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GUNS AND THE CONSTITUTION:Telling The Right Second Amendment Story (BARF ALERT)
Findlaw.com (sic) ^ | 11/2/2001 | Akhil Reed Amar and Vikram David Amar

Posted on 11/02/2001 2:54:29 PM PST by Fixit


A federal appellate panel ruled last week that the Constitution guarantees a limited right of individual Americans to keep guns for nonmilitary purposes. By so ruling in United States v. Emerson, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit re-energized popular debate about the meaning of the Second Amendment and also created a split among federal appellate courts, thus increasing the odds that the Supreme Court will soon weigh in with its own reading of the Amendment.

Citizens who enter the fray;be they Justices or other judges, lawyers or layfolk;should be wary of the Fifth Circuit's opinion. Though the Circuit may have reached the right conclusion, both in recognizing an individual right and in deeming it nonabsolute, the court told the wrong constitutional story.

And make no mistake, the story Americans tell themselves about liberty matters, and the story judges tell us especially matters, for these are the stories that shape our self-image and ultimately determine who has rights, to what, and why.

The Emerson Opinion and the Constitution

As our fellow Writ columnist Michael Dorf has explained more fully, Emerson involved a man who brandished a firearm against his estranged wife in violation of a federal statute. Parting company with other federal courts, which have limited the application of the Second Amendment to organized militias like the National Guard, the Fifth Circuit insisted that the amendment affirms a broader individual right to own guns. The court also ruled that this right must yield to reasonable regulations, including the gun statute at issue.

Professor Dorf and other commentators have thoughtfully discussed whether the Emerson ruling is consistent with current Supreme Court precedent. But as United States Chief Justice John Marshall observed over 150 years ago, "it is a Constitution" — and not the U.S. Reports, which compile judicial opinions — that "we are expounding." And when we turn to the Constitution itself, we see that the Fifth Circuit's account of the document is lacking.

The Fifth Circuit claimed that the Second Amendment's text and history compel an individual rights reading. But they do not.

The Meaning of the Phrase "Bear Arms"

Consider first the Amendment's text: "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." The phrase "bear arms" in 1789 was at its core a military phrase: it referred to those who bore arms in the context of military service rather than those who carried guns merely for hunting or sport.

Indeed, the Emerson court found only one clear nonmilitary use of the phrase before 1789. Against this linguistic outlier are scores of military allusions to arms-bearing in eighteenth-century laws and legal sources.

The Second Amendment's overall context further strengthens the military reading of the phrase "bear arms." The Amendment speaks of a "militia"— another military term — and flanks the Third Amendment, which addresses the military issue of troop quartering. Most eighteenth-century state constitutions likewise linked arms-bearing to other military matters.

Evidence for a Collective, Not an Individual, Right

Moreover, in considering whether the Second Amendment creates an individual or a collective right, we should note that the Amendment speaks of a collective "people," not individual "persons."

Elsewhere, the Constitution most often uses "the people" as a collective noun embodying voters and jurors, rather than all citizens. The Preamble, for example, states that "We, the people"–that is, voters–ordained and established the Constitution. Similarly, Article I directs that the House of Representatives shall be elected biannually by "the people"–once again, voters.

And of course, at the Founding the class of voters was very different from the class of citizens. Women, children, and aliens fell outside this core definition of voting "people." They were likewise excluded from the Second Amendment's "militia."

The Second Amendment's syntax, too, suggests that the "militia" and the "people" are, roughly speaking, synonymous; the use of "people" in the Amendment's second clause in effect refers back to the use of "militia" in its introductory clause. (Indeed, an early draft spoke explicitly of the militia "composed of the body of the people." The final draft makes this point with fewer words.)

According to the Amendment's basic vision, all voters ideally should serve in the military, and the military in turn should be composed of ordinary voters. This conception is quite far afield from today's professional military. However, it can be more easily understood by thinking of the early military as somewhat similar to a jury, another local collectivist institution closely akin to the militia. At the founding, one would have not only a jury of one's peers, but ideally a militia of one's peers as well.

The Historical, and the Contemporary, Second Amendment

This reading of the original Second Amendment — suggesting that it confers a collective military right rather than an individual nonmilitary one — is confirmed by history. The Founders were thinking of local militiamen like those who fought at Lexington and Concord — not of hunters or sportsmen. The Framers envisioned Minutemen bearing guns, not Daniel Boone gunning bears.

None of this means that Emerson is wrong in result or that the Constitution cannot now be read to protect a qualified individual right to possess guns outside the military. Other constitutional clauses are read nonliterally and the Second Amendment may likewise be read expansively.

Law and language have evolved; today it is common to speak of nonmilitary arms-bearing. Many modern state constitutions embrace a limited right of individual gun ownership, and millions of Americans deem guns a fundamental right, though not an absolute one. The fact that there are almost as many firearms as citizens in this country similarly suggests that, like it or not, guns are part of the American ethos.

How Later Amendments May Have Altered the Second Amendment's Meaning

Most importantly, we must remember that our Constitution differs dramatically from the Framers'. Over the centuries, We the People have made amends for some of the Founding fathers' failures. And some of these amendments speak to the question of who in America should be trusted with arms.

The great generation that won the Civil War had a more individualistic view of liberty than did the Founders, and this later generation's Fourteenth Amendment, adopted in 1868, reflected that individualistic worldview. Concretely, the Amendment pledged to protect various fundamental "privileges and immunities" of individuals.

One such "privilege" explicitly embraced by the Reconstruction Congress in legislation accompanying the Fourteenth Amendment was a limited right to have a gun in one's home for self-protection, because police in the 1860s could not always be trusted to protect blacks from white night-riders and other thugs. This right to a gun was seen as a right of all citizens–women as well as men, blacks as well as whites–even if the gun owner was not a voter or militiaman.

The Fourteenth Amendment, which Emerson virtually ignored, both anchors an individual right in constitutional text and explains why this right is properly limited by other rights, like the right to be free from irresponsible gun use and thuggery.

Instead of detailing the Fourteenth Amendment's new birth of freedom — and the way it might alter our understanding of the Second Amendment — Emerson blandly cited parts of the Supreme Court's infamous 1857 Dred Scott case, without even noting that much of that case was repudiated by the Fourteenth Amendment. (Dred Scott held that blacks, even if free, could never be citizens, and were entitled to little respect from whites. The Fourteenth Amendment explicitly overruled this holding by promising citizenship to all born in America–rich and poor, black and white, male and female--and by further promising to protect all citizens in their fundamental "privileges and immunities.")

Nor did America's constitutional saga end with the Fourteenth Amendment. In 1870, the Fifteenth Amendment enfranchised black men because they had helped win the Civil War on the battlefield–preserving the Founding linkage between military arms-bearing and voting, but extending the definition of "the people" to include former slaves and other free blacks.

A century later, the Twenty-sixth Amendment likewise enfranchised young adults who were being told to fight in Vietnam. And after the Nineteenth Amendment made women part of the voting " people" in a way they were not at the Founding, we might ask whether women should have a Constitutional right to bear arms on equal terms in today's military, just as they have a Constitutional right now to serve equally on juries.

Rallying Around the Amended Constitution — Not Just the 1789 Text

Emerson erred by failing to weave any of these amendments into its arms-bearing story. By inflating the Founding, Emerson exaggerated a 1789 text adopted with little input from women and blacks. It also slighted later amendments expanding democracy, amendments that affirmed rights of previously excluded persons and included these persons in the constitutional conversation itself.

In general Emerson's methodological skew — that is, its exclusive focus on the founding — tends to tilt constitutional adjudication sharply rightward. Consider, for example, civil rights more generally. Unlike Emerson, the Warren Court understood the importance of Reconstruction and upheld every federal civil rights law it reviewed. In contrast, the Rehnquist Court, a la Emerson, has trivialized Reconstruction. In the name of Founding-era states' rights, the Justices have invalidated key Reconstruction-style civil rights laws protecting women, the elderly, the religious, and the disabled. The judiciary has also endorsed sex discrimination in the military and age discrimination in jury selection–types of discrimination much easier to justify if we look only to the Founders while ignoring the equality vision underlying the Fourteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-sixth Amendments.

With Americans under attack, our Constitution can be a rallying point uniting citizens of diverse ethnicities, faiths, and ideologies. But the document contains much more than the Founding vision. It also reflects the spirit of antislavery idealists, progressive era reformers, and 1960's activists.

When other courts and commentators revisit the gun issue, they should tell the full story, rather than merely the opening chapter, of American liberty. Akhil Reed Amar and Vikram David Amar are brothers who write about law. Akhil graduated from Yale College and Yale Law School, clerked for then-judge Stephen Breyer, and teaches at Yale Law School. Vikram graduated from U.C. Berkeley and Yale Law School, clerked for Judge William Norris and Justice Harry Blackmun, and teaches at U.C. Hastings College of Law. Their "brothers in law" column appears regularly in Writ, and they are also occasional contributors to publications such as the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the Washington Post. Jointly and separately, they have published over one hundred law review review articles and four books.




TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial
KEYWORDS: 26thamendment; 2ndamendment; banglist; nationalvoterid; nra; secondamendment; twentysixthamendment; voterid
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To: bruoz
"These morons also ignore the usage of "the people" in the First, Fourth and Ninth Amendments. In each case it preserves or reserves the rights of individual persons."

Oh, they didn't ignore the usage at all. First they need to establish a new precedent into law, then they can apply it to the rest of the Bill of Rights!!!

41 posted on 11/02/2001 7:44:43 PM PST by Destructor
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To: Fixit
Author: Akhil Reed Amar and Vikram David Amar

Hmmm. Hello, FBI? I think I found a couple more terrorists...
42 posted on 11/02/2001 10:36:27 PM PST by VRWC_Member428
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To: prambo
Well, I follow you; but I would add that it is the Feds' business to decide whether a breach of those right occurred. The 5th C decision was initiated by the suit of the defendant who alledged a violation per Lautenburg. I vigorously agree with the defendant's position.

I would also add that the Fed Courts have been remiss in their duty to defend that same BOR , generally: chosing to defer to the States rather than to intervene where they should have, when patently dubious state legislation interferes with rights guaranteed by the Fed charter.

43 posted on 11/03/2001 8:50:45 AM PST by dasboot
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To: moderation_is_not_a_bad_thing
Why does the ammendment bring up the militia? If the framers wanted an unlimited individual right to bear arms why did they include that at all?

In order to enable a militia. You can have armed citizens and no militia, but you can't have a militia (comprised of all the people) without armed citizens.

44 posted on 11/03/2001 9:17:12 PM PST by sailor4321
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To: Fixit
These guys haven't got a clue. Well, actually, they do. They understand their anti-gun viewpoint has been dealt a severe blow and they are doing their best (which isn't very good), to counter it. Their arguments are shallow, badly researched, sophitical and rely in a number of instances on misreading case law (e.g., the 2nd amendment implications of Dred Scott)
45 posted on 11/03/2001 9:22:04 PM PST by sailor4321
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To: Fixit
These guys haven't got a clue. Well, actually, they do. They understand their anti-gun viewpoint has been dealt a severe blow and they are doing their best (which isn't very good), to counter it. Their arguments are shallow, badly researched, sophitical and rely in a number of instances on misreading case law (e.g., the 2nd amendment implications of Dred Scott)
46 posted on 11/03/2001 9:22:26 PM PST by sailor4321
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To: Fixit
Hey, Akhil and Vikram ... Molon Labe!
47 posted on 11/03/2001 9:25:18 PM PST by Jeff Head
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To: D Joyce
I hereby promise to buy any one of you his or her very own tank to keep on one condition: you must be able to personally and individually (i.e., no equipment allowed) "bear" this weapons for distance of 1 mile....thus bringing it within the scope of the term "keep and bear".
48 posted on 11/03/2001 9:26:57 PM PST by sailor4321
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To: VRWC_Member428
(Snicker)

Oh wait, were you joking?...JFK

49 posted on 11/03/2001 9:28:45 PM PST by BADROTOFINGER
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To: moderation_is_not_a_bad_thing
If you believe that some reasonable regulation is ok, do you think it's a mistake for the NRA to take a Zero-regulation stance instead of working for a compromise?

What is "reasonable" is one thing if there is no individual right to keep and bear military arms. In that situation, which the gun controllers believe, anything at all is reasonable. So you end up with things like Senators banning firearms because they look evil.

What is "reasonable" in the face of a clearly established individual right is something else altogether. It is, as the Emerson Court so correctly pointed out, something that is narrowly tailored, specific to the situation, etc.

To get your mind around it, try imagining there is no amendment protecting your freedom of religion. Now imagine what sorts of reasonable restrictions might be applied to your individual religious practices (all for the betterment of greater society, of course).

50 posted on 11/03/2001 9:37:22 PM PST by sailor4321
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To: moderation_is_not_a_bad_thing
Why does the ammendment bring up the militia? If the framers wanted an unlimited individual right to bear arms why did they include that at all?

To make clear what is meant by the term "arms".

My reading of the Second Amendment is that the term "arms" menas, essentially, "any artifacts which would be useful as weapons in the context of a well-functioning militia". Miller seems to agree with this view.

There are two reasons I can see why it is necessary to make such a clarification:

An interesting irony is that the real Miller decision is actually not anti-gun, but the synopsis was apparently written by an anti-gun court reporter. Contrary to what some later court decisions have claimed in [mis]citing Miller, the Court did not uphold Miller's conviction. Neither Miller nor co-defendent Layton was ever actually convicted of possessing an unregistered short-barreled shotgun. Instead, what the court actually held was that the Second Amendment does protect arms suitable for military use, but it is the responsibility of anyone claiming Second-Amendment protection for certain arms to produce evidence of such military usefulness. While the Court ruled that the government's case against Miller and Layton would be allowed to go forward, had the government done so it almost certainly would have lost (since Miller and/or Layton could have easily demonstrated the use of "trench guns" in the Great War). By effectively dropping the case, however, it allowed the fact that the Court said it could proceed to overshadow the fact that the Court also provided Miller and Layton with an absolute defense.
51 posted on 11/07/2001 9:49:41 PM PST by supercat
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To: Dan from Michigan
My opinion - All but felons. Felons shouldn't be able to vote either.

There would be no Constitutional problem with a state imposing lifetime slavery as a punishment for certain crimes and allowing such slaves some freedoms while denying the right to keep and bear arms or the right to vote. Nonetheless, I don't see such lifetime impositions as being a good idea except for crimes which also justify lifetime imprisonment.

If someone who, e.g. writes a bad check for $500, is forever branded as a serf for having done so, that aspect of his punishment can only be imposed once (once his freedoms have been lost, he has none left to lose). Consequently, the punishment for his first crime will be in many ways greater than the punishment for future crimes. This is not good.

If part of the goal of punishment is to deter future crimes, I would think it more effective to provide that someone who goes 'straight' for a suitable number of years should have their full rights restored. While I know that this is theoretically possible today, restoration of rights is today generally at the whim of whatever judge hears a felon's petition. Consequently, the fact that a felon could possibly have his rights restored if he goes straight isn't apt to provide much of a disincentive to future crime. By contrast, if there were well-defined criteria (e.g. felon must be crime-free through any probation/parole, and then for an additional term of years equal to the original sentence) felons might go straight in the hopes of achieving them.

52 posted on 11/07/2001 10:07:00 PM PST by supercat
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To: moderation_is_not_a_bad_thing; pocat
You invalidate your serious debate attempt with the "own even a tank or cannon" comments. See Vermont for sanity regarding lawful use of small arms. Over 26 thousand laws on the books alone covering firearms in some form and manner.

Almost all deal with cosmetics versus capability. For example, if your shotgun barrel is under 18 inches your a criminal, if your barrel is 18 inches or more your a good citizen and not a threat to society.

If you have a bayonet lug on your rifle your a criminal, if you don't your not a suspect in the next drive by bayoneting in your neighborhood.

If you have a magazine extension on your shotgun you can't have a pistol grip on the stock. But if you have no pistol grip you "can " have a extended magazine tube :o) See where all this insanity goes ? No where but revenue base BS to make all who have simple rifles or shotguns in their homes subject to fines and or penalities per BS laws as defined by some bean counter that believes a "criminal" will indeed follow HIS/HER law.

The little SOB's that killed the kids at Columbine broke some 30 plus laws and yet polidiots responded with more laws that disarm the responsible men and women we trust our kids safety with every day who could NOT defend them because laws they follow but others don't...........

Do you have a fire extinguisher in your home ? WHY ?

Do you have Insurance on your car ? WHY ?

Do you have a spare tire in the trunk ? WHY ?

My choice to protect me and mine if I can not evade a threat at all costs (except our lives of course) is hampered by someone charging me for the constitutional right to self protection. They use my choice as a law abidding citizen to not rely on Law Enforcement, 20 minutes after I'm attacked, for protection, as a source of revenue and income. That is in and of itself criminal, more so than any criminal on the street as it is subverting the original intent of those who know what an unarmed individual is........... easy pickings for any criminal act. Be sheep if you so desire, but don't demand that I do so just because you have 24 and 7 security detail or live in a better neighborhood or city and have never been attacked or in fear of your life at Oh dark Thirty .

As the national guard was created by congress some 125 years after the signing of the constitution I'll just guess that the framers weren't so visionary that they proposed an amendment for something that wasn't even invented yet.

My 2 cents..........sorry for the rant

53 posted on 11/07/2001 10:25:20 PM PST by Squantos
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To: Squantos
Well said, bro.

Nothing more could be added.

54 posted on 11/08/2001 3:17:55 AM PST by pocat
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To: Squantos
Do you have a fire extinguisher in your home ? WHY ? Do you have Insurance on your car ? WHY ? Do you have a spare tire in the trunk ? WHY ?

More to the point, given that we have doctors and fire departments, why should anyone need a first-aid kit or a fire extinguisher? Likewise, since we have police departments, why should anyone need a gun? [note: the answers are analagous]

55 posted on 11/08/2001 7:26:35 PM PST by supercat
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To: Fixit
Doesn't matter to me.

FMCDH!!

56 posted on 11/08/2001 7:31:22 PM PST by Looking4Truth
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To: supercat; TEXASPROUD
You fell into my more to the point trap Supercat :o)........... Just what I wanted to convey to the debate the individual sought. I have carried in some form or manner now since the age of 17 years old when my grandfather gave me a 1911A1. Only had a need to use it three times in my life, twice in service and once as a retiree/civilian (no bill justifiable by Grand Jury).

I'm told that it is an extreamly rare situation for anyone to ever have to defend themselves in such a manner. Better chance of winning lotto or struck by lightning yada yada.

Well , I play the lotto and ninja beer bunny golf ( with little sucess I may add, darn it) "BUT" have "indeed" encountered the need to use self defense for me and mine and hope to the good lord that I never , ever, ever have to do it again. But at least I'm alive and well and owe it to just having the simple 1911A1 stuffed in my waistband under a baggy shirt.

My Girl Friday aka soft squeezy toy seems to think I wear it , a spare mag and a surefire flashlight just to keep my love handles from spilling over my belt :o)..........I gotta PT more I guess......

Stay Safe

57 posted on 11/08/2001 9:12:27 PM PST by Squantos
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To: Squantos
You fell into my more to the point trap Supercat :o)...........

Perhaps you misunderstood me. Doctors and fire departments don't eliminate the need for private ownership of first-aid kits and fire extinguishers. The reason the latter are still needed is that in many cases a layman's response to a situation, executed immediately, is more necessary than a professional's response, executed later. If someone is in a major accident, a layman with a first-aid kit isn't going to eliminate the need for medical attention. If anything, the person with the first-aid kit will 'increase' it [by keeping the patient alive long enough for such attention to be worthwhile].

Police, likewise, do not eliminate the need for armed citizens, but armed citizens are not a substitute for police. Armed citizens, however, can help the police by staying alive so they can give the police the information they need to catch their would-be attackers.

58 posted on 11/09/2001 5:21:04 AM PST by supercat
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To: Fixit
Here's the funny thing to me. The writer talks about it being the right of the militia -- and then goes on to talk about the National Guard. But even if he were right he would not get what he wants, because a militia is not necessarily established and maintained by a government. According to Webster's (and common knowledge) a militia is "a body of citizens organized for military service" plain and simple. I could get a group together in my neighborhood, call it the neighborhood militia, and then be perfectly within my right to own guns -- BY HIS OWN INTERPRETATION OF THE CONSTITUTION!!! Cleary this is not the outcome the writer is seeking, but even if we played by HIS rules, we would still be able to get what we want. I love it. Why are these aholes such idiots?!
59 posted on 11/09/2001 5:58:12 AM PST by Lee'sGhost
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To: moderation_is_not_a_bad_thing
that's why we're all "up in arms", m_i_n_a_b_t. If you read through the court ruling, you'll see that they discuss it all at length, much more cogently than these fellows do. The good counselors at findlaw have decided that they're smarter than the constitution.
60 posted on 11/09/2001 6:17:54 AM PST by WindMinstrel
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