To me, the idea that we need guns to save us from a hypothetical government military dictatorship or whatnot is outdated.
Not that such an event is impossible, but more that if the government backed by the military decided that they wanted to raze the entirety of rural Virginia for resisting their new fascist liberal regime or whatnot, they would just do it remotely with drones and bombs. Guns would mean nothing.
A bunch of guys in the woods can't actually resist a modern military if they really want to get them. They can see you from space.
Doubt it. The USA seems to continually relive the Vietnam war, believing that they lost because they didn't use enough bombs against a bunch of guys in the woods. For starters making the assumption that the military backs the government is not the argument that I was making, US drone operators already have enough trouble maintaining morale when they're bombing distant people a world away, how would you maintain morale when you've ordered them to wipe out their own countrymen?
I was arguing that the US military would defend its own free state, should its state turn to tyranny. With the US military defending the state's liberty, people should not need to risk life and limb against their own state. If the US military was against them, that would not be a reason to abandon arms, that would be even
more reason to have never surrendered them to begin with.
Realistically any armed insurrection would have a good chance of receiving support from the US military, from Russia and China, and even without any international interference or US defections you'd run into the conundrum of trying to defeat the enemy by destroying your own country. You have a low chance of success and a guaranteed outcome of destroying your own country, while all those Virginians hiding in woods, hills and ground yet remain. Taking such a heavy handed approach would further alienate popular support against you, because bombing the enemy is not the same as restoring government administration to an area. Air power can only do so much, you then have to send in your ground forces to occupy the area, which would be an absolute nightmare against American guerillas.
All in all the only winner in such a confrontation between militias and the state, would be all the warlords who arise in the power vacuum who would end up in control of the US interstate roads, while being popular amongst the locals and militarily literate, capable of integrating both militias and defecting soldiers into their warlord states.
There was an end goal, though. We destroyed the regimes/groups we came to destroy, such as the Taliban, Saddam's regime, and ISIS. We did exactly what we came to do, and then we hung around and dealt with guerrilla warfare each time.
You may note that guerrilla warfare did not, in fact, change anything whatsoever at any time for the ones carrying it out, because Rambo wasn't a documentary. All of those people are dead, and we won. The only reason we didn't just roll in and kick the shit out them is because they were often hidden in population centers.
And these actions resulted in the destruction of Afghanistan, Iraq and most of Syria. Saddam was a conventional enemy, the Taliban still remain and just last year launched one of their largest assaults in Afghanistan, with tens of thousands of soldiers still remaining. ISIS was destroyed by the combined efforts of NATO, Russia, Syria, Kurdish forces and Iran - the level of force levied against ISIS, most of whom were not supported by natives but were instead implanted foreign fighters, was significant not just in air but in land too. The only actual instance where the US fought an insurgency you mentioned was against the Taliban, in which the US has not won anything. The Taliban remain and the cost to the US is such that the Taliban need only wait until the US withdraw.
The Russian military police in Syria highlight how air strikes without policing will not stop even destroyed enemy units from regaining control. You can't just solve every problem with bombing.
In the scenario of a fascist government takeover, they would not have any of those concerns. Also, what happened in Iraq doesn't change the fact that they can see you, right now, wherever you are, at any time, and then park a missile on that spot at any time. i'm curious as to what help, specifically, you think an AR-15 will be against a jet guided by a guy in a leather chair tracking you via satellite.
Need not be fascist, merely a state turning tyrannical. I'm trying to argue why the US citizenry do not need weapons, but if the only argument is seriously that the state can see you from space and atomize you at will, then I think the time is long past that the US citizenry should even consider disarming themselves in the face of such a threat. In the French Revolution it was said that they revolted not because the King was a tyrant, but because he was a man who could be tyrant.
I should state that I am super not for disarming the populace of the US, but I think it's important to note that the idea that the military is somehow concerned about a bunch of us with AR's and a working knowledge of how to live in the woods is not a real thing. The only reason they didn't take a tank and drive through the building those dudes in Oregon were holed up in two years ago is because as it stands right now, you can;t do that by law.
Why haven't you wiped out the Taliban yet if you can see them from space? A bunch of agrarian dudes with soviet surplus weaponry seem to be causing more grief than you believe Americans with American weaponry could - Americans who are integrated into US infrastructure on domestic soil