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<blockquote data-quote="ConstitutionCowboy" data-source="post: 3085236" data-attributes="member: 745"><p>You must remember that after a sentence has been completed, the government no longer has the power to limit or take away anyone's rights - to include the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. Once free, government must return their arms and not infringe upon their right to keep and bear more arms if they wish. If government believes it is not safe for someone to be free to keep and bear arms, that person should not be freed from prison, an institution, or from under 100% guardianship. So, no one really loses a right.</p><p></p><p>The Fifth Amendment mentions being 'deprived' of life, liberty and property. Being deprived of life is a death sentence, but being deprived of liberty and property is not the same as having liberty and property forfeited. Liberty is returned upon release from prison or an institution, etc., and so must property be returned - even when that property is arms.</p><p></p><p>If a person is sent to prison for six months for a misdemeanor, they don't lose their arms and may bear them upon release. It should be the same no matter why or for however long a person has been sent to prison. It used to be that way.</p><p></p><p>Woody</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ConstitutionCowboy, post: 3085236, member: 745"] You must remember that after a sentence has been completed, the government no longer has the power to limit or take away anyone's rights - to include the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. Once free, government must return their arms and not infringe upon their right to keep and bear more arms if they wish. If government believes it is not safe for someone to be free to keep and bear arms, that person should not be freed from prison, an institution, or from under 100% guardianship. So, no one really loses a right. The Fifth Amendment mentions being 'deprived' of life, liberty and property. Being deprived of life is a death sentence, but being deprived of liberty and property is not the same as having liberty and property forfeited. Liberty is returned upon release from prison or an institution, etc., and so must property be returned - even when that property is arms. If a person is sent to prison for six months for a misdemeanor, they don't lose their arms and may bear them upon release. It should be the same no matter why or for however long a person has been sent to prison. It used to be that way. Woody [/QUOTE]
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