consider that brilliant strategy?
"LOL" on your incomprehension; 1939 Germany had 80 million citizens, Soviet Russia 160 million. Russia lost >twice as many fighters as Germany, 10.5M to Germany's 4.5M; do you understand the premise now? And why the framers would not handicap the citizenry by barring arms and hoping Canada, Mexico - somebody - would and would be able to SHAZAAM! - suddenly give us weapons to fight the rogue federal government?
Yeah, I history.
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