aurelius said:
So? Can´t I use a tank or a rocket launcher to shoot stuff?
"Whether it's a lead ball and musket or a black talon coming through a cop's Spectre vest, they saw this coming, bullets are bullets."
How can you possibly say that? How do you know? Just because you´re intelligent doesn´t mean you can see through time.
You finish by saying that "bullets are bullets." This is not so. There´s no way the founding fathers when thinking of the word "bullet" were capable of conjuring up images of "body armor piercing rounds." Body armor didn´t even exist!
Someone asked me why I should care about American´s rights and freedoms. I thought it was a silly question so I gave a silly answer. Here´s a more serious one. Why shouldn´t I be interested? Aren´t any of you ever interested in the world outside the US? There is one, you know.
Actually I very much appreciate your repsonse. The reasons I say that our forefathers saw the future coming when they wrote the Bill of Rights is because they were the best educated men of the time.
If we were starting over today, an American leader may want to assembpe a think tank composed of say Alan Greenspan on economics, Bill Joy on computers/technology, Craig Ventner on Biology, and other leaders in their fields, they could get a pretty good understanding of where things were headed. Could they see the future, of course not. But they could put a document together which would anticipate a lot of what was to come.
OK - the founders of the US didn't have teh technology available to them: no computer modeling, no collected data, etc. But they did have an understanding of the past as well as America's place in the present (late 1700's) and future.
Based on that, I am sure they were able to visualize expansion, improvements in technology, etc. Throughout history, was has driven technological imrpvement. Even the Internet is a prodcut of teh US Dept. of Defense. So they saw a lot of this coming.
We (Americans) do our founders a great disservice when we look at these documents with eyes only for the present. They are not meant to be revised, only amended.
As to your other point: there is a lot of validity to the criticism of Americans knowing nothing else. I think, though, that Spetember 11th changed that, and over time, Americans will get more informed.