Hi Eden,
Originally posted by Eden
Most likely if needed in a military environment the gun will already be drawn. Having to draw quickly is more of a police issue . Americans have this thing against seeing people armed. Can't let the police appear to be armed even if it gets them killed so they have to hide the weapon and be able to draw super fast. Crazy, stupid anti-gun SOBs. If I had my way the Uniformed Police could carry MP-5s (or similar). Reliable weapons with better accuracy then most handguns (if an officer has to shoot a bad guy who is standing near me I hope he has the most accurate weapon in the world).
PC anti-gunniness is indeed part of the explanation for why Americans don't like having obviously heavily armed police officers in plain sight, but there's more to it than that.
Historically, the British people were opposed to having a large standing army and their American descendents inherited that trait. They rightly viewed large bodies of heavily armed men who took their orders from the present political administration as counter-productive to the aims and ideals of a representative democracy - and with good reason. Historically, those standing armies had been used more often to suppress political and religious dissent within Britain, than to fight the enemies of the state.
Perhaps the most eggregious examples of this trend were provided roughly 100 years prior to the American revolution when Cromwell used his position as the head of the New Model Army to forcibly eject all the members of parliament who did not agree with his religious and political aims, and to ensure that only his cronies (the "rump" parliament) remained. Later when even they proved unruly, he essentially ruled directly in a way that not even the
Jus Divinum tyrant Charles I whom he had replaced had tried to do. Later Charles II used his restored power to eject over 2000 ministers who refused to sign the act of uniformity and then to militarily suppress Scottish religious dissenters.
These lessons were learned and remembered by the Scots/Irish/English colonists who came to America, and they had a natural aversion to funding and maintaining well armed security forces who might just as easily be turned against them - this was one of the reasons the American military developed relatively slowly and was consistently underfunded and why America followed a "no big army in peacetime" policy for many years.
As a result of our history, we still see well-armed "peace officers" as a potential threat to our liberties, and given the choice between accepting increased risk or potentially losing our freedoms, we have generally taken the "I'll take the chance and defend myself, thank you" approach. That is obviously gradually changing, but there it is.