Montana Has It Right On Second Amendment
By Chuck Baldwin
March 3, 2009

According to ABC News (Feb. 25, 2009), "The Obama administration will seek to 
reinstate the assault weapons ban that expired in 2004 during the Bush 
administration, Attorney General Eric Holder said today.

"'As President Obama indicated during the campaign, there are just a few 
gun-related changes that we would like to make, and among them would be to 
reinstitute the ban on the sale of assault weapons,' Holder told reporters."

Holder also said that President Obama would seek to make the assault weapons 
ban permanent, close the "gun show loophole," and ban "cop-killer" bullets.

At this point, I believe it is incumbent on me to say that both Eric Holder and 
Barack Obama have made a career out of doing everything in their power to strip 
the American people of their right to keep and bear arms. Even under the rubric 
of the abovementioned "few gun-related changes," there is the potential for 
widespread assault against our Second Amendment.

For example, the so-called "assault weapons" ban is as phony as the Bush-Obama 
stimulus spending bills--and just as fraudulent. A semi-automatic rifle, which 
is incapable of automatic fire, is not an "assault weapon." By definition, an 
assault weapon must be capable of fully automatic fire. A civilian AR-15-style 
rifle--in any configuration--is functionally identical to any semi-automatic 
hunting rifle. In fact, many hunters commonly use AR-15-style rifles for all 
types of hunting, both predator and big game. The term "assault weapon" is 
simply a dangerous-sounding moniker that makes it easy for a compliant media to 
intimidate the public and public officials into passing a ban against 
semi-automatic rifles.

Furthermore, does anyone believe that if Obama and Holder were successful in 
outlawing semi-automatic rifles, pump and bolt-action rifles would not also be 
targeted? Get real! I well remember gun control zealots during the Clinton 
years railing against bolt-action rifles, calling them "sniper" rifles. And 
once rifles are outlawed, how long would it be before handguns and shotguns 
would fall victim to a similar fate? As always, the issue for these people is 
not what type of firearm it is; the issue is the infringement of the right of 
the people to keep and bear arms--any arms.

Of course, the "gun show loophole" is nothing more than the prohibition against 
private citizens selling and trading their own personal firearms. I would like 
to remind the Obamas and Holders of this country that liberty is not a 
"loophole."

In the beginning, the private sale and trading of firearms was almost 
exclusively the purpose for which gun shows were started. Today, commercial 
firearms dealers dominate gun shows, but it is still a convenient marketplace 
for citizens to buy and trade guns. This is a freedom and right that is as old 
as the country itself. Shoot (pun intended)! I remember when we were free to 
buy guns from a Sears & Roebuck catalog.

And as to banning "cop-killer" bullets, what bullet is not capable of killing? 
Any bullet that is not capable of killing a good guy is not capable of killing 
a bad guy (be it two-legged or four). This is just another approach to the same 
goal: the infringement of the right to keep and bear arms. Obviously, any gun 
without a bullet is pretty much useless.

The Democrats went down this road in 1994. Are they really willing to go down 
the same road again? It looks like they are.

It was largely an aggressive gun control agenda that caused the Republicans to 
sweep both houses of Congress in 1994 and render Bill Clinton without a 
majority in either chamber. It was also an aggressive gun control agenda that 
caused Al Gore to lose the Presidential election in 2000. Even Bill Clinton 
publicly acknowledged that fact.

All of that said, however, the underlying reality is that it is the individual 
States that must ultimately be guardians of the Second Amendment (and the rest 
of the Bill of Rights, of course). States must be willing to resist any and all 
efforts by the central government to intrude upon their independence, 
sovereignty, and liberties. If this was not the case, why did the individual 
States not dissolve after the federal government was created by the adoption of 
the U.S. Constitution in 1787? Why? Because the States were deemed to be 
superior entities. Superior in assignment. Superior in responsibility. Superior 
in nature. Superior in scope.

As James Madison said in the Federalist Papers, No. 45, "The powers delegated 
by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. 
Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite."

Therefore, when the federal government begins to intrude upon the rights and 
liberties of the people, it is the responsibility of the States to resist. 
Obviously, the way the federal government tries to keep States in subjection is 
through bribery: by threatening to deny federal tax dollars unless States 
comply with their despotic machinations. And, sadly, most States have succumbed 
to this menacing temptation for far, far too long.

The good news is that States are finally beginning to fight back.

According to World Net Daily, "So far, eight states have introduced resolutions 
declaring state sovereignty under the Ninth and Tenth Amendment to the 
Constitution, including Arizona, Hawaii, Montana, Michigan, Missouri, New 
Hampshire, Oklahoma and Washington.

"Analysts expect that in addition, another 20 states may see similar measures 
introduced this year, including Alaska, Alabama, Arkansas, California, 
Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Nevada, Maine and Pennsylvania."

Pertaining specifically to the Second Amendment, the State of Montana, in 
particular, seems to have it all together. In anticipation of the recent Heller 
Supreme Court decision, a host of Montana's senators and representatives--along 
with its Secretary of State-- proposed a resolution stating "that any 
'collective rights' holding in D.C. v. Heller will violate
Montana's compact with the United States, the contract by which Montana entered 
the Union in 1889."

The Montana resolution recalls, "When Montana entered into statehood and 
adopted the Compact as a part of the Montana Constitution in 1889, included was 
a provision guaranteeing the right to bear arms to 'any person.'"

The resolution continues, "To be clear, the wording of the right to bear arms 
reservation in the Montana constitution is exactly the same today as it was in 
1884."

Furthermore, the Montana resolution says, "There is no question that the 
contract into which Montana entered for statehood was predicated upon an 
understanding that the people of Montana would benefit from an individual and 
personal right to bear arms, protected from governmental interference by both 
the federal and Montana constitutions. That was the clear intent of the parties 
to the contract."

The resolution ended by stating sternly, "A collective rights holding in Heller 
would not only open the Pandora's box of unilaterally morphing contracts, it 
would also poise Montana to claim appropriate and historically entrenched 
remedies for contract violation."

In other words, representatives and senators in the State of Montana 
unequivocally put Washington, D.C., on notice that it would not tolerate the 
infringement of its citizens' right to keep and bear arms. I don't think I'm 
reading anything into the resolution by assuming that they were implying that 
they would secede before they let the federal government trample their Second 
Amendment liberties. (Plus, I've just been told that New Hampshire
may also be preparing to propose such a resolution.)

Montana has it exactly right!

Now it is time for every State legislative body in America that believes in the 
Second Amendment to step up to the plate and let Barack Obama, Eric Holder, and 
the rest of these gun-grabbing socialists know that they will not tolerate even 
one more attempt to infringe upon the right to keep and bear arms--and that 
includes any so-called "assault weapons" ban.

And let's never forget that the purpose of the Second Amendment was not to 
ensure the rights of hunters, but of citizens to protect themselves--and their 
States--against the tyrannical tendencies of their own government.

P.S. If anyone wants to see firsthand testimony regarding the importance of the 
Second Amendment, I encourage him or her to watch this testimony given before 
Congress not long ago:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4069761537893819675
 


      
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