"The Tell-Tale Privileges or Immunities Clause" 

Cato Supreme Court Review ALAN GURA, Gura & Possessky, P.L.L.C.
Email: a...@alangura.com
 ILYA SHAPIRO, Cato Institute
Email: ishap...@cato.org
 JOSH BLACKMAN, George Mason University - School of Law, Alumni, Penn
State Dickinson School of Law
Email: joshblack...@gmail.com


Help is on the way! That’s the Supreme Court’s most readily obvious
message for those Americans living in the small handful of states that
don’t respect the right to keep and bear arms. It should not have been a
surprise. Two years ago, in striking down the District of Columbia’s
handgun and functional firearms bans, the high court provided a
none-too-subtle message to recalcitrant politicians unwilling to obey
national civil rights standards. Ancient cases refusing to apply the
right to arms against the states, said the Court, had also failed to
apply the First Amendment, and were based on obsolete thinking. This
term, in McDonald v. City of Chicago, Heller’s wink-and-nudge became a
shove, finally dragging anti-gun politicians into the late 19th century.

But at exactly what part of the late-19th century have we arrived? The
heady days of the Fourteenth Amendment’s first five years, when it was
understood that states were actually bound to respect Americans’ basic
rights? Or the century’s last three years, with the Fourteenth
Amendment’s central guarantee of freedom having been parodied into a
dead letter, the Supreme Court setting about to pick and choose which
rights are worth securing, and to what extent?  It is this answer to
this question, more than the result applying the right to arms, which
promises to make McDonald an enduring landmark of American liberty for
years to come.



Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M.         o-  651-523-2142  
Hamline University School of Law             f-   651-523-2236
St. Paul, MN  55113-1235                        c-  612-865-7956
jol...@gw.hamline.edu                               
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