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Armed and Ready [George Will]
SJ Mercury News ^ | 11/5/01 | George Will

Posted on 11/05/2001 4:30:15 AM PST by tpaine

Armed and ready

BY GEORGE F. WILL

ATTEMPTS to use Sept. 11 events to impart momentum to pre-Sept. 11 agendas are mostly comic, such as the Farm Security Act, the title of which suggests what a supporter of the bill proclaims -- that the bill's agricultural subsidies and other stuff will strengthen ``national security.´´ But no attempt is more peculiar than that of advocates of ever-stricter gun controls.

With the latest warnings from Washington that the public should be wary and vigilant because other terror attacks may be imminent, the federal government has, in effect, deputized the American people. Such vague warnings may seem unhelpful, but they do, in effect, call 280 million sets of eyes and ears to heightened sensitivity, which has to change the environment, and risks, for terrorists.

Yet some say this is a logical time to multiply the legal hurdles for Americans seeking to defend themselves with firearms. What this idea ignores is the connection between civic health and the public's responsibility for participating in the provision of public safety. So this is an appropriate time to revisit the most fundamental reason why both the right and the fact of widespread gun ownership reflect a healthy dimension of America's democratic culture. This subject is doubly timely because of what a federal appeals court said 35 days after Sept. 11.

In an opinion containing a remarkably detailed -- and persuasive -- analysis of prior Second Amendment cases and the political and social culture from which the amendment arose, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that the amendment guarantees individuals the right to ``possess and bear their own firearms . . . that are suitable as personal, individual weapons.´´ This is important, even path-breaking.

The amendment 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.´´ Proponents of gun control, including those who say the government has a comprehensive power to control the possession of all weapons, even to the point of disarming the American public, have argued that the 13-word preamble means that the amendment provides only anachronistic protection of states´ rights to maintain militias.

However, had that been the aim of those who enacted the amendment, they could simply have said: ``Congress shall have no power to prohibit state militias.´´ They did not, because more -- much more -- was at issue.

The framers did not merely constitutionalize, meaning make fundamental, the right to possess and bear arms. The significance of their placement of the Second Amendment -- second only to the guarantee of freedom of speech, worship and assembly -- is that they considered the right the amendment protects to be central to citizenship.

Widespread possession of guns is justified by considerations of public safety, individual dignity and healthy democracy. Public safety because law enforcement personnel can never be numerous enough to guarantee safety. Personal dignity implies, among much else, readiness for self-defense. And the health of democratic culture is implicated in the general public's involvement in public safety. This is so because freedom is not a gift from government, and defending it is not a duty that properly responsible citizens will entirely delegate to government. ``Who are the militia?´´ asked George Mason, one of the framers insistent on adding a Bill of Rights to the Constitution. He answered his rhetorical question: ``They consist now of the whole people.´´ Today the whole American people should feel informally enlisted in a kind of anti-terrorism militia.

All Americans are, potentially, intended victims of terrorism. What can they do about that? Americans who live in large cities develop a certain urban wariness -- an instinctive alertness, a set of prudential strategies for minimizing dangers. A similar heightened alertness is now a civic duty.

And that duty cannot be properly understood or carried out unless Americans understand that the Second Amendment carries the considerable weight of expressing an important component of the meaning of citizenship, which is:

Public safety is the public's business. Public authorities take the lead and some of them work at it full time. However, at all times, and especially in times like these, it is every citizen's business.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial
KEYWORDS: georgewill
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1 posted on 11/05/2001 4:30:15 AM PST by tpaine
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To: tpaine; *bang_list
George will get its right on gun control, finally.

Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown

2 posted on 11/05/2001 4:41:51 AM PST by harpseal
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To: tpaine
Excellent editorial! I agree whole-heartedly with this sentence:

This is so because freedom is not a gift from government, and defending it is not a duty that properly responsible citizens will entirely delegate to government.

3 posted on 11/05/2001 4:41:58 AM PST by randita
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To: harpseal
Maybe he does. Maybe he's pretending to have finally gotten it to salvage his readership figures. George is a pissant, really. I don't believe he gets it at all.
4 posted on 11/05/2001 4:45:03 AM PST by Twodees
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To: tpaine
Will's change of heart on the Second Amendment is a monumental event in the evolution of thought on gun control among the chattering class. This eminent student of history finally experiences what the Founders felt in the aftermath of the Revolutionary War; i.e. both a shared and individual sense of responsibility for the safety and security of home, community, and nation.
5 posted on 11/05/2001 4:49:53 AM PST by DoctorHydrocal
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To: harpseal
Yep, - this crisis seems to be finally waking up the beltway crowd to the fact that they are not immune from bad things.

Two bits the majority of congress are now packing. - They, of course, are allowed to ignore fed, state, & local 'regulations'. VSP's have their priviliges.

6 posted on 11/05/2001 5:11:50 AM PST by tpaine
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To: randita
"This is so because freedom is not a gift from government, and defending it is not a duty that properly responsible citizens will entirely delegate to government."

An yes, - but note he infers that 'properly responsible citizens' will delegate to government ----? [a large portion?]. - Not entirely, not all, - to be sure, - but George is a master of the waffling statement.

7 posted on 11/05/2001 5:24:17 AM PST by tpaine
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To: tpaine
Two of our happy gun grabbers


8 posted on 11/05/2001 5:30:13 AM PST by dennisw
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To: DoctorHydrocal
The 'chattering class' lost one of their own, because she & her peers couldn't defend themselves.

- BIG wake up. - But I don't think it has fully sunk in yet.
More will probably have to die before it does.

9 posted on 11/05/2001 5:31:39 AM PST by tpaine
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To: dennisw
Please don't spam me thread with stoopid pics.

Thanks.

[some clown put enough pics in one 50 post unit the other day, that it took a half hour to load]

10 posted on 11/05/2001 5:36:20 AM PST by tpaine
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To: tpaine
A welcome change of heart by ol george!!!
11 posted on 11/05/2001 5:41:27 AM PST by ghostcat
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To: harpseal
Good for George!
12 posted on 11/05/2001 5:44:47 AM PST by Silly
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To: tpaine
Most browsers have a setting to ignore images (I do at the house on 56kb).

"Yet some say this is a logical time to multiply the legal hurdles for Americans seeking to defend themselves with firearms."
Yep, slam 3 planes into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, and thanks to heroic passengers on a fourth flight narrowly avert a fouth diaster, and Dims want to ban guns.

*Sigh*

13 posted on 11/05/2001 5:45:20 AM PST by 4CJ
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To: tpaine
The gun grabbers do not stop to think that armed citizens keep the govermental stage for them to operate in. The university law schools take advantage of the uneducated gun grabbers to weaken the country so the terrorists can do as they please. The government is so weak they cannot face the un-american groups raising up from 40 years of public education.
14 posted on 11/05/2001 5:48:53 AM PST by mbb bill
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To: tpaine
Public safety is the public's business. Public authorities take the lead and some of them work at it full time. However, at all times, and especially in times like these, it is every citizen's business.

BTTT

15 posted on 11/05/2001 5:51:18 AM PST by carpio
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To: carpio
Years ago, Will wrote about Snyder's "Nation of Cowards". At the time he found Snyder's arguments unpersuasive, but "bracing." It seems he's come home to Jesus, finally ;) BTTT!
16 posted on 11/05/2001 6:08:47 AM PST by IGOTMINE
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Nope, I don't have that feature. -- Any settings to ignore idiots?
17 posted on 11/05/2001 6:12:59 AM PST by tpaine
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To: tpaine
LOL - if I had that feature I'd ignore my boss

Not sure about Linux browsers, but here's what I use on Windows PC's
IE - Tools - Internet Options - Advanced - Show Pictures (uncheck)
Netscape - Edit - Preferences - Advanced - Automatically load images (uncheck)
Opera - File - preferences - multimedia - Show no images (check)

Of course, there is not a movement to ban "box-cutters"

18 posted on 11/05/2001 6:34:00 AM PST by 4CJ
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To: tpaine
"Today the whole American people should feel informally enlisted in a kind of anti-terrorism militia."

This bears repeating.

Thanks for posting

Regards

19 posted on 11/05/2001 6:48:18 AM PST by Tinman
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
Thanks for your info. - No we have to get John Rob working on FR's new [selective] idiot ignore button.
- Like bosses, sometimes it pays to listen to them.
20 posted on 11/05/2001 7:02:47 AM PST by tpaine
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