http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/04/what_does_the_second_amendment_mean.html



April 9, 2016
What Does the Second Amendment Mean?

By David Deming <http://www.americanthinker.com/author/david_deming/>

It's one of the most controversial passages of the Constitution. Allegedly,
it's also one of the most obscure and unintelligible sections. The Second
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution 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."

Prior to the Supreme Court's decision in *District of Columbia v.
Heller *(2008),
we were told for decades that the Second Amendment did not guarantee or
even refer to an individual right. Based on the wording of *United States
v. Miller* <https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/307/174> (1939),
the theory was promulgated that the Second Amendment protected only State's
rights to maintain organized militia. One problem with this curious
interpretation is that States don't have rights, they have powers. But
there's nothing new about twisting the truth into a pretzel so that it
conforms to a dogmatic ideology. Some people
<http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/06/second-amendment-guns-michael-waldman>
still doggedly maintain that the Second Amendment does not refer to an
individual right. Among these persons are some judges on the Seventh
Circuit Court of Appeals. In clear defiance of the Supreme Court, the
Seventh Circuit recently announced
<https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/15-133> that "states, which
are in charge of militias, should be allowed to decide when civilians can
possess military-grade firearms."

Contrary to what some confused and unlettered judges think, the Second
Amendment does indeed protect an individual right. Neither is it opaque or
difficult to understand. A militia is "a citizen army," an entity that is
most definitely distinct from a professional military. The Second Amendment
becomes perfectly lucid when we understand that the "well regulated"
militia spoken of in the Amendment is to be composed of a people who have
right to keep and bear arms. The two clauses of the Second Amendment, the
first which refers to a "militia," and the second which refers to "the
people," cannot be separated and interpreted independently. For the Second
Amendment to be intelligible the two clauses must be reconciled. Indeed, it
is very difficult to assemble a militia from a people who have been
disarmed.

The Second Amendment is not a radical innovation. Militia have a long
history <http://www.davekopel.org/2A/Foreign/arms-and-the-greeks.htm>. The
armed forces of the city-states of ancient Greece consisted mostly of
ordinary citizens that banded together to defend themselves in time of
common need. In *Politics
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politics_%28Aristotle%29>*, Aristotle
identified the right to keep and bear arms as synonymous with citizenship. He
declared <http://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/politics.3.three.html> "those
who possess arms are the citizens," and "the government should be confined
to those who carry arms." Thus when we insist on the right to own guns, we
are only asking for a right that has been ours by twenty-five hundred years
of tradition in Western Civilization. To be deprived of our ancient and
inalienable right is to be reduced to serfdom. It is an intolerable affront
to a free people.

A militia can be governed and commanded when called to duty, but it is,
nevertheless, not a body of professional soldiers. A "well regulated"
militia is not one that is tightly controlled by a political
administration. Rather, the term "well regulated" in the context of the
Second Amendment means "well-trained
<http://www2.law.ucla.edu/volokh/common.htm>" and thus efficient in its
operation.

There are two advantages to defending a free state by means of a militia
instead of a professional army. First, it's less expensive. Second, a
militia has less allegiance to a tyrannical government than a select group
of servicemen who rely upon that government for their livelihood. Thus the
Second Amendment links the right to keep and bear arms to a "free state,"
not just a "state." The militia whose existence and continuance is
guaranteed by the Second Amendment was intended by the Founding Fathers to
serve as a safeguard against tyranny. In Federalist Paper No. 29
<http://www2.law.ucla.edu/volokh/beararms/FEDERALI.HTM>, Alexander Hamilton
explained that if the government ever tried to oppress the people with a
standing army, that army would be countered by "a large body of citizens,
little, if at all, inferior to them in discipline and the use of arms, who
stand ready to defend their own rights and those of their fellow citizens."

What type of arms are citizens allowed to have? This is where the Supreme
Court has largely failed us. In *District of Columbia v. Heller
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/District_of_Columbia_v._Heller>*(2008) the
court decided that the Second Amendment protects weapons that are "in
common use," while precluding "dangerous and unusual weapons." This is far
from clear guidance. All weapons are "dangerous," and any firearm may
appear "unusual" to a person who has no experience with guns.

An earlier Supreme Court case provides more sensible guidance on what type
of weapons are protected by the Second Amendment. The despised *United
States v. Miller <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Miller>*
(1939) is commonly characterized as being the most recondite and obscure of
all Second Amendment cases. But *Miller* constitutes the most useful guide
in determining what types of weapons are protected by the Second Amendment.
In *Miller *the Court noted that the militia consisted of "all males
physically capable of acting in concert for the common defense," and that
the Second Amendment "must be interpreted and applied... to assure the
continuation and render possible the effectiveness" of this militia.

To be effective, the members of a militia must be well armed. Thus the
quintessential weaponry protected by the Second Amendment consists of the
arms that would ordinarily be possessed by an individual soldier in an
infantry unit -- not weapons designed for defense from criminals or for
shooting ducks. This means machine guns, mortars, and hand grenades. It
excludes weapons of mass destruction such as large artillery pieces, poison
gas, or aircraft. If this interpretation seems extreme, consider that our
colonial militia possessed cannon. The Revolutionary War was initiated by the
British attempt
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battles_of_Lexington_and_Concord> to seize
cannon held by the militia at Concord.

We should not be too critical of the *Heller *decision crafted by the late
Justice Scalia. It was decided on the most narrow of margins (by a 5:4
vote) and may have been the best compromise obtainable. Certainly, a
decision that went the other way would have been devastating. Nevertheless,
the wake of *Heller* has left case law in disarray. We have a judiciary
largely composed of left-wing ideologues who detest the Second Amendment,
find guns to be repulsive, and are almost completely ignorant regarding
firearms and everything concerning them.

The Second Amendment states plainly that the right to keep and bear arms
"shall not be infringed." But we have judges who are not only intent on
infringing the right but curtailing it altogether. Some recent decisions
contain comments that are asinine and embarrassingly ignorant. Among these
is the moronic declaration
<http://apps.washingtonpost.com/g/documents/local/court-opinion-on-maryland-assault-weapons/1852/>
by Fourth Circuit Judge Robert King that "assault weapons" (meaning
semi-automatic rifles such as the AR-15) constitute "exceptionally lethal
weapons of war." This must be news to the U.S. military, since they equip
their infantry with select-fire rifles capable of fully automatic fire.
After declaring the AR-15 to be "exceptionally lethal," Judge King then
immediately contradicted himself by concluding that it has a "questionable
utility for self-defense," seemingly oblivious to the fact that the utility
of a weapon for self-defense is directly correlated with its lethality. In
Judge King's opinion, the Second Amendment "affords no protection
whatsoever" with regard to the what he terms "assault rifles and shotguns."
One wonders what Judge King expects the militia described in the Second
Amendment to equip themselves with -- wiffle bats and cap guns?

Judge King is not the only ignorant fool sitting on the Federal bench.
In *Friedman
v. Highland Park <http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-7th-circuit/1698803.html>*
(2015), Judge Frank Easterbrook ruled that the city of Highland Park could
ban the possession of AR-15s and other common semi-automatic rifles because
AR-15s were not in existence at the time the Second Amendment was written.
Imagine the judiciary applying this logic to the First Amendment. The only
means of expression protected would be materials printed on paper in shops
where the print was set and inked by hand.

Another one of Judge Easterbrook's gems was the notation that his ruling
was justified by the fact it "may increase the public's sense of safety."
If this absurd rationale were applied in interpretation of the First
Amendment, reading materials could be removed from your house if they
placed your neighbor in a subjective state of fear or apprehension.

And who needs an AR-15? According to Judge Easterbrook, the city of
Highland Park could ban semi-automatic rifles because the "ordinance leaves
residents with many self-defense options." In other words, banning some
books is all right so long as you're free to read others that are approved
by the government. Such is the common practice in totalitarian regimes like
Cuba, a place where Judge Easterbrook would no doubt be right at home.

The execrable decision crafted by Judge Easterbrook achieved the rare
distinction of being expressly criticized
<https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/15-133> by two Supreme Court
justices. In a stinging dissent from the Court's failure to grant
certiorari, Justices Thomas and Scalia noted that in the Highland Park case
the Seventh Circuit did not follow the precedent and reasoning the Court
outlined in *Heller *(2008). Thomas and Scalia concluded that if the judges
on the Seventh Circuit Court were allowed to be arbiters of our rights then
"the Second Amendment guarantees nothing."

There is not a single word in the U.S. Constitution regarding either
abortion or gay marriage. Yet our ingenious federal judiciary has
discovered that the Constitution guarantees both a right to kill babies and
to sanction sodomy. Simultaneously, these cunning little tyrants blithely
assure us that a right expressly guaranteed means nothing. If you steal a
pack of cigarettes from a convenience store, you're going to be
apprehended, arrested, and imprisoned. But if you strip three hundred
million people of their most fundamental rights, you can sit smugly behind
the bench under the blessing of judicial immunity and collect a hefty
salary.

It is evident that we have a lot of work left to do. The best place to
begin is to educate yourself. A good place to begin is with Stephen
Halbrook's book, *That Every Man Be Armed
<http://www.amazon.com/That-Every-Man-Armed-Constitutional-ebook/dp/B00B5I2JP0/ref=sr_1_6?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1459176465&sr=1-6&keywords=halbrook+second+amendment>*.
Sanford Levinson's essay, "The Embarrassing Second Amendment
<http://www.constitution.org/mil/embar2nd.htm>", is also essential reading.
If reading is not your style, get involved in politics. If you find
politics distasteful, write out a check to the NRA or your favorite
gun-rights organization. They need the money and will put it to good use.
Please keep in mind: it's easier to write a check than it is to cross an
icy Delaware River on Christmas Eve. If none of the preceding appeal to
you, take someone shooting. No one can do everything, but everyone can do
something.


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