To: kevkrom
What is more, in all six other provisions of the Constitution that mention the people, the term unambiguously refers to all members of the political community, not an unspecified subset.
405 posted on
06/26/2008 7:31:06 AM PDT by
kevkrom
(2-D fantasy artists wanted: http://faxcelestis.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=213)
To: kevkrom
In any event, the meaning of bear arms that petitioners and JUSTICE STEVENS propose is not even the (sometimes) idiomatic meaning. Rather, they manufacture a hybrid definition, whereby bear arms connotes the actual carrying of arms (and therefore is not really an idiom) but only in the service of an organized militia. No dictionary has ever adopted that definition, and we have been apprised of no source that indicates that it carried that meaning at the time of the founding. But it is easy to see why petitioners and the dissent are driven to the hybrid definition. Giving bear Arms its idiomatic meaning would cause the protected right to consist of the right to be a soldier or to wage waran absurdity that no commentator has ever endorsed. See L. Levy, Origins of the Bill of Rights 135 (1999). Worse still, the phrase keep and bear Arms would be incoherent. The word Arms would have two different meanings at once: weapons (as the object of keep) and (as the object of bear) one-half of an idiom. It would be rather like saying He filled and kicked the bucket to mean He filled the bucket and died. Grotesque.
456 posted on
06/26/2008 7:36:58 AM PDT by
kevkrom
(2-D fantasy artists wanted: http://faxcelestis.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=213)
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