This is my rebuttal as I understand your statement. If I’ve misunderstood your statement, and you feel like it, please correct me.
Would we in The States have more liberty if we could safely and legally buy cocaine? Bombs? Lethal chemicals?
Extreme examples, maybe, but my point is that simply making more things available to buy does not necessarily mean more liberty for people.
Cocaine? Yes
Bombs? Yes
Lethal chemicals? Yes
Bombs and lethal chemicals are already widely available. Nicotine and bleach are "lethal chemicals". Even water can be lethal in large doses.
Every 4th of July the are literally millions of bombs sold in the US.
This all goes back to our constitution, the Federalist papers, and how the SCOTUS has defined and interpreted them.
Bombs are legal, until they reach the "dangerous AND unusual" stage where SCOTUS has clearly defined.
Buying a 24 megaton nuke is obviously dangerous AND unusual", so can be banned. However, tanerite is legal in most jurisdictions, and can blow a 3 story building into toothpicks. Its very common and available in every sporting goods store.
Dangerous chemicals can be highly controlled, but are not banned in most jurisdictions. You can buy cyanide and Yersinia pestis bacteria which causes Bubonic plague, but you need permits.
Cocaine is FAR less dangerous than alcohol and refined sugar, so why not?
As far a American freedom, the SCOTUS has interpreted several times that when banning what someone can own, it must pass scrutiny. The current and well defined interpretation is the "text, history, and tradition" test.
This means they cannot ban anything that was not banable at the nation's founding. The federalist papers describe this in detail. According to our constitution, things like speech, guns, religion...cannot be banned. UNLESS it falls in the "dangerous AND unusual" context.
Many want to ban some firearms because they are dangerous. But, one of the reasons the 2nd amendment was added is because privateer ships wanted cannons. Some wanted cannons banned because they were to dangerous for civilians. The founding fathers disagreed. Cannons were not unusual. They clearly said that any arm which can be used offensively OR defensively cannot be banned. They even took into account that arms would advance, and possibly become more "dangerous". This is why the dangerous AND unusual clause came to be. If an arm is "in common use", it cannot be banned, or even restricted.....infringed if you will. An arm must be both dangerous AND unusual to be banned.
This all goes back to our "text, history, and tradition."
Ok,ok, ill stop.