..............................................................

>From the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]:

From: Monte E. Rudd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Monte & Barbara Rudd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [OPF]Grammatical Disection Of The Second Amendment
Date: Sunday, June 04, 2000 1:21 AM

     With credit due to: "Wayne Mann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>




       ENGLISH USAGE EXPERT INTERPRETS 2ND AMENDMENT

                    by J. Neil Schulman
                       July 17, 1991
                California Libertarian Party

     I just had a conversation with Mr. A.C. Brocki,
     Editorial Coordinator for the Office of
     Instruction of the Los Angeles Unified School
     District. Mr. Brocki taught Advanced Placement
     English for several years at Van Nuys High School,
     as well as having been a senior editor for
     Houghton Mifflin. I was referred to Mr. Brocki by
     Sherryl Broyles of the Office of Instruction of
     the LA Unified School District, who described Mr.
     Brocki as the foremost expert in grammar in the
     Los Angeles Unified School District -- the person
     she and others go to when they need a definitive
     answer on English grammar.

     I gave Mr. Brocki my name, told him Sherryl
     Broyles referred me, then asked him to parse the
     following sentence:

     "A well-schooled electorate, being necessary to
     the security of a free State, the right of the
     people to keep and read
     Books, shall not be infringed."

     Mr. Brocki informed me that the sentence was
     overpunctuated, but that the meaning could be
     extracted anyway.

     "A well-schooled electorate" is a nominative
     absolute.

     "being necessary to the security of a free State"
     is a participial phrase modifying "electorate"

     The subject (a compound subject) of the sentence
     is "the right of the people"

     "shall not be infringed" is a verb phrase, with
     "not" as an adverb modifying the verb phrase
     "shall be infringed"

     "to keep and read books" is an infinitive phrase
     modifying "right"

     I then asked him if he could rephrase the sentence
     to make it clearer. Mr. Brocki said, "Because a
     well-schooled
     electorate is necessary to the security of a free
     state, the right of the people to keep and read
     books shall not be
     infringed."

     I asked: can the sentence be interpreted to
     restrict the right to keep and read books to a
     well-schooled electorate --
     say, registered voters with a high-school
     diploma?" He said, "No."

     I then identified my purpose in calling him, and
     read him the Second Amendment in full:

     "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."

     He said he thought the sentence had sounded
     familiar, but that he hadn't recognized it.

     I asked, "Is the structure and meaning of this
     sentence the same as the sentence I first quoted
     you?" He said, "yes." I asked him to rephrase this
     sentence to make it clearer. He transformed it the
     same way as the first sentence: "Because a
     well-regulated militia is necessary to the
     security of a free state, the right of the people
     to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

     I asked him whether the meaning could have changed
     in two hundred years. He said, "No."

     I asked him whether this sentence could be
     interpreted to restrict the right to keep and bear
     arms to "a well-regulated militia." He said, "no."
     According to Mr. Brocki, the sentence means that
     the people \are\ the militia,
     and that the people have the right which is
     mentioned.

     I asked him again to make sure:

     Schulman: "Can the sentence be interpreted to mean
     that the right can be restricted to "a
     well-regulated militia?"

     Brocki: "No, I can't see that."

     Schulman: "Could another, professional in English
     grammar or linguistics interpret the sentence to
     mean otherwise?"

     Brocki: "I can't see any grounds for another
     interpretation."

     I asked Mr. Brocki if he would be willing to stake
     his professional reputation on this opinion, and
     be quoted on this.
     He said, "Yes."

     At no point in the conversation did I ask Mr.
     Brocki his opinion on the Second Amendment, gun
     control, or the right
     to keep and bear arms.


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