Quote from: Gwynne on January 14, 2014, 08:18:01 AM
Partially, I object to school sports because they are antithetical to the core function of public education, which is the development of a productive collaborative (not competitive) ethos.
One could make the argument, that learning to collaborate in a competitive environment is what team sports actually teach; This is fairly representative of how things are structured in life after school too, groups use their collective strength to compete with other groups. Group cohesion is very important, and while I certainly feel it could be taught better (after all hazing and other such things being used to cement group cohesion isn't working out well in your office environment) I could see the argument that these things are teaching students valuable lessons. Though it has to be mentioned if the lesson is valuable then all should participate, and if it is a limited participation thing, then everyone tax dollars shouldn't subsidize it for the few who do participate in sports.
Quote from: Gwynne on January 14, 2014, 08:18:01 AM
That's a fairly cynical attitude. I suspect that it's an inevitable shift in attitudes that will follow generational lines. Give it twenty years and things will happen naturally. I have very little doubt that the 2nd will be repealed in my lifetime and will come to be viewed as an embarrassing blight on US cultural and legal history.
I would be interested to learn why it is you think that attitudes will change on firearms. Sure I mean over time all attitudes change but you said within your lifetime, and perhaps I am misreading the trend, but in the time I have been alive the pendulum seems to be swinging the other way, after all cities like DC and Chicago have had their gun bans lifted, not made stricter. I am not saying that a gun ban will never happen, and i would gladly give up my firearms if the law said I had to (as I said before my life has not been made better or worse from owning a gun, so I don't have that cultural attachment).
I just cannot imagine what could really catalyze the country as a whole against private firearms ownership and even if it did handguns and assault rifles would go, but I couldn't think anything would dislodge hunting rifles and shotguns. After all even in Europe there is still hunting, and it isn't all archery. I do admit, while I have traveled the country I generally stay in the east coast now, and my work keeps me in a range between MA and SC, so perhaps I am misreading the cultural mood of the nation, but it seems if anything gun "rights" are being expanded, with the vast majority of new "restrictions" just being closing of loopholes that get around background checks and such.