notyou2 wrote:Dukasaur wrote:DoomYoshi wrote:I understand the reform to be about bringing second amendment rights to Japan. If you aren't allowed to form a militia, are you even free?
Militias by definition defend their home turf. Authorizing the army to form a mercenary auxiliary to accompany a foreign power on whatever harebrained adventures it decides to define as being in your best interest is the diametric opposite of forming a militia.
Militia is not defined as troops to defend home turf. It is a secondary force of the nation it serves. It is defined as a "part time army" as the members have regular jobs outside of the army, but it is not defined as a force to defend home turf. It could certainly be used in that aspect, but that is not the definition. It is technically a "reserve" force.
No, that is the way statists have corrupted the concept. A militia was originally a group of residents who came together spontaneously, without any input from the parasites in parliament, and decided on their own recognisance to defend their homes from a foreign invader.
Militias were instrumental in the Age of Enlightenment, in conflicts like the French Revolution and the American Revolution, in overthrowing the established order and bringing down tyrants. Unfortunately, those revolutions lost their way and abandoned their morals in less than a generation. Thereafter, having seen what citizen militias could do, the tyrants began a process of subverting the militias and bringing them to heel as part of the organised standing armies. Enlightened thinkers knew that standing professional armies were the one thing that freedom cannot survive, which is why they desperately but unsuccessfully tried to prevent such abominations re-rooting. Always standing professional armies will be tools of the subhuman sludge that slithers through the halls of our capitals. The subversion of militias into being auxiliaries to the thug armies is inimical to the concept of free peoples, in any time and in any place.