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People Screaming About Real IDs to Fly Need to Take Issue With This, Too

People Screaming About Real IDs to Fly Need to Take Issue With This, Too
AP Photo/Keith Srakocic

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced that, as of today, a Real ID would be needed to fly anywhere in the country. This has been coming for ages now, but there are still a lot of people very upset about it.

I'm mostly ambivalent on the topic myself because I didn't have a choice about getting one, but many screaming about them seem a tad selective in their outrage.

See, there are a lot of arguments against this out there, but one is that these requirements are burdensome and problematic for poorer Americans.

Of course, as someone who has lived more than a little lean in the income department for a good chunk of my adult life, I'm not entirely sure where poor folks are flying to and from because tickets on flights aren't exactly cheap most of the time.

Yet there's something else that seems to raise some questions about that line of reasoning, and that was framed pretty well by Second Amendment attorney Kostas Moros.

Or, we could probably add the burden of getting a semi-automatic with a detachable magazine – which is most of them – which will become the norm in Colorado very soon.

There is no constitutionally protected right to take a flight. Yes, you have the freedom to travel between the states, but there's no absolute right to access whatever means of travel you want. Especially as planes, trains and automobiles are all private property, and unless you have one of your own, you have no right to automatically access some means to travel owned by someone else.

I'm not thrilled at the idea of the government telling private entities who they can and cannot admit on their vehicles, of course, but that ship set sail long ago.

Yet, while there's no constitutionally protected right to board a plane, there is one to keep and bear arms.

Bearing arms means carrying them, which California and New York, among others, make as burdensome as humanly possible. Those requirements go well beyond getting a particular type of ID that not just lets you board a plane but also do everything else you'll need an ID for.

If anyone asks why we think the Second Amendment is treated as a second-class right, this is why. This right here.

Of course, anti-gun crusader Fred Guttenberg tried to turn this in't a slam dunk in the other direction:

He ignores the fact that Real IDs are the norm in many states and that you do, in fact, have to show ID when buying a firearm from a licensed gun dealer. If you don't have that, then you'll need a passport. In other words, this kind of shows how little even a prominent gun control advocate actually knows about buying a gun.

Then again, Fred isn't very bright.

Neither are some of the people losing their minds about the whole Real ID thing, though.

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