The ATF are far from "technical experts." Did you not see the recent video of the ATF's Firearms Ammunition Technology Division Chief was unable to disassemble a Glock pistol? That's like a 4 second operation.
It's not on that basis that it was overturned though. It was overturned because the definition of machinegun requires that it fires more than one round with a single operation of the trigger. Everyone knows bump stocks don't do that, thus they're not machineguns. The president just ordered the ATF to pretend that they were, that's all. States will probably still be able to ban them by legislation though.
"natural" rights no, Second Amendment rights provisionally.
And like... there are dozens of restrictive gun laws that rational people should advocate for. Concealed carry should not be available to just anyone; firearms should not be allowed on planes or long-distance public transit, background checks should be mandatory for Uncle Jack buying an anti-materiel rifle, and hunting licenses should continue to be mandatory to prevent overhunting.
Repeating this sort of non-nuanced position is how you get ignored in the grander scheme of gun control legislation
And like.. All of those "dozens of restrictive gun laws that rational people should advocate for" are also wildly unconstitutional and a complete violation of our natural rights. I'm not concerned with nuance or the narrow range of viewpoints on the issue that to which we are confined by individuals attempting to shape the narrative.
It appears that you seem ill equipped to participate in this conversation effectively if you are unable to discern that the 2A, as well as the other amendments in the bill of rights, are not the source of our rights. They are restrictions on the government that prevents it from interfering or infringing on our natural rights.
> All of those "dozens of restrictive gun laws that rational people should advocate for" are also wildly unconstitutional and a complete violation of our natural rights.
Okay. There are also laws that limit your speech on certain topics, but nobody is about to go defend the guy yelling "Fire!" in a movie theater. So natural infringement or not, there's not necessarily a demand to overturn all of these laws.
Naturally speaking you're entitled to a great number of things the law stops you from doing, because deterministic change is not inherently a good thing. We prevent unnatural and harmful actions by outlawing the most egregious violations of our right to self-determination. If you're unwilling to adopt a compromising approach to gun control then I'd argue you're ill-equipped to promote change in a liberal democracy.
> "...nobody is about to go defend the guy yelling "Fire!" in a movie theater."
"...But those who quote Holmes might want to actually read the case where the phrase originated before using it as their main defense. If they did, they'd realize it was never binding law, and the underlying case, U.S. v. Schenck, is not only one of the most odious free speech decisions in the Court's history, but was overturned over 40 years ago...."
Don't market yourself as a founder. Market yourself as a former employee of your own company. Rightly or wrongly, holding yourself out as a "founder" is going to give a hiring manager the impression that you're going to be difficult to manage. Also, they might believe that your focus is going to be on your own business and not theirs.
I'm going to be brutally honest, the market sucks right now. I haven't seen it this bad since 2008. I just started a new role after 18 months of looking. And the only reason I got it is because I had someone on the inside who fast-tracked my resume to the right people. I have nearly 20 years of experience in software development, btw. I used to have to block recruiters because they would never stop calling. Now? Those recruiters all gave up and became realtors.
The words "hard right" mean nothing other than "not reliably leftist." It's semantically void in informational content. Ask yourself why things are commonly referred to in the media as "far right" but you never see the term "far left" used to describe anything. Even those things that are demonstrably far left.
Judaism is a religion. The intentional attack on the USS Liberty was an intentional act by the Israeli government to draw the US into a war with the USSR aligned Egypt to aid them in that effort. I don't understand why you're attempting to conflate the actions of a sovereign ethno-state and a religion.