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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 13, 2023

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As a practical martial art, I think it is. Dressage evolved from cavalry charges, fencing from renaissance duelling. Both these skills are long past military or practical usefulness. See also: Kung Fu, karate etc. They've been stylized and gamified into irrelevance, plus martial technology and tactics have changed wildly.

Rapier, sure -- but skill with a sabre or epee is still a plausibly useful self-defense mechanism if you wanted to walk around with a cavalry sword or something. (proves your point I guess, but the picture is amusing -- surely it's indisputable that the 2A would apply to actual 18th century weapons?)

if you wanted to walk around with a cavalry sword or something

Oh man, if we can bring back wearing a sidearm and sword, I am so in. Come to think of it, aren't I authorized a couple of uniform swords?

Actual antique 19th century cavalry swords are SO COOL -- and pretty cheap to find in good shape, as they were kind of a mass produced item.

Be the change...

A gucci Glock and a 1860 LCS........

You do work at a gunshop, right? If there's any job that could rock this combo (other than "time travelling Civil War meddler" I guess), you have it already!

I work in a corporate gun shop.....no guns allowed >.>

surely it's indisputable that the 2A would apply to actual 18th century weapons?

Yes it is very disputable.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knife_legislation#Constitutional_protection

There is no NSKA (National Sword and Knife Association) and as a result, in many places where gun carry is fully legal even small knife can get you in trouble. As always, CYL before you get in knife fight ;-)

Aren't these laws mostly CCW related though? I don't see anything there about lugging around a sword in the scabbard. (and the Ohio ruling seems favourable in this regard)