The Second Amendment Goes to Heller

The shoot-out between gun-control forces and gun-rights defenders moves into the Supreme Court when its justices hear oral arguments March 18, 2008, in District of Columbia v. Dick Anthony Heller . They’ll consider whether the Second Amendment guarantees an individual’s right to keep and bear arms or whether it merely protects a collective militia right.

The Second Amendment reads: "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. " Not by the federal government, that is.

The Constitution and its first ten amendments circumscribed the power of the central government over the states and their citizens. The Bill of Rights did not apply to the states. In the 1900s, however, the court discovered the Fourteenth Amendment, barring the states from denying to their citizens the rights “of citizens of the United States,” incorporated some Bill of Rights’ personal freedoms, like First Amendment free speech. Not Second Amendment protections though. There is no personal right to a militia.

Sixty-nine years ago, when in United States v. Miller it last considered the matter, the court said the amendment protects a right "that has some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well regulated militia, " and, "It must be interpreted and applied with that end in view. "

Last year, Dick Heller persuaded the court to reconsider. He says the amendment secures an individual right that the District of Columbia’s 1976 gun-control law violates by banning new ownership of handguns. By Heller’s sights, the amendment’s clauses should be read in isolation, divorcing the right to keep and bear from the militia business. It doesn’t matter that the District isn’t a state since the city is a creature of the federal government and, incorporated or no, the right is federal.

The District says the amendment’s pieces are interdependent and the militia clause cannot be divorced from the keep and bear segment. Moreover, since it isn’t a state as envisioned by the amendment, the amendment doesn’t apply to the district. And it has infringed no right to arms anyway because it allows long arms.

A good deal more has been said on both sides, and you are encouraged to listen, read, and judge for yourself.

A thoughtful evaluation of the cases and authorities suggests that, if there is an individual right, it is not one the amendment protects. That’s not to say there is no individual right. Only that the militia-purposed amendment should be read to be silent about it, and no one’s the worse. There is a right to self-defense, and agreement among state constitutions that ownership and use of arms are corollary rights.

The Second Amendment has never defeated a gun-control statute. It appears, however, that four justices favor an individual rights reading. A fifth would make it law. If it is a right fundamental to the scheme of justice, under Benton v. Maryland it appears incorporation against the states is certain and automatic.

Just as certain is that gun control will go on. Even a fundamental right may be reasonably regulated in the interests of the public good, wherever that right resides.

A decision is due in June.

While you are waiting, you can read the 68 briefs filed in the case.

Filed Under: gun control, gun rights, bill of rights, Second Amendment

Here it is plain and simple:

“A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.”

I stress, “the right of the people to keep and bear arms”

It is not the right of the militia, not the right of the army, navy, air force, or marines. It is not the right of the police force or national guard. IT IS the Right of the PEOPLE. No organization or group - but it is the individual.

Why now over 200 years we are questioning this? 100 years ago gunslingers, citizens, and frontiersmen did not need permits and no one questioned it? Seems that the further we go the more we lose sight of where we started.

It is a highly dubious exercise in English to tear the amendment apart clause by clause and to pretend that the qualifying clauses—the reasons stated for the operative clause—have no relation to one another.

It is like pretending the opening and operative clause of the Pledge of Allegiance—”I pledge allegiance”—has no relation to the clauses that follow—”to the flag of the United States, and to the country for which it stands,” etc. In both cases the operative clause depends for its meaning upon the language in which it is couched.

A better question to ask might be how many firearms fatalities have been avoided since D.C. banned handguns.

To the person who mentioned NIU and VT, are you planning to commit a crime with your gun? Explain to me how leaving law-abiding gun owners without a means of protecting themselves and their families is going to stop one or two deranged individuals from going on a rampage. It’s been proven over-andover again statistically that communities/states with less restriction on firearms tend to have less crime than those where the victims are left defenseless. Please show me how the tightening of gun controls in DC has lowered their violent crime rate over the years.

Gun rights groups like the NRA have given MILLIONS of dollars to lobbyists to promote this kind of attitude. How sad that others must suffer because of the prevalence of accessible guns in our society.

Clearly the main post was written by a far left-wing gun-control freak. The only way they are going to get my Glock is to pry it out of my cold dead fingers.

In the wake of the killings at Northern Illinois University and Virginia Tech, shouldn’t we be willing to give up an individual right to own a gun to stop such senseless killings?

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