-Caveat Lector-

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
http://seattlep-i.nwsource.com/opinion/27699_gunsop.shtml

Reader's Soapbox: Post-Intelligencer wrong on gun law

Saturday, June 16, 2001

JOE WALDRON AND DAVE WORKMAN
GUEST COLUMNISTS

To paraphrase National Rifle Association President Charlton Heston, "When a newspaper 
gets it wrong, that's a mistake.
When a newspaper knows it's wrong, that's a lie."

Leave it to readers of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer to decide which in the aftermath 
of a June 1 editorial that horribly distorted
fact when it discussed Attorney General John Ashcroft's interpretation of the Second 
Amendment and the frequently
misrepresented Supreme Court ruling in the 1939 Miller case.

The P-I Editorial Board would have readers believe that Ashcroft, in telling the NRA 
that the Second Amendment protects an
individual right, is expressing an opinion that "runs counter to most legal 
scholarship on the amendment ..."

To the contrary, overwhelming legal scholarship supports the individual-right 
interpretation. With few exceptions, nearly all law
review articles published since 1980 on the amendment say it protects an individual 
right. That interpretation is now known as
the "standard model."

Even distinguished constitutional scholar and law professor Laurence Tribe, long an 
advocate of the "collective interpretation,"
has reversed himself and now acknowledges -- however grudgingly -- that the Second 
Amendment does, indeed, protect an
individual right to bear arms.

In the 1990 Fourth Amendment case U.S. vs. Verdugo-Urquidez, Chief Justice Rehnquist, 
writing for the majority, noted in
dicta, "The Preamble declares that the Constitution is ordained and established by 
'the people of the United States.' The
Second Amendment protects 'the right of the people to keep and bear arms,' and the 
Ninth and 10th Amendments provide that
certain rights and powers are retained by and reserved to 'the people.'"

The term "right of the people" appears five times in the Bill of Rights. Why would 
anyone believe that the individual right
protected by the Second Amendment be any different from the individual rights 
protected by the First, Fourth, Ninth or 10th
Amendments?

The P-I alludes to the Miller case. Someone familiar with Miller could reasonably 
wonder whether anyone on the Editorial
Board has read that decision. The P-I called Miller "the court's last major holding, 
which said the Constitution guarantees only a
collective right to guns through state and federal militias."

Nowhere in Miller is it stated that the Second Amendment is a collective right. 
Justice McReynolds, writing for the majority in
that case, merely stated that a sawed-off shotgun did not have "some reasonable 
relationship to the preservation or efficiency of
a well-regulated militia," adding, "we cannot say that the Second Amendment guarantees 
the right to keep and bear such an
instrument."

This does not mean individual citizens do not have the right to keep and bear other 
types of firearms.

Further, the court held: "The signification attributed to the term Militia appears 
from the debates in the (Constitutional)
Convention, the history and legislation of Colonies and States, and the writings of 
approved commentators. These show plainly
enough that the Militia comprised all males physically capable of acting in concert 
for the common defense. 'A body of citizens
enrolled for military discipline.' And further, that ordinarily when called for 
service these men were expected to appear bearing
arms supplied by themselves and of the kind in common use at the time."

Translation: Every able-bodied male could be called to muster in an emergency, and 
bring their own firearms. This state's
Constitution, Article 1, Section 24, states quite clearly: "The right of the 
individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself, or
the state, shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall be construed as 
authorizing individuals or corporations to
organize, maintain or employ an armed body of men."

It would appear that Ashcroft's interpretation of the Second Amendment as an 
individual right is far more accurate than the
discredited "collective right" theory to which the P-I Editorial Board continues to 
cling in its ongoing campaign to restrict firearm
ownership.

And that begs the question: At what point does a right become so regulated that it 
ceases to be a right?

If we were debating the First Amendment's guarantee of a free press, that line would 
be drawn very narrowly and defended
with equal fervor by the Fourth Estate as the Second Amendment is defended by gun 
owners.

The Second Amendment is no more, or less, absolute than the First, and that if one is 
so easily demonized and misinterpreted,
what is to stop that same thing from happening to the other?

� 1998-2001 Seattle Post-Intelligencer

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