Posted on 02/26/2018 6:04:05 AM PST by Kaslin
As the Parkland, Fla., school shooting revealed yet again, when it comes to firearms, the differences between Americans has become too monumental to overcome. On one end of the political spectrum are left-wing politicians and pundits calling for the elimination of the Second Amendment and severe restrictions on virtually every kind of gun. On the other end are Americans who believe the best way to stop mass shootings is to have even more weapons available to the public, and for everyday citizens, including teachers, to be better armed so that they are capable of defending themselves and others from murderers like Nikolas Cruz.
How can this stark divide ever be reconciled? Although it may be difficult for many to accept, the answer is likely that it cant. The United States is in desperate need of a new Second Amendment, one that recognizes the fundamentally different views people today have about guns, their role in society, and our rights as citizens.
When the Founders first wrote and passed what we know call the Second Amendment, they viewed the Constitution in an entirely different way than most people do today. Originally, the U.S. Constitution was, for the most part, only understood to govern the relationship between Americans and their federal government. The Bill of Rights was largely meant to protect the states and the people from an out-of-control centralized power in the nations capital. Most laws were passed at the state and local levels, and state constitutions determined the limits of those laws, including gun laws.
In 1833, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall clearly articulated this principle when writing the majority opinion in Barron v. Baltimore. The Constitution was ordained and established by the people of the United States for themselves, for their own government, and not for the government of the individual States, Marshall wrote. Each State established a constitution for itself, and in that constitution provided such limitations and restrictions on the powers of its particular government as its judgment dictated.
As with other important issues, the Civil War and its fallout radically transformed the scope of the Constitution. Following the passage of the 14th Amendmentwhich reads, in part, No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United Statessome courts began determining that at least some of the federal Bill of Rights applies to the states as well. This extension of the Constitution, combined with the tremendous technological improvements in transportation, media, and more than a century of additional Supreme Court cases, resulted in the high-stakes national policy debates that have become so common. Instead of making decisions at the state level, uniform laws are imposed on more than 320 million people, irrespective of the nations many different cultural, political, religious, moral, and philosophical differences.
For most issues, Americans are willing to accept such a model. But on the issue of guns, it has become increasingly evident there is no resolution. Either left-wing states and their citizens will have to continue living in a nation in which guns are constitutionally protected, or theyll have to change the Constitution to ban most or all types of guns from being owned.
Fortunately for those of us who support gun owners rights, the likelihood of an anti-gun constitutional amendment ever being ratified by three-fourths of the statesa requirement of the Constitutionis virtually nonexistent. Even under the best circumstances, its unlikely half the states would be willing to approve such an amendment.
Unfortunately for gun advocates, left-wingers dont need an amendment to gut the Constitution of its firearms protections. Five Supreme Court justices who oppose the established, two-centuries-old view of the Second Amendment are all that are needed to reinterpret the meaning of the amendments right to bear arms. And although Republicans now control Congress and the White House, it seems its only a matter of time before the pendulum swings in liberals favor, opening the door for the elimination of most gun rights. After all, liberals already have four justices on the bench who would likely approve of a law creating radical restrictions on gun rights, and the Courts swing vote, Anthony Kennedy, is 81 years old.
The United States needs a new amendment governing gun rights, and the only amendment that would likely have any chance of being approved would be one that returns the Second Amendment to the position the Founders envisioned, when it only applied to federal law. This, coupled with clarifying language that makes it more difficult for federal authorities to restrict gun rights, would permit states to issue stricter gun bans, assuming their state constitutions allow it. But it would also ensure citizens in states where guns are valuedwhich, by the way, is most statesare guaranteed from ever having their gun rights taken from them by a Supreme Court controlled by left-wing justices.
Such a scheme would likely result in some gun owners losing their ability to purchase or possess some or possibly all guns. But it would also protect gun owners in the clear majority of states and turn those states into safe havens for those who want greater firearms freedom. Its not a perfect compromise, but its probably necessary to ensure the long-term survival of gun rights, and maybe even the country.
In order to save the village, we had to destroy the village.
Asinine article. It is amazing that people get paid to be this stupid.
The right to self-defense doesn’t come from the state, and the state cannot take it away.
Why don’t we just repeal XIV?
He’s not that wrong.
We only need to add the phrase: “, except for liberals.”
The second amendment is every bit as important as the first amendment.
Every single bit.
Don’t touch either one. Ever.
This guy fell out of the boat and somehow missed the water. His premise is false. The Bill of Rights was to protect the inalienable rights of all citizens of the USA. The Supreme Court was established to rule on the constitutionality of all laws, including states laws, where it pertains to the liberties of citizens.
He is confusing the stature of state law over federal law, pertaining to the original intent of the Constitution, with the universal protection of inalienable rights.
“For most issues, Americans are willing to accept such a model”
I doubt that. Repeal XIV.
"...Second Amendment..."
So let's dump it and write a NEW 2A - which the activist judges will honor (because it reflects their views).
NO THANKS! FO! Come and take it!
“As the Parkland, Fla., school shooting revealed yet again, when it comes to firearms, the differences between Americans has become too monumental to overcome.”
Mark.. Missed. Again.
There is no divide. There is the law and there is lawless. The law allows us all to keep and bear arms. In all the states.
Most people want their speed limits removed too. But it’s the law so at the very least they have two parties to argue against: Those who oppose the idea and the Law.
The law states that I must own and bear a weapon.
The only change to the 2nd amendment I would accept is the deletion of the dependent clause at the beginning of the text.
“The right to self-defense doesnt come from the state, and the state cannot take it away.”
Agreed. However, the zero tolerance polices at many schools does effectively take away the right of self defense when administrations punish the victim of violence for fighting back. I find it disgusting and absolutely ridiculous and parents should be aggressively fighting back against School Boards that implement such policies.
Peach
To assure the preservation of gun rights, the American left must be destroyed. Until they are gone, they will never let up.
There are more of them than there are of us. They will prevail
Wrong, wrong, wrong. Any/all bizarre supreme court interpretations aside, a simple reading of the plain text of the Bill of Rights makes it clear that the First Amendment is the only one of the first eight that is intended to limit only the federal government. The 1st is the only amendment in the Bill of Rights which states: "Congress shall make no law...". The rest of them are simple declarations and they restrict the powers of all levels of government.
Limits on their own governmental powers is part of the "deal" the states signed on to when they ratified the Constitution.
“The Bill of Rights was to protect the inalienable rights of all citizens of the USA”
So, in your opinion, children born to two slaves in one of the States after 1789 were citizens of the United States even though they were not citizens of, say, Alabama, and they had inalienable rights the Constitution as amended was intended to protect?
Want to try again?
Agreed.
I would support a change to the 2nd Amendment ONLY if it would clarify the language so that states and localities cannot infringe on the right in a number of ways they are trying to do now, and make gun rights uniform across the nation so I can drive and openly carry my handgun or long gun from the West Coast to the East Coast, Canadian border to Mexican Border, and not have to worry about running afoul of some state or local law.
Otherwise, no.
But we know that won’t pass, either. So it is going to be an ongoing fight for as long as I live, or as long as there are leftists who will try to undermine it in every way they can.
Proof positive that the ability to think rationally is not a requirement to write for Townhall.
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