-Caveat Lector-

http://www.tommcclintock.com/news/sp010608.cfm

Freedom and Firearms
A Speech to the 2nd Annual Western Conservative
Conference in Los Angeles by Tom McClintock, June 9,
2001

There are two modern views of government that begin
from entirely different premises.

There is the 18th Century American view propounded by
our nation's founders. They believed, and formed a
government based upon that belief, that each of us is
endowed by our creator with certain rights that cannot
be alienated, and that governments are instituted to
protect those rights. This view is proclaimed in the
Declaration of Independence and reflected in the
American Bill of Rights.

The second view is 19th Century German in origin and
expressed in the philosophies of Marx and Hegel and
Nietzsche. It is a restatement of philosophies of
absolutism that have plagued mankind for millennia. In
this view, rights come not from God, but from the
state. What rights you have are there because
government has given them to you, all for the greater
good�defined, of course, by government.

In the 20 years I have been actively engaged in public
policy, I have seen the growing influence of this 19th
Century German view. It disdains the view of the
American Founders. It rejects the notion of inalienable
rights endowed equally to every human being by
the "laws of nature and of nature's God." In this view,
it is the state, and not the individual, where rights
are vested.

I mention this, because of a debate that occurred last
week on the floor of the State Senate. It was a debate
that occurred under the portrait of George Washington
and the gold-emblazoned motto, "Senatoris Est Civitatis
Libertatum Tueri"�"The Senators protect the Liberty of
the Citizens."

At issue was a measure, SB 52, which will require a
state-issued license to own a firearm for self-defense.
To receive a license, you would have to meet a series
of tests, costs and standards set by the state.

We have seen many bills considered and adopted that
would infringe upon the right of a free people to bear
arms. But this was the most brazen attempt in this
legislature to claim that the very right of self-
defense is not an inalienable natural right at all, but
is rather a right that is licensed from government; a
right that no longer belongs to you, but to your
betters, who will license you to exercise that right at
their discretion.

During the debate on this measure, which passed the
Senate 25 to 15, I raised these issues. And I would
like to quote to you the response of Senator Sheila
Kuehl, to the approving nods of the Senators whose duty
is to protect the liberty of the citizens.

She said, "There is only one constitutional right in
the United States which is absolute and that is your
right to believe anything you want."

I want to focus on that statement. "The only
constitutional right which is absolute is your right to
believe anything you want."

Now, compare that to the Declaration of
Independence: "We hold these truths to be self-evident:
that all men are created equal; that they are endowed
by their creator with certain inalienable rights, that
among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness; that to secure these rights, governments are
instituted among men, deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed."

What rights have a slave? There is only one: a slave
can think anything he wants: as long as he doesn't
utter it or act on it�he may think what he wants. He
has no right to the fruit of his labor; no right to
self-defense, no right to raise his children, no right
to contract with others for his betterment, no right to
worship�except as his master allows. He has only the
right to his own thoughts. All other rights are at the
sufferance of his master�whether that master is a state
or an owner.

Now, let us continue to look at this new constitutional
principle propounded by Senator Kuehl, under the
portrait of George Washington to the delight of her
colleagues whose duty, according to the proud words
above them, is to "Protect the Liberty of the Citizens."

She continued, "Other than that, (the right to your own
thoughts) government has the ability to say on behalf
of all the people�I will put it in the colloquial way
as my grandmother used to�your right to swing your fist
ends where my nose begins. It's a balance of your
rights and my rights because we all have constitutional
rights. And the question for government is how do we
balance those rights?"

Indeed, the right to swing your fist does end where my
nose begins. An excellent analogy. Shall we therefore
amputate your fist so that you can never strike my
nose? And would you deny me the use of my own fist to
protect my nose?

Senator Kuehl and her colleagues believe government has
the legitimate authority to do so. It is simply the
question of balancing.

It is very important that we understand precisely what
Senator Kuehl and the Left are saying.

A thief balances your right to your wallet against his
right to eat. A murderer balances your right to life
against his right to freedom. A master balances your
right to "work and toil and make bread," against his
right to eat it. These are matters of balance.

The American view is quite different. In the view of
the American Founders, the Laws of Nature and of
Nature's God endow each of us with rights that are
inalienable, and we are each equal in those rights. It
is not a balancing act. These rights are absolute. They
cannot be alienated.

But in a state of nature, there are predators who would
deny us those rights. And thus we come together to
preserve our freedom. In the American view, the only
legitimate exercise of force by one person over
another, or by one government over its people, is "to
secure these rights."

Senator Kuehl continues, "My right to defend myself in
the home does not extend to my owning a tank, though
that would make sense to me, perhaps, that no one would
attack my home if I had a tank sitting in the living
room."

Let us put aside, for a moment, the obvious fact that a
tank is only an instrument of self-defense against a
power that employs a tank. But let us turn to the more
reasonable side of her argument: that rights can be
constrained by government; that there is, after
all, "no right to shout 'fire' in a crowded theater.
How can a right be absolute and yet constrained by
government?

To Senator Kuehl and the Left, the answer is
simply, "it's easy�whenever we say so." Or, in her
words, "government has the ability to say (so) on
behalf of all the people."

The American Founders had a different view, also, not
surprisingly, diametrically opposed to Senator Kuehl's
way of thinking.

The right is absolute. In a free nation, government has
no authority to forbid me from speaking because I might
shout "fire" in a crowded theater. Government has no
authority to forbid me from using my fist to defend
myself because I might also use it to strike your nose.
And government has no authority to forbid me from
owning a firearm because I might shoot an innocent
victim.

Government is there to assure that the full force of
the law can be brought against me if I discharge that
right in a manner that threatens the rights of others.
It does not have the authority to deny me those very
rights for fear I might misuse them.

Senator Kuehl continues, "In my opinion, this bill is
one of those balances. It does not say you cannot have
a gun. It does not say you cannot defend yourself. It
says if you are going to be owning and handling and
using a dangerous item you need to know how to use it,
and you need to prove that you know how to use it by
becoming licensed."

How reasonable. How reassuring. How despotic.

We must understand what they are arguing, because it is
chilling. They are arguing that any of our most
precious rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights�any at
least they decide are conceivably dangerous�may only be
extended through the license of the government.

If that is the case, they are not rights. With that one
despotic principle, you have just dissolved the
foundation of the entire Bill of Rights. You have
created a society where your only right is to your own
thoughts.

Inalienable rights are now alienated to government, and
government may extend or refuse them upon its whim�or
more precisely, upon a balancing act to be decided by
government. Let us follow�in our minds at least�a
little farther down this path.

Hate groups publish newsletters to disseminate their
hatred and racism. Sick individuals in our society act
upon this hatred. The Oklahoma City bombing killed
scores of innocent children. Shouldn't we license
printing presses and Internet sites to prevent the
pathology of hate from spreading? Such an act doesn't
say you cannot have a press. It does not say you cannot
express yourself. It says if you are going to be owning
and handling a printing press, you should know what not
to say and prove that you can restrain yourself by
becoming licensed.

And what are we to do about rogue religions like those
that produced Heaven's Gate and Jonestown. How many
people around the world are killed by acts of religious
fanaticism every year? Should we not license the
legitimate churches? Such an act doesn't say you cannot
have a church. It does not say you cannot worship. It
says if you are going to be running and conducting a
church, that you must know how to worship and prove
that you know how by becoming licensed.

The only right you have is the right to believe
anything you want. The only right of a slave. The rest
is negotiable�or to use the new word, "balanceable."

In 1838, a 29 year old Abraham Lincoln posed the
question for which he would ultimately give his life.
Years later, he would debate Stephen Douglas, who
argued that freedom and slavery were a matter of
political balance. But in this speech, he spoke to the
larger question that we must now confront:

"Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant, to
step over the ocean, and crush us at a blow? Never!�All
the armies of Europe, Asia and Africa combined, with
all the treasure of the earth (our own excepted) in
their military chest; with a Buonaparte for a
commander, could not by force, take a drink from the
Ohio, or make a track on the Blue Ridge, in a trial of
a Thousand years. At what point, then, is the approach
of danger to be expected? I answer, if it ever reach
us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from
abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be
its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we
must live through all time, or die by suicide."

The American Founders worried about the same thing.
Late in life, Jefferson wrote to Adams, "Yes we did
create a near perfect union; but will they keep it, or
will they, in the enjoyment of plenty, lose the memory
of freedom. Material abundance is the surest path to
destruction."

And as I listened to Senator Kuehl proclaim that "the
only constitutional right in the United States which is
absolute...is your right to believe anything you want,"
and as I gazed at the portrait of George Washington,
and as I thought about the solemn words, "the Senators
Protect the Liberty of the Citizens," I couldn't help
but think of an aide to George Washington by the name
of James McHenry, who accompanied the General as they
departed Independence Hall the day the Constitution was
born. He recorded this encounter between Benjamin
Franklin and a Mrs. Powell. She asked, "Well, Doctor,
what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?" Answered
Dr. Franklin, "A republic, madam, if you can keep it."

For this generation, that is no longer a hypothetical
question. History warns us that to one generation in
five falls the duty�the highest duty and the most
difficult duty of this Republic�to preserve the liberty
of the citizens. It is the most difficult, because as
Lincoln warned, it is a threat that springs up not on a
foreign shore where we can see it�it springs up amongst
us. It cannot be defeated by force of arms. It must be
defeated by reason.

Have you noticed yet, that ours is that generation? And
how ironic it would be that the freedoms won with the
blood of Washington's troops, and defended by so many
who followed, should be voluntarily thrown away piece
by piece by a generation that had become so dull and
careless and pampered and uncaring that it lost the
memory of freedom.

The Athenian Democracy had a word for "citizen" that
survives in our language today. "Politikos."
Politician. The Athenians believed that a free people
who declare themselves citizens assume a duty to
declare themselves politicians at the same time. It is
time we took that responsibility very seriously.

In 1780, the tide had turned in the American
Revolution, and the Founders began to sense the freedom
that was within sight. John Adams wrote these words to
his wife that spring. He said, "The science of
government it is my duty to study, more than all other
sciences; the arts of legislation and administration
and negotiation ought to take the place of, indeed
exclude, in a manner, all other arts. I must study
politics and war, that our sons may have liberty to
study mathematics and philosophy. Our sons ought to
study mathematics and philosophy, geography, natural
history and naval architecture, navigation, commerce
and agriculture in order to give their children a right
to study painting, poetry, music, architecture,
statuary, tapestry and porcelain."

Ladies and gentlemen, the debate is not about guns. It
is about freedom. And the wheel has come full circle.
Our generation must study politics that we may restore
the liberty that our parents and grandparents expect us
to pass on to our children and grandchildren.

If we fail, what history will demand of our children
and grandchildren, in a society where their only right
is to their own thoughts, is simply unthinkable. And be
assured, history will find it unforgivable. A
generation that is handed the most precious gift in all
the universe�freedom�and throws it away�deserves to be
reviled by every generation that follows�and will be,
even though the only right left to them is their own
thoughts.

But if we succeed in this struggle, we will know the
greatest joy of all�the joy of watching our
grandchildren secure with the blessings of liberty,
studying arts and literature in a free nation and under
God's grace, once again.

Ladies and Gentlemen, isn't that worth devoting the
rest of our lives to achieve?

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