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The Militia of The Several States Guarantee the Second Amendment, Part 1 of 8
Tuesday, July 5, 2005
By: Dr. Edwin Vieira, Jr.
One
cannot hold to a fanciful, romantic, or even partially erroneous interpretation
of the Constitution and nevertheless expect to be able to use the
Constitution effectively to protect his rights. For his opponents
will inevitably expose the flaws in his position and exploit them
against him. Nowhere is this more true than with respect to the right
of the people to keep and bear arms.
Most
defenders of that right begin and end with the Second Amendment: "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." Inasmuch as the Second Amendment does say that "the right
of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed", this
reliance is not illogical. Less explicable, though, is why so many
who advocate that right under color of that part of the Second Amendment
nonetheless exclude altogether from their consideration the preceding
companion language, "[a] well regulated Militia, being necessary to
the security of a free State". Why rely on only a part, but not the
whole?
Often, the
reason advanced follows these lines:
Even
if the right to keep and bear arms is something that will support
"[a] well regulated Militia", it is not necessarily the same thing
as, or limited to, or even connected with "[a] well regulated Militia".
Otherwise, the Second Amendment would simply say that "a well regulated
Militia shall not be prohibited", or that "the right of the people
to form a well regulated Militia shall not be infringed", or even
that "the right of each State to form a well regulated Militia shall
not be abridged". Therefore, the right to keep and bear arms can
(and should) be defined, established, guaranteed, and protected
separate from considerations of "a well regulated Militia".
One
must wonder, however, why people today believe that such an argument
can be valid, when obviously the Founding Fathers--who themselves
explicitly conjoined the phrases "[a] well regulated Militia, being
necessary to the security of a free State" and "the right of the people
to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed" in the Second Amendment--subscribed
to no such theory of separation in thought, nor consequentially in
action, either. Certainly, "[i]t cannot be presumed, that any clause
in the constitution is intended to be without effect". Marbury
v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 174 (1803). See also Myers
v. United States, 272 U.S. 52, 151-52 (1926); Knowlton v. Moore,
178 U.S. 41, 87 (1900); Blake v. McClung, 172 U.S. 239, 260-61
(1898); Hurtado v. California, 110 U.S. 516, 534 (1884).
The
Founding Fathers, of course, were not writing on a clean slate. All
of pre-constitutional American history as well confirms this plain
linguistic evidence. From the settling of the first Colonies in the
mid-1600s, "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms" was everywhere
and always coincident with a duty of the people, as individuals, to
keep and bear arms for service (actual or potential) in their Colonial
and then State Militia. Indeed, it is impossible to read the dozens
of Colonial and State Militia Acts of the pre-constitutional period--in
basic form and content strikingly similar to one another, from New
Hampshire in the North to Georgia in the South--without concluding
that the right and the duty to keep and bear arms were then--and,
absent amendment of the Constitution, remain today--two sides of the
selfsame coin. Nowhere will a researcher find a body of Colonial or
early State laws explicitly recognizing, protecting, and even enabling
the right of individuals to keep and bear arms outside of the context
of the duty of each individual to keep and bear arms.
Therefore,
anyone conversant with this history—which forms the primary legal
basis for "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms"--must question
the practicality, and worry about the possible pitfalls, of the theory
that reliance solely upon the second phrase of the Second Amendment
can secure that right. "'In expounding the Constitution of the United
States, every word must have its due force and appropriate meaning;
for it is evident from the whole instrument, that no word was unnecessarily
used, or needlessly added. * * * Every word appears to have been weighed
with the utmost deliberation, and its force and effect to have been
fully understood.'" Williams v. United States, 289 U.S. 553,
572-73 (1933). That being so, one hoping to rely on the Second Amendment
dissects it at his peril.
Moreover,
under present conditions, one who hopes to secure "the right of the
people to keep and bear Arms" relies exclusively on the Second Amendment
itself at his peril. In The Federalist No. 84, Alexander Hamilton
warned that all bills of rights were not only
unnecessary
in the proposed Constitution, but would even be dangerous. They
would contain various exceptions to powers not granted; and, on
this very account, would afford a colorable pretext to claim more
than were granted. * * * Why, for instance, should it be said that
the liberty of the press shall not be restrained, when no power
is given by which restrictions may be imposed? * * * [S]uch a provision
* * * would furnish, to men disposed to usurp, a plausible pretense
for claiming that power. * * * This may serve as a specimen of the
numerous handles which would be given to the doctrine of constructive
powers, by the indulgence of an injudicious zeal for bills of rights.
Howsoever
Hamilton himself may be justly criticized as an advocate of too powerful
a central government and of too many "constructive powers", on this
point he has proven all too prescient. "Why", one may ask with him,
"should it be said that the [right of the people to keep and bear
arms] shall not be [infringed], when no power is given by which restrictions
may be imposed? * * * [S]uch a provision * * * would furnish, to men
disposed to usurp, a plausible pretense for claiming that power."
And so Hamilton's prediction has become America's reality--with "men
disposed to usurp" today using the very existence of the Second Amendment
as a "handle[ ]" and "a plausible pretense for claiming th[e] power"
to do precisely what the Amendment prohibits.
But
was Hamilton correct that "no power is given [in the original Constitution]
by which restrictions may be imposed"? Everyone who pays attention
to the issue of "gun control" is familiar with the "gun controllers'"
contentions that:
If
the Second Amendment did not exist, Congress and the States would
enjoy plenary power to ban all private possession of firearms--Congress,
through the powers "[t]o lay and collect Taxes" and "[t]o regulate
Commerce", which form the jurisdictional predicates for all modern
"gun control" emanating from the General Government. Article I,
Section 8, Clauses 2 and 3. And,
Even
though the Second Amendment does exist, it confines the powers of
Congress and the States in that particular only to the limited degree
the courts (that is, the General Government and the States themselves)
permit.
Everyone,
too, has heard the argument that "the right of the people to keep
and bear Arms" does not protect the private, personal possession of
suitcase nuclear weapons, or anti-aircraft missiles, or heavy artillery--and
that if Congress and the States may "regulate" to the point of absolute
prohibition the private possession of such "Arms" as these, then they
may also "regulate" to the point of absolute prohibition (or licensing,
or registration) the private possession of any other "Arms", the sole
question in every case being whether some judge will deem such a "regulation"
to be "reasonable". (Of course, this line of reasoning is hopelessly
illogical. Just because "the right of the people to keep and bear
Arms" might not include certain things that can be called "Arms" does
not mean that it does not extend to the very types of "Arms" to which
history proves the Second Amendment refers, or that it could ever
be constitutionally "reasonable" to do precisely what the Amendment
prohibits. But, as Emerson would have agreed, where the spoils of
usurpation and tyranny are at stake, "a foolish consistency is the
hobgoblin of little minds".)
From
arguments such as these--coupled with the imprudent concession by
many supporters of "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms"
that that right need not necessarily be construed in relation to or
in light of what constituted "[a] well regulated Militia" in American
experience--arises the "gun controllers'" latest all-purpose theory
that, at the most, the Second Amendment protects the private possession
of only some innocuous "sporting" "Arms", but not of any inherently
dangerous military "Arms", such as so-called "assault rifles", .50
BMG caliber rifles, "sniper rifles" of all calibers (that is, very
accurate rifles, typically with optical sights), and so on. This theory
exemplifies the old adage, "to kill a dog you must first call him
mad". And it presupposes that construction of the Constitution may
be reduced to puerile "name calling"--or at least that most Americans
are so juvenile as to accept such a procedure. Yet, notwithstanding
(or is it perhaps because of?) that fatal logical demerit, this jurisprudence
of nasty names enjoys remarkable popularity among today's politicians,
judges, and trial lawyers.
The
epithets that pass for legal reasoning these days are all too familiar--such
as "gangster weapons", "Saturday night special" (a bad name with an
even worse racist background[1]),
"concealable handgun", "sawed-off shotgun" (essentially, a shotgun
plus a hacksaw), "cop-killer bullet" (and soon "cop-killer weapons",
because a criminal can employ any firearm to kill a policemen), ad
nauseam. Most elastic and therefore dangerous, perhaps, is "weapon
of choice for criminals"--because America's Colonial Militiamen were
themselves all "criminals" under British law, as would be any modern
Militiamen fighting usurpers and tyrants, if judged according to the
usurpers' and tyrants' "laws"! Thus, under this reasoning-by-labels,
notwithstanding the Second Amendment Americans could be denied "the
right * * * to keep and bear Arms" to defend even "the security of
a free State", if their possession of "Arms" threatened the usurpers
and tyrants intent on destroying that "security", and the usurpers
and tyrants enacted "laws" banning such possession! This last example
emphasizes that the "gun controllers'" ultimate goal is to demonize
not just certain specific adjectives, but the general nouns: "weapon",
"rifle", "handgun", "shotgun", "bullet", and so on--that is, ANY AND
EVERY firearm and type of ammunition--as the excuse for the utter
elimination of them all from private possession, and with that the
exposure of common Americans to whatever usurpation and tyranny surely
will follow.
Where
"gun controllers" cannot prohibit the private possession of firearms
altogether by smearing them with bad names, they work to proscribe
possession in certain places by playing on the feel-good modifier
"gun free"--as in "gun-free school", "gun-free airport", "gun-free
streets", or simply "gun-free zone". If generalized (which is the
"gun controllers'" objective), this tactic would gradually prohibit
the private possession of firearms except within one's own home--and
probably not allow it even there, given that slogans such as "gun-free
home" or "gun-free family" doubtlessly will appeal strongly to those
people who pay attention to sounds rather than substance.
One
can hope that even the dullest American will recognize why, in the
real world, where actions have consequences and effects follow from
causes, any "gun-free zone" is actually a "self-defense prohibited
zone" and a "free-fire zone for criminals and psychopaths", advertised
and guaranteed as such to the predators under color of law. It
amounts to locking the visitors at the zoo inside the cages with hungry
lions and tigers, jackals and hyenas, at feeding time. In short, it
is politically mandated and imposed victimization of innocent citizens,
through public officials' intentional aiding and abetting of criminal
activities. (Another egregious case of contemporary politicians'
penchant for using the law to break the law.)
As
commonsensical as this insight is, though, it would be unnecessary
if many advocates of "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms"
did not concede that the Second Amendment can or even should be construed
without reference to "[a] well regulated Militia", and therefore without
reference to the actual history and principles of the pre-constitutional
American Militia. For, under all of the pre-constitutional Militia
Acts, individuals kept the latest military firearms, ammunition, and
accoutrements of their day in their own homes, in their private possession,
at all times. No public official or "gun-control" group would ever
have dared to propose anything as ridiculous as a ban on "assault
weapons" or "sniper rifles", when the muskets and rifles the laws
required individuals to possess were the premier "assault weapons"
and "sniper rifles" of that era. And no Militia Act ever created any
"zone" where people who were required to possess arms could not go
about armed. To the contrary, in the days of greatest danger Militia
Acts specifically designated even such places as town meetings and
houses of worship to which individuals were required to bring their
firearms in order to provide security for the community[2]--a
practice which, if followed in today's governmental schools (the most
extensive and indefensible of America's "gun-free zones"), probably
could have stopped in their tracks the deplorable shooting rampages
of recent years.
Thus,
no free American needs any special reason, excuse, license, or permission
to possess firearms or to go armed at home or in most public or private
places, because these are not only constitutional rights, but also
constitutional duties.[3]
The Constitution is every American's reason, license, and requirement
to be armed. And therefore the notions that whole classes of firearms
suitable for Militia service can be proscribed by giving them bad
names, or that huge geographical zones can be carved out in which
individuals can be prohibited from exercising and performing their
constitutional rights and especially duties, dissolve in the acid
of their own absurdity.
Now,
no one can deny that proponents of the Second Amendment have done
yeoman service in both courts and legislatures, defending and often
even advancing "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms"--such
as through legislation in many States that expands the right of private
citizens to carry concealed handguns in public. Nonetheless, in contemporary
judicial practice the Second Amendment constitutes something of a
weak reed on which to lean while opposing prohibitions on the private
possession of "bad-name guns", or the establishment of feel-good "gun-free
zones". Every lawyer who has engaged in constitutional litigation
knows that judges often allow the General Government and the States
to abridge, infringe, violate, or otherwise set aside even rights
the Supreme Court considers "fundamental" (including the freedoms
of speech and of the press), if government lawyers can satisfy the
judges that there is some so-called "compelling interest" for doing
so, and the means being employed are supposedly "least restrictive"
of the right at issue.
This
"compelling governmental interest test" (or "balancing test", as the
courts often style it) is hopelessly incoherent, as Justice Hugo Black,
dissenting, proved in the early decision in Konigsberg v. State
Bar of California, 366 U.S. 36 (1961). An even more fundamental
point than Black made in that case, though, is that any government's
most "compelling" interest is to protect its citizens in the enjoyment
of their lives, liberties, and property. Every citizen "owes [the
government] allegiance and is entitled to its protection. Allegiance
and protection are, in this connection, reciprocal obligations. The
one is a compensation for the other; allegiance for protection and
protection for allegiance." Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21
Wall.) 162, 165-66 (1875). Accord, Luria v. United States,
231 U.S. 9, 12 (1913). Absent protection from the government, no citizens
owe allegiance to it; but absent citizens' owing allegiance to it,
there can be no "government" at all, rightly understood, because a
"government" without loyal citizens is a contradiction in terms. As
the Declaration of Independence asserted in its indictment of King
George III, "[h]e has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out
of his Protection and waging War against us." So, how can there possibly
ever be a more "compelling interest" that justifies abridging the
government's most "compelling interest", upon the achievement of which
its very existence and legitimacy depend?
Notwithstanding
the self-contradictory nature of the "compelling governmental interest
test", the courts now routinely employ it. And inasmuch as they apply
it even to the First Amendment--the constitutional provision most
beloved by the legal intelligentsiia, because it offers them
the greatest range of opportunities for subverting, debasing, and
generally corrupting America's culture--judges will certainly enforce
it with even more gusto against the Second Amendment, which the legal
intelligentsiia despise, fear, and desire to destroy. Moreover,
a "compelling government interest" and the "least-restrictive means"
to achieve it are matters that judges themselves will decide, whilst
recognizing no requirement for their decisions to rest on actual evidence,
historical facts, objective standards, or even common sense.
For
example, assume that Congress enacts a purported statute which bans
the transportation, receipt, sale, barter, gift, transfer, or possession
in interstate commerce of all handguns by private individuals. "Surely
a clear-cut violation of the Second Amendment!" you say. Not so, as
any $500-an-hour "gun-control" shyster attorney can easily demonstrate
in the contemporary kangaroo courts:
-
Criminals
use "concealable handguns" to commit violent crimes.
-
The
government has a "compelling interest" in reducing the incidence
of all crimes, including those committed with "concealable handguns".
-
Because
all handguns are more or less "concealable", all handguns are
"concealable handguns".
-
Criminals
obtain handguns in the markets, white or black, which operate
through or affect interstate commerce.
-
If
all these markets were absolutely denuded of handguns, criminals
could not obtain them, and then could not use them to commit crimes.
-
If
interstate commerce were absolutely denuded of handguns, there
would be none in the markets.
-
The
only way to remove all handguns from interstate commerce is to
prohibit them absolutely.
-
Therefore,
the "least-restrictive means" to serve the "compelling interest"
is to outlaw transportation, receipt, et cetera of all handguns
in interstate commerce. And,
-
Inasmuch
as the Second Amendment protects only the right of common individuals
to possess "sporting" firearms (the Amendment's "well regulated
Militia" phrase being irrelevant), the government's "compelling
interest" in banning all firearms outweighs any individual's personal
interest in possessing any firearm, because the suppression of
crime is undoubtedly more important than the pursuit of a mere
hobby. Q.E.D.
Thus
the Second Amendment is rendered (or proves itself) impotent.
Now,
no true constitutionalist would ever admit that the foregoing "gun
control" argument is even cogent, let alone unanswerable. To the contrary,
properly contested it, and the "balancing test" on which it rests,
are easily demolished. Nonetheless, this little mental exercise demonstrates
that as soon as one accepts the propositions that (i) the only or
best protection for "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms"
comes from those words in the Second Amendment, coupled solely with
the further phrase "shall not be infringed", (ii) the "Arms" to which
the Amendment refers have no necessary relation to "[a] well regulated
Militia", and (iii) the Amendment's prohibition on any "infringe[ment]"
of "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms" is always subject
to the Judiciary's crackbrained "compelling governmental interest
test", then the path to destruction of that right is straight downhill.
For
a somewhat different example, assume that Congress enacts a purported
statute which bans the private possession of all firearms, and requires
them to be surrendered to the BATFE for immediate destruction. On
its face, such a statute is legally psychotic: On the one hand, to
require individuals voluntarily to surrender their firearms to a governmental
agency is to demand that they demonstrate their allegiance to the
government by such an act. Yet, on the other hand, to disarm those
individuals is to deny them the means of self-defense and self-preservation
both from common criminals and (more importantly) from usurpers and
tyrants. Self-defense is the only recourse left to citizens from common
criminals when the police are not on the scene (which is most of the
time), and especially when usurpers and tyrants control the police
and employ them to enforce their usurpation and tyranny (which in
that event is all of the time). A true "government" is obliged, as
a condition of its legitimacy and authority, to provide its citizens
with protection under all circumstances--which requires it to empower,
enable, or at least allow those citizens to possess and use efficacious
means for self-defense when it cannot protect them directly, which
is the case from time to time when common criminals or psychopaths
strike unexpectedly, or at all times when society finds itself ground
down under the iron heels of sociopathic usurpers and tyrants. For
public officials affirmatively and intentionally to make impossible
self-protection by the citizens, by requiring them to surrender their
firearms and render themselves utterly defenseless in the face of
deadly aggression, puts an end to the citizens' "reciprocal obligation[
]" of allegiance to the government. But if that allegiance is nonetheless
forced by, say, requiring citizens to suffer in silence house to house
searches for and seizures of firearms, under color of law, what other
than tyranny has been established? A government that refuses protection
to its citizens, but instead exposes them to destruction, cannot demand
their allegiance; and a government that demands their allegiance without
offering them protection--let alone while prohibiting them from protecting
themselves--is no government at all, only a criminal conspiracy among
the public officials constituting it.[4]
Thus,
the very existence of such a statute, intended to further, and as
an overt act evidencing, a criminal conspiracy against society, is
itself a perfect legal justification for disobeying its commands,
as well as any purported court order or other mechanism aimed at its
enforcement. Disobedience to such a statute, order, or other mechanism
could not be a crime, because "[a]n unconstitutional act is not a
law; * * * it imposes no duties; it is, in legal contemplation, as
inoperative as though it had never been passed". Norton v. Shelby
County, 118 U.S. 425, 442 (1886). "An unconstitutional act is
not a law; it binds no one". Huntington v. Worthen, 120 U.S.
97, 101-02 (1887). "An unconstitutional law is void, and is as no
law. An offence created by it is not a crime." Ex parte Siebold,
100 U.S. 371, 376 (1880), quoted with approval in Fay v. Noia,
372 U.S. 391, 408 (1963).
Observe
that, in the course of this argument, the Second Amendment, "compelling
governmental interests", and "least-restrictive means" find no place
at all, because the first is not necessary and the other two are not
proper.
As
a matter of practical politics--or, perhaps more descriptively, of
criminal politics--when America reaches the point at which Congress
or some police-state agency Congress has created to do the dirty work
unconstitutionally demands: "Turn them all in!" the only response
for patriots short of accepting the "due Subjection and Obedience"
of slavery will have to be "MOLON LAVE!" ("Come and get them!" as
the Spartan King, Leonidas, told the Persian envoy at Thermopylae).
To be sure, even up to an Angstrom Unit before that point is reached,
patriots should still seek relief in the courts (and, should time
permit, in legislatures and voting booths), if only to prove to the
world who are the aggressors. Every lawful avenue of recourse, no
matter how tortuous, must be explored to its very end. But, even now,
one can anticipate that, in the midst of such a crisis, the types
of judges who will infest the Bench will lift not a solitary finger
to assist common Americans--just as their precursors refused to help,
but instead facilitated and covered up the wrongdoing, when Franklin
Roosevelt seized Americans' gold in 1933-1934.[5]
The
great question facing this country is whether, by reliance on something
more efficacious than simply a part of the Second Amendment, "the
right of the people to keep and bear Arms"--and with it all of Americans'
liberties--can be protected and advanced short of a new Lexington
and Concord. For part 2 click below.
To my readers:
I am now working on a constitutional program of "homeland security"
based on "the Militia of the several States". This is probably the
most important project on which I have ever embarked. It will also
be the most difficult to fund, because next to no one among the powers
that be, "conservative" or "liberal", wants to see the Militia revitalized.
Therefore,
I appeal to common Americans for whatever financial support they can
offer to advance this work. Contributions should be made out to me,
marked "Militia Project", and mailed to 13877 Napa Drive, Manassas,
Virginia 20112. All contributions will be hypothecated to this work
only.
Even
if you cannot contribute, please drop me a line to let me know that
you believe this effort is important.
Footnotes:
1,
See Kenneth V.F. Blanchard, Black Man with a Gun: A Responsible Gun
Ownership Manual for African Americans (Baltimore, Maryland: American
Liberty Press, 2000), chapter 3.
2,
See, e.g., By the Body Politicke in the Ile of Aqethnec, Inhabiting
this Present, 25 of 9: month. 1639, in Records of the Colony of Rhode
Island and Providence Plantations in New England, 1636 to 1792 (J.R.
Bartlett editor, 10 vols., 1856-1865), Volume 1, at 94; At a Generall
Towne Meeting at Portsmouth, 1st of March, 1643, in ibid. at 79; ACT
LVI, A Grand Assembly Holden at James City the 21st of ffebruary 1631-32,
in The Statutes at Large; Being a Collection of all the Laws of Virginia
from the First Session of the Legislature, in the year 1619 (W.W.
Hening, 13 vols., 1819-1823), Volume 1, at 174; ACT XLI, At a Grand
Assemblie Holden at James City the Second Day of March 1642-3, in
ibid. at 263.
3,
The limiting adjective "most" is necessary, because some exceptions
are conceivable: for example, when a citizen visits a prisoner in
a public jail; or when a private owner requests that his guests not
bring firearms onto his property.
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. For further information please refer to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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