Driving is a privilege, not a right. Owning a firearm is a right, and all rights must be granted to all citizens. All people are created equal.
This is where we disagree. I don't see owning a firearm as a right any more than I see owning a nuke as a right.
To me, saying that a blind person can't own a gun is like having a citizen pass a test before being allowed to vote. Would letting people with who fail vote lead to a decrease in the quality of elections? Even if so, it wouldn't be sufficient reason to deny them their rights. If there are preconditions on who can exercise universal rights, then they aren't universal rights anymore.
Considering the quality of the voting population, I think you are on to something here.
But seriously, owning a gun is not a universal right. You may regard it as a right granted to you in 'merica (fuck yeah) by the constitution, but it is not a universal right.
The way I see it, you also have the right to own a gun. Your system just doesn't acknowledge it. I don't regard it as right granted to me by the Constitution; as I've mentioned, I have the right regardless of what the Constitution says.
Exactly. And as I said: if he doesn't believe in universal rights, he can't believe in rights at all. If there exists anything like rights, they have nothing to do with legislation.
The only RIGHT legislation any state should be allowed to make are those which directly protect all of the states' citizenry from abuses by the state itself. Otherwise, what is the reason any thinking body of people would have for joining a state of any sort.
Getting down to brass tacks, though; even a simple union of home owners in a certain area may have desires for the "union" that do not protect specific rights of each owner. They may decide that no home can have vegetables in the front yard, for reasons of appearance for instance, thus violating the universal right of a home owner to use his land as he sees fit. Even in this one simple instance a "so called" state can fail to meet the demands of ALL its citizenry.
The notion of Universal Rights is in question from the outset!
Take this example to the level of trying to govern hundreds of millions of people under one rule almost makes anarchy seem more desirable.
... or not.
I am well armed, in either case.