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45. Military power is a danger to democracy. 45. Military power is a danger to democracy.
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46. Free people go to war together or not at all. 46. Free people go to war together or not at all.
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47. Private weapons are offensive to free people. 47. Private weapons are offensive to free people.
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48. Punishment demeans the free. 48. Punishment demeans the free.
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49. Free people are not policed. 49. Free people are not policed.
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VIII Force is the enemy of the free
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Published:February 2023
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Abstract
The theses in this section address the problem of force: from military power to private weaponry. The opening theses discuss the threat military power poses to all democracies, and how to address that. They argue that free people go to war together or not at all. Decisions about war should be made only when virtually all people assume the burdens and the risks of war. The next thesis argues that private weapon pose a similar threat. Contrary to the arguments for gun rights, Norton argues that private weapons are largely aimed not at the state, not at the government, but at us. Everyone who aims a gun at you is claiming an absolute and tyrannical authority over you. The aim is not personal protection or the right of revolution, but undemocratic power. The final theses argue that punishment and policing both demean free people.
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