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The Twin Peaks of the Second Amendment

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In the wake of another senseless shooting yesterday we can expect progressive attacks on our Second Amendment freedom to become even more shrill and frenetic.  That is why now is a good time to go back to basics.  In this essay I will explain the history and theoretical underpinnings of the Second Amendment and discuss why it continues to be vitally important in both of its functions – ensuring the right of law abiding citizens to defend against both private violence and public violence. 

The Theoretical Underpinnings of the Right to Keep and Bear Arms

The United States Supreme Court has held the right to keep and bear arms [“RKBA”] is “among those fundamental rights necessary to our system of ordered liberty.”  McDonald v. City of Chicago.1 No one should be surprised by this holding because the RKBA is deeply rooted in our history, not just as Americans but as heirs to the English common law tradition. 

The first thing and most basic thing one needs to understand about the RKBA is that the right is codified in, not granted by, the Constitution.  The Supreme Court put it this way nearly 150 years ago:  “This is not a right granted by the Constitution.  Neither is it in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”2  In 1689, William and Mary enacted a statute3 in the wake of the Glorious Revolution that is generally considered to be the predecessor of the right that was codified in the Second Amendment over 100 years later.4  William Blackstone’s famous commentaries on the common law greatly influenced the founding generation.  Blackstone summed up all human rights within three primary rights – the right of personal security, the right of personal liberty, and right of private property.5  In addition to these three primary rights, he listed five auxiliary rights that serve as “barriers to protect and maintain inviolate the three great and primary rights.” The RKBA is one of these auxiliary rights.   According to Blackstone, the RKBA has two independent aspects:  (1) “the natural right of resistance and self-preservation;” and (2) “the right of having and using arms for self-preservation and defence.”  Thus, by the time of the American founding, the right was understood to protect against both public and private violence. 

The first aspect of the right – the right to resist a tyrannical government – was the primary impetus behind the Second Amendment.  After all, the Revolutionary War was ignited at Lexington and Concord when the colonists resisted a governmental attempt to seize their arms.  The militia clauses of the original 1789 Constitution giving Congress the power to organize, discipline and call forth the militias were highly controversial, because the anti-federalists feared that these powers could lead to the derogation of the RKBA by the federal government.  The Second Amendment was included in the Bill of Rights to address these objections. 

In the years following the Revolution and the Constitutional Convention, the “check on government power” aspect of the right continued to receive prominence of place.  St. George Tucker was an influential constitutional scholar in the founding period, and he described the right as “the true palladium of liberty.”6  Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story, echoing Tucker, wrote in his commentaries:  “The right of the citizens to keep and bear arms has justly been considered, as the palladium of the liberties of a republic; since it offers a strong moral check against the usurpation and arbitrary power of rulers; and will generally, even if these are successful in the first instance, enable the people to resist and triumph over them.”7

By the 1850’s, the fear that the federal government would disarm the universal militia that had prompted the founders to include the Second Amendment in the Bill of Rights had largely faded as a popular concern.8  And the second aspect of the right – the right to personal self-defense – had become more prominent in the public’s mind.  Nevertheless, both grounds for the right – what I have called the “twin peaks of the Second Amendment” – continued to provide the theoretical foundation of the right.  In the next two sections I will discuss why both of these peaks continue to be vitally important for ordered liberty in these troubled times.

The Right to Defense Against Private Violence

A few years, ago my wife and I adopted three precious, beautiful children, ages 3, 5 and 7.  Sadly, not long after the kids came to live with us, we received what we believed to be credible information that the biological father was telling people he was making plans to invade our home, kill us, and kidnap the children.  Naturally, when we heard this, we immediately contacted the police and an officer came to our house to meet with us.  I doubt I will ever forget that conversation.  The officer politely listened to our concerns and commiserated with us as we told our story.  And then he said “Well, if he attacks you give us a call and we will get here as soon as we can.”  Have you ever heard the old saw, “when you need the cops in seconds, they are only minutes away”?  My wife and I sat there across our kitchen table from the officer and came to grips with the reality underlying that old saw.  Don’t get me wrong.  I am not criticizing the officer who sat with us, and in retrospect, I should not have been surprised.  Criminals have this advantage over the police:  They pick the time and place of their crimes.  What was he going to do, promise us that he would have a unit parked in our driveway 24/7 from then on?  Of course not.  The cops cannot be everywhere, and it follows that their role is almost always reactive and not preventative. 

My wife and I took our safety into our own hands.  We upgraded our alarm system and installed a security door.  And I made an appointment with a dear friend, an ex-Navy SEAL, who gave me a course in combat shotgun.  And from that time on I slept with that shotgun nearby.  Many nights I laid in bed wondering if this was the night when we would hear a crashing door or a breaking window, the dogs would bark, the alarms would scream, and I would face the test of whether I would be able to put another man down.  My SEAL friend told me to have a specific plan and to visualize implementing that plan over and over.  My wife and I physically practiced our roles in the plan, and countless times I laid there staring at the ceiling as I pictured hearing the crash, grabbing my weapon, racking the slide, and running to meet our attacker in what would surely be a deadly encounter. 

This season of our life came to an end a few nights ago when this man died in a violent encounter with the police.  The next day I marked the occasion by putting my shotgun in the gun safe for the first time in a very long while. 

Here is where the RKBA comes in.  This man was a career criminal who had been to prison several times.  It was illegal for him to possess a firearm.  Yet he had one in his hand when he died.  This may come as a shock to you, but criminals don’t follow the law.  That’s right.  Criminals are infamous for ignoring pesky statutes they find inconvenient, such as the statute that prohibits criminals from possessing guns.  Another old saw:  “If you outlaw guns, only outlaws will have guns.”  Trite?  Yes.  True?  Also yes. 

There are over 300 million firearms in this country – we have more guns than people.  Any attempt to confiscate all of those guns would be not only unconstitutional, but also wildly futile.  That is why one basic, indisputable fact should always underlie every discussion about the right to private defense:  Bad men will always find a way to get a gun.  Two more facts follow from this one: (1) The police will candidly admit that they usually cannot prevent bad men from attacking good people.  (2) Therefore, law abiding citizens must be free to defend themselves with equal if not superior firepower to that employed against them. 

My wife and I have lived as if under the Sword of Damocles.  She was especially vulnerable, and can tell you how it feels to have a stab of fear in your heart every time an unfamiliar car passes by.  We hoped the day would never come and thankfully it did not.  But we had to prepare to defend ourselves and our precious children.  Her .38 special and my 12-gauge pump action were crucial to that preparation.  Gun control fanatics imagine a utopia where such preparation is never necessary.  They have deluded themselves and would delude the rest of us too.  We must live, not ignore, harsh realities, including the harsh reality that bad men will always find a way to arm themselves.  We must resist the progressives’ efforts to disarm us and render us defenseless.  Never forget that the Greek roots of “utopia” literally mean “no place.”

The Right to Defense Against Public Violence

Two of the stupidest comments I hear from gun control fanatics are “You don’t need an AR-15 to hunt!” and “the Second Amendment does not protect weapons of war!”  God help us.  The sheer breadth and depth of the historical ignorance that underlies these statements beggars belief. 

The Second Amendment states: “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.”

What in God’s name do these fanatics think a militia does?  That’s right.  It fights wars.  As we saw above, the RKBA ensures the right of the people to defend against both private violence and public violence.  Only an idiot believes the Second Amendment was a sop the Founders extended to duck hunters to get them to vote to ratify the Constitution. 

But surely, we are far past the time when we need to worry about public violence, aren’t we?  No, we are not. 

A few years ago I had a gun control debate with a friend (we will call him “Tony”) who was a citizen of Hong Kong.  There was a mass shooting here, and Tony took to Facebook to bemoan gun violence in the United States and compare us unfavorably to peaceful Hong Kong.  In my response I acknowledged that mass shootings are indeed a terrible thing and a few thousand people had indeed died in such incidents in the last 50 years.  But then I tried to put that statistic into perspective, and I asked my friend “What did Mao call a few thousand deaths?”  Answer:  “Tuesday afternoon.”  Mao famously said  that “power grows out of the barrel of a gun,” and in his China, the government had a monopoly on guns.  He used that monopoly to perpetrate 65 million murders.  That’s right, I said, within living memory your government used its gun monopoly to accomplish the ruthless murder of tens of millions.  Maybe governments should not have a monopoly on guns.

Tony was unimpressed with my arguments and eventually unfriended me.  Xi’s government stands in direct linear descent from Mao’s government, and in recent months we have watched in horror as China brutally stomped out the last vestiges of freedom the British common law system had bequeathed to Hong Kong.  As I watch those reports, I sometimes wondered if Tony ever thought back on our exchange.  Has he reconsidered whether it would have been a good thing for the freedom loving citizens of Hong Kong to have the means to resist Xi’s brutality by force of arms?

But that can never happen in the United States Barry.  Why do you say that?  Are American politicians so much purer of heart than Chinese politicians?  Does their lust for power not burn as hotly as their Chinese counterparts?  Do you really think that a wild-eyed progressive fanatic like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez would not impose her utopian visions on the American people by force of arms if she thought she had half a chance? 

I will grant you this.  Maoist style authoritarianism is unlikely to occur in the United States.  But this is not because our politicians are better than theirs.  It is because our politicians have a healthy fear of a well-armed citizenry and know there are limits beyond which they dare not push us.  I hope there never comes a day when those limits are tested.  But if they are, I am glad the Second Amendment ensures the US government – unlike the Chinese government – will not have a monopoly on power. 

Freedom is Costly

None of what I have written means I take the deaths caused in mass shootings lightly.  Every death is a tragedy.  And it is certainly the case that the right to keep and bear arms comes at a cost – the cost we incur when that right is abused.  But we do not jettison our fundamental rights even when it is absolutely certain that public safety would be increased if we did.  This principle is true not only of RKBA; it is equally true of many of our other freedoms.  As the Supreme Court noted in McDonald:

The right to keep and bear arms, however, is not the only constitutional right that has controversial public safety implications.  All of the constitutional provisions that impose restrictions on law enforcement and on the prosecution of crimes fall into the same category.  The exclusionary rule generates substantial social costs, which sometimes include setting the guilty free and the dangerous at large.  [There are] serious consequences of dismissal for a speedy trial violation, which means a defendant who may be guilty of a serious crime will go free.  In some unknown number of cases [the Miranda rule] will return a killer, a rapist or other criminal to the streets to repeat his crime.

We could do away with the right against self-incrimination and let cops beat confessions out of suspects.  There is not the slightest doubt that if we did, countless lives would be saved by keeping criminals off the street.  We do not give up this and other freedoms even though they come at a high cost.  Why? Because in the United States we have chosen a dangerous freedom over a peaceful slavery. 

_______________

1561 U.S. 742, 778 (2010).

2United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U.S. 542, 553 (1876).

31 W. & M., ch. 2, § 7, in 3 Eng. Stat. at Large 441.

4District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 593 (2008).

51 Blackstone 141 (1765). 

61 Blackstone’s Commentaries, Editor’s App. 300 (S. Tucker ed. 1803). 

73 J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States § 1890, 746 (1833). 

8McDonald, 561 U.S. at 770.

Comments
Sev, What does "sport" have to do with the 2nd Amendment? Please show me where in the text or history of the clause it is even mentioned. See the OP where I talk about the two stupidest comments I hear. I am surprised that you would make one of those two stupidest comments without at least trying to justify it.Barry Arrington
April 18, 2021
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Sev, Do you think the government should be able to issue (or if it chooses withhold) a license to exercise any of your other constitutional rights? BTW, you don't have a constitutional right to drive a car.Barry Arrington
April 18, 2021
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Sev, I see and raise. I think there should be a compulsory class in High School on firearms, safety, handling, basic tactics and military discipline; that is so in say Cuba. As part of that class, each child should be sworn in as a junior member of the unorganised militia of the USA with counsel that use of firearms, edged weapons, blunt force weapons etc [parallel to a bayonet-tipped rifle with a hard butt such as a Springfield 03 . . . thus, spears, quarter staffs, swords, knives, clubs, archery equipment and the like] is under military discipline and subject to military tribunal and penalty. That should be noted, as something normally deferred to civilian courts but a reserve power with particular relevance to civil disorders and emergencies. Similarly, it should be brought out that criminality involving weapons is a violation of the relevant code of military justice with same implications. In severe cases of organised large scale crime, such is subject to being treated as brigandage, piracy or armed rebellion, under the same code. And yes, that applies to the Mafia, Bonnie and Clyde imitators, Cripps, Bloods, Narcotraffickers, Coyotes etc. Further to this, given terroristic threats etc, organised militias should be established to protect likely sites for mass attacks. Where, under relevant circumstances, the police forces are acting as militias in the face of disorders. I have already discussed these some years back. KFkairosfocus
April 18, 2021
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Sev “Police and special forces trainers will all tell you that pistols – which is what most people will choose to carry – are notoriously inaccurate. They will tell you that it takes long hours of training and practice to be sure you can use them with reasonable accuracy while under extreme stress. “ I don’t think people understand how difficult it is to put a bullet on target at someone say 20 feet away. I am not talking bullseye I am talking about center mass or even hitting someone in the shoulder. Nor can shooting your pistol at a gun range ever prepare you for the adrenaline dump you will be experiencing in a real life situation , one would be lucky to even get the gun out of ones holster! Then there is the tunneling effect which can put others at risk. If you do shoot someone and kill them expect certain uncontrollable nasty physical consequences, hint you will likely“ #### your pants and throw up. Especially because of the tunneling effect when the police come tell them you will fully cooperate with them after you consult an attorney. Expect to be sued so gun owners should have insurance because ones legal fees will be substantial. An informed gun owner needs to understand the gun laws in your home state. If someone is in your backyard no you don’t shoot them you call 911 and tell them to leave. If someone is in your garage stealing your car no you don’t shoot them let them have your car. The best self defense is to be aware of your surroundings, leave if you sense a dangerous situation and don’t look for trouble like taking a gun to a protest. Trouble is easy enough to find you so don’t put oneself into situations where it’s you inviting trouble. Vividvividbleau
April 18, 2021
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Leading up to the Trail of Tears was legislation passed in Georgia, which was the precursor to what followed. In 1828, Georgia passed a series of laws against the Cherokee, which the Cherokee replied by going through the federal courts until it reached the Supreme Court. The Cherokee Nation Vs Georgia and Worcester Vs Georgia. It was Worcester Vs Georgia that ruled that the Cherokee Nation was politically separate and not bound by Georgia law, which was ignored by the federal government and military. Since the Cherokee Nations Vs Georgia had a slightly different ruling in which they were both considered part of the American people and a nation of their own, they should have exercised their 2nd Amendment rights to defend themselves.BobRyan
April 17, 2021
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Barry well done|| I have a concealed carry license in my home state and carry a gun everywhere it is legal to do so. I also support Maj Tour the founder of “Black Guns Matter” ,the NRA and USCAA. I go to a gun range often. I can’t believe this but I agree with almost everything Seversky wrote in post number 8. Go figure. Vividvividbleau
April 17, 2021
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In Massachusetts you have to take safety training. The training includes firing a gun. Then you get a certificate. You have to take that certificate to the local police department. They set up an interview and conduct a background check. Only if all of that is OK'd will you get a permit to own a firearm. That seems very reasonable.ET
April 17, 2021
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Superb commentary on the Second Amendment, and I especially appreciate how you brought in the fact that our Bill of Rights, in its entirety, does not always provide for the "safest" society. However, I would argue that most higher-level opposition to firearms is not a reaction to gun violence but is because totalitarian-bent politicians understand precisely what the Second Amendment means. After all, dozens of black people are shot in Chicago each weekend, but there is seemingly very little concern over their welfare because it doesn't fit nicely into the narrative. No, the power-hungry leftists make their appeal to gullible white Americans who might dare try to trade liberty for safety because it's THAT group that has the ability to weaken the Second Amendment.OldArmy94
April 17, 2021
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I understand there is an old legal saw which goes something like, your right to swing your fist in any direction stops at the end of my nose. In other words, the free exercise of an individual's rights ends where it encroaches on those of other members of society. I believe that the Second Amendment should be upheld. Individuals should have the right to own firearms for sport, recreation and self-defense. That said, I also believe society has a right and a duty to ensure that those who own firearms should undergo training in the safe handling of those weapons. If they pass a test of their proficiency then they should be issued a certificate or license which would permit them to purchase and own firearms, just like they would be issued a license to drive a motor vehicle. Maybe they should also be require to carry insurance just as they are for driving a car. For those intending to carry one for defensive purposes they need to be impressed with the fact that guns are not a perfect solution. Police and special forces trainers will all tell you that pistols - which is what most people will choose to carry - are notoriously inaccurate. They will tell you that it takes long hours of training and practice to be sure you can use them with reasonable accuracy while under extreme stress. Most owners are not usually willing to do this. They also need to be impressed with the fact that they are responsible for every round that leaves the barrel of their gun. What happens to those that miss their intended target as some inevitably will? Could you live with the knowledge that you killed an innocent bystander, perhaps a child, albeit unintentionally? Because that can and has happened. I'm all for responsible gun ownership and I believe the majority are. The problem is how to deal with those that aren't. Is it acceptable to just throw up our hands and say there is nothing that can be done?Seversky
April 17, 2021
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MNY, it seems a significant number of mass attacks, by shooting, bombing, rioting, arson, edged weapons etc are terrorist strikes supporting various ideologies -- often unacknowledged when that is inconvenient. Of course, such motivations overlap significantly with the foot soldiers being unhinged, whether on a longstanding psycho-social basis, or ideologically or by being steeped in sub cultures of extreme hostility. Balanced, responsible, rational, well adjusted individuals will not resort to murder. I fear, as the obvious ongoing and accelerating disintegration of especially the US proceeds, more and more extremists will feel empowered to act out. It may now be too late to prevent a much higher kinetic element in the ongoing 4th generation civil war. KFkairosfocus
April 17, 2021
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The mass shootings appear to be mostly about mental illness, and loners. Both loneliness and mental illness are increasing, so the mass shootings would also increase. The problem is that a large percentage of the population of the USA are now defacto socialists. Socialism as some kind of mindset. It's a different kind of people. And actually for people who are socialists it is a better outcome to have guncontrol, and critical race theory, and that stuff. It would be better if they weren't socialists, but given that they are socialists, it is a better outcome for them to have that socialist stuff. So it is inevitable that when the majority of people become socialists, that then the constitution is thrown out. Some arbitrary hysteria will then throw it out. So I think it's not about convincing someone about what a good policy is, it's about people having the policy that suits them. So you can talk all the great arguments you want, but they are not suited for people who are socialists.mohammadnursyamsu
April 17, 2021
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Thank you News Desk.Barry Arrington
April 17, 2021
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I served prison time in 1969 for marijuana, and learned the difference between professional criminals and circumstantial lawbreakers. They are COMPLETELY DIFFERENT TYPES OF PEOPLE. Your experience underlines our total failure to act on this DIFFERENCE. We have fake three-strikes laws that are never truly used. It's not unusual to see arrests of criminals with 50 separate convictions, who still haven't broken through the fake three-strike boundary.polistra
April 17, 2021
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This is honestly the best defense of the US2A I have ever read. I understand it now. It is easy for a serious news hack to understand US1A (freedom of the press, etc.). Only parasitic grifters in media genuinely don't understand it. Glad it's over for you and surely a learning opportunity for the rest of us.News
April 17, 2021
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Thank you KF for your kind words and your thoughtful, per usual, additions.Barry Arrington
April 17, 2021
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BA, excellent, sobering essay. Sad to hear of your years-long threat, and though it has come to an end, a death under those circumstances is eternally sobering. Your essay is a reminder on just how superficial and ill informed so much of media, public and office water cooler discussion is. I note, classic sources I saw point to natural defences that animals have as a start point for recognising the right of self-defence. That suggests, observing from nature, effective means of concealment, means of flight, warning signals, means of force. With humans, we don't have particularly impressive natural concealment, burst speed [though we are good on long distance running], warning or force. We have always augmented, using intelligence. In that context, civil law and states are responsible to recognise realities such as the seconds-minutes gap and that Col Colt rendered men equal in self-defence capability. I think you know that on current global threat profiles I have argued for proper local organisation and mobilisation with associated discipline on the old Swiss model. I even favoured the 9 mm parabellum and the 6.5 mm Grendel and Tavor bullpup. For long range, 6.5 mm Creedmoor. Of course 12 or 16 Ga have a voice all of their own, esp. on the clear warning side. Looking on, those look more and more sadly relevant. I trust that sober thinking will prevail. KFkairosfocus
April 17, 2021
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