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Friday, June 27, 2008
Andrew Langer :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Supreme Court - Reaffirming the Founders' Brilliance
by Andrew Langer
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When it comes to the individual nature of rights, history has long obscured what the founders intended.  As the years have gone by, the simple, straightforward framework of our government, which laid out limitations on that government’s power and left expansive rights in the hands of individuals, has been muddied and complicated by people either ignorant of what the founders envisioned, or affirmatively interested in subverting that which had been created.  The end result has been a much-too-large and too-costly government eager to able to inject itself in all aspects of an individual’s life.

The Supreme Court’s decision in DC v. Heller yesterday dealt a blow to those who would subvert, and, for the first time in a number of years, shed a bright light onto that elegant Constitutional framework.  The debate, of course, in the Heller case, was over whether the 2nd Amendment protected an individual’s right to keep and bear arms, or whether it was some sort of group right.  Moreover, the case touched on whether the 2nd amendment limited that right to keep and bear arms to certain circumstances, and certain circumstances alone.

The Court’s decision was clear, and it affirmed what many understood the intent of the founders to be:  that the Constitution, in this case as in all others, is a document which limits power, and doesn’t confer rights.  Those rights are inalienable and have been endowed by our creator (to bring our nation’s “enabling” document, the Declaration of Independence, into play here).  This was plain to many from a reading of the rest of the Bill of Rights, especially the last two amendments, the 9th and 10th.

If you understand the 9th and 10th Amendments to the Constitution, you understand the Constitution itself.  All powers not surrendered to the government are retained by the people, says the 10th, and the 9th says that simply because something isn’t enumerated in the Bill of Rights doesn’t mean that such a right doesn’t exist.  And because those 10th Amendments in the Bill of Rights can’t be picked and chosen from arbitrarily, we have to read all of those Amendments in the context of the totality of the Bill of Rights itself.

That’s why a right to privacy exists, though privacy isn’t mentioned anywhere in the Bill of Rights. 

When one puts the 2nd Amendment into the context of the 9th and 10th Amendments, it made the “militias-only” justification for limited the 2nd Amendment’s scope a tenuous and twisted one, facially nonsensical.  The founders were clearly saying that one reason for preventing Congress from interfering in the right to keep and bear arms was to ensure the effectiveness of militias.  But that was only one of innumerable reasons for doing so.  That’s made clear from the 9th and 10th Amendments.  You have a right to engage in whatever lawful activity you want with your firearm—from defending yourself, to hunting, to target-shooting, to whatever.

That’s the ultimate limitation, incidentally—the lawfulness of the activity.  All just law is created out of the intersection between exercises of individual rights.  I have a right to swing my arms around.  I do not have a right to hit you with them.  You have a right to hold up your arm to block my arm should it be swinging towards you.  I do not have a right to prevent you from doing so.  Should I hit you, there are laws that you can use to remedy your grievances against me.

The same holds true with firearms.  I have a right to own one and to use it.  I do not have a right to shoot you with it.  I do not have a right to use it in a manner which will endanger you or your property.  I do not even have a right to threaten you with it.  All of those uses would violate your rights, and therefore laws protecting you from those infringements on your rights are perfectly constitutional.

But the Supreme Court rightly recognized that I have rights too.  They thankfully affirmed, once again, that the Founders were brilliant in their vision for a free and civil society, and in recognizing that simply because they couldn’t imagine a possible right, that didn’t mean that the right didn’t exist.

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About The Author
Andrew Langer is the President of the Institute for Liberty, an advocacy organization dedicated to fighting the petty tyrannies of government.
 
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Subject: Re: Jim--What does IT actually/Thank you
So, do I understand you correctly: because the Amendment only mentions the need for a militia, the right to keep and bear arms is only for state (opp. to individual) military purposes; and we would have to amend the amendment (?) in order to keep and bear arms for any other purpose?

Need the amendment be so exclusive, esp. when the phrase "the people" is not? (In the first amendment, we assume that "the people" who have a right to assemble include all individuals. Why should "the people" in the 2nd Amendment now be taken to mean only those who are in military or police forces?)

Furthermore, need the amendment's positive affirmation of the necessity of a militia negate all other reasons for having a gun? I.e., Just because the amendment affirms one condition, need it imply the rejection of all others, esp. when there are no strong limiting words (like "only"), and when the point of the Constitution and Bill of Rights was to keep the federal government from interfering overmuch with citizen's God-given rights?

Thank you, Thank you

keturah1122 Location: TN
Reply # 94
Date: Jun 30, 2008 - 9:40 AM EST

Thanks a million for your response to my long list of comments on the comma. I have read your comments, but have yet to study them.

Over the past nearly 60 some years I have written many technical documents (computers, starting in 1950), and have written several books, and thousands of pages of Journals and stories about our travels.

I know that most of the time, when I edit (over and over) anything that I have written, I add and remove a handful of commas. So I could tell a million story about changing a comma because of how I think it changes what is written.

And I might add that in addition to my Uncle who was Superintendent of schools in a major city 70 years ago, I have the opinions of at least two long time college professors, one Ph.D. from MIT, the other from Ohio State, and they both agree with me. That is what makes this argument fun.

It has long been my opinion that punctuation is just as important as words, and throughout this discussion I have insisted that I was not commenting on the interpretation that anyone came up with, just that it was my opinion that the interpretation did not fit what was written. So if you didn’t like what it said, amend it.

I would like to “talk” to you some more, so if you wish go to http://www.travel-tidbits.com/
and you will find a couple thousand pages of my writings about our travels, and even 80 pages about the old computer days. My Email address is there.

I Googled your name, but didn’t know, or want to learn, what to do with what I found.


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