From:   Thomas A Chandler, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

FROM MOUNTAIN MEDIA
EDITORS: IN FOURTH-TO-LAST PARAGRAPH OF THIS VERSION ONLY, NOTE USE OF
POSSIBLY OBJECTIONABLE TERM 'NIGGERTOWN.'
ADDITIONALLY: A SHORTER VERSION, AT 900 WORDS, ALSO MOVES
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DATED JULY 16, 2000
THE LIBERTARIAN, 

By Vin Suprynowicz

Gun-grabbers: masters of the New Plantation


Last time we dug into Yale Law professor Akhil Reed Amar's impressive
1998 tome "The Bill of Rights" (due out in paperback this month), the
good professor -- neither a gun owner nor in any sense a "right-wing
militia nut" -- demonstrated through historical research that the
gun-grabbers are wrong: The Second Amendment does not merely protect
firearms ownership by active duty members of the National Guard.  Rather,
it conveys the right to own and carry weapons of military usefulness to
all Americans.

But now that this undead golem of those who despise our Bill of Rights is
down, let's proceed to stake it through the heart.

For you see -- while the Second Amendment is "sufficient" to guarantee
the right of citizens to own machine guns (not to mention rifles,
pistols, "assault weapons," and shoulder-launched missiles)
-- it's not even the best guarantee of this right.  The whole debate over
the "Second" Amendment, professor Amar points out, has largely distracted
us from considering a pair of enactments even more directly on point: the
14th Amendment and the original, 1866, Civil Rights Act.

We rejoin professor Amar at page 258:

"At the Founding, the right of the people to keep and bear arms stood
shoulder to shoulder with the right to vote; arms bearing in militias
embodied a paradigmatic "political" right.  ...  But Reconstruction
Republicans recast arms bearing as a core "civil" right, utterly divorced
from the militia and other political rights and responsibilities.  Arms
were needed not as part of political and politicized militia service but
to protect one's individual homestead.  Everyone -- even nonvoting,
nonmilitia-serving women -- had a right to a gun for self-protection. 
...

"The Creation vision was public, with the militia muster on the town
square.  The Reconstruction vision was private, with individual freedmen
keeping guns at home to ward of Klansmen and other ruffians.  ...

"Alongside ...the Civil Rights Act of 1866 ...  Congress passed the
Freedman's Bureau Act, a sister statute introduced the same day by the
same sponsor.  ...  The Freedman's Bureau Act affirmed that 'laws ... 
concerning "personal" liberty, "personal" property,"personal" security,
and the acquisition, enjoyment and disposition of estate, real and
"personal, including the constitutional right to bear arms" shall be
secured to and enjoyed by all citizens.  ...' Thus, the Reconstruction
Congress expressly repudiated "Dred Scott"'s claim that because free
blacks could never be citizens, they lacked many of these basic rights."

Allow me to interrupt the good professor to point out that the opposite
also holds true.  Though modern-day black Americans tend to despise
antebellum Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney for ruling in "Dred
Scott" that black Americans were neither citizens nor men, they might
want to go back and re-read his logic.  They will find the devil
unintentionally gave them their due.  Taney said blacks could not be
considered men or citizens, because if they were so considered, "there
would be no option but to allow them to own and carry arms without
restriction."

Quick, now: which side won the Civil War?  Can a law-abiding black
citizen today buy a 30-caliber machine gun and drive it home in the back
of his pickup truck without seeking massa's "permission"?

Why was the 14th Amendment -- darling of the left when it appears to
justify the expansion of federal power -- enacted?  Professor Amar
explains:
"Southern states, ever fearful of slave insurrections, enacted sweeping
antebellum laws prohibiting not just slaves but free blacks from owning
guns.  In response, antislavery theorists emphasized the personal right
of all free citizens -- white and black, male and female, northern and
southern, visitor and resident -- to own guns for self-protection."

Really?  But what chance does a law-abiding citizen of any color have
today, of carrying his self-defense pistol with him if he chooses to
visit the collectivist metropolises of Los Angeles, Washington or New
York City?

"In the 1846 case "Nunn vs.  Georgia", professor Amar continues, "the
proslavery contrarian Chief Justice Joseph Henry Lumpkin proclaimed not
only that the Second Amendment bound the states but also that 'The right
[is guaranteed to] the whole people, old and young, men, women, and boys,
and not militia only, to keep and bear arms of every description, and not
merely as are used by the militia.' ...

"Roger Taney and [prominent abolitionist] Joel Tiffany hardly saw eye to
eye in the 1850s, but they both agreed on this: "if" free blacks were
citizens, it would necessarily follow that they had a right of "private"
arms bearing.  According to "Dred Scott", the 'privileges and immunities'
of 'citizens' included 'full liberty of speech in public and in private
...  and to keep and carry arms wherever they went.' ...

"One of the core purposes of the Civil Right Act of 1866 and of the
Fourteenth Amendment was to ...  outlaw the infamous Black Codes [by
which the southern states sought to ban firearms for freed blacks], and
affirm the full and equal right of every citizen to self-defense.  ..."

Professor Amar quotes Sen.  Samuel Pomeroy, declaring on the floor of the
Senate in 1866, "Every man ...  should have the right to bear arms for
the defense of himself and his family and his homestead.  And if the
cabin door of the freedman is broken open and the intruder enters for
purposes as vile as were known to slavery, then should a well-loaded
musket be in the hand of the occupant." Even Rep.  Henry Raymond, a
founder and editor of the New York Times, declared that the black
freedman "has a country and a home; a right to defend himself and his
wife and children; a right to bear arms."

"Today's NRA," professor Amar concludes, "pays far too much attention to
1775-91 and far too little to 1830-68."

But is this curious forgetfulness about the original meaning of "Civil
Rights" merely an accident?  Where do the modern forces of "gun control"
-- including the nation's largest gun-control organization, the National
Rifle Association, which endorsed the federal gun control acts of 1934
and 1968 and the "compromise" Brady Law with its national gun-buyer
registry -- now focus their energies?

What race predominates among the subsidized housing projects where HUD
now claims it needs no search warrants to root out and seize "dangerous
firearms" -- while the cheerleader NRA urges the government to
"rigorously enforce the gun laws already on the books"?  Where are most
of the "gun buy-back" stunts conducted?  Among the racial minorities of
the inner cities, of course.  What is the derivation of "Saturday Night
Special" -- describing the inexpensive self-defense handgun which the NRA
says it's OK to go ahead and ban as long as we rich white folk are
allowed to keep our engraved fowling pieces?

Cover your ears if you like, but the origin of this term for the
inexpensive handguns most useful for self-defense to a black or Hispanic
resident of the inner city is the old, derogatory police slang
"Niggertown Saturday Night," referring to inner city weekend violence not
meriting much attention, since it mainly occurred among the black folk.

When handgun "licenses and permits" require expensive safety courses and
the OK of the local sheriff, and one-third of our young black men today
have experienced some kind of run-in with the legal system and are thus
blocked from even applying, what percentage of these "permits" end up
issued to black folk?

And when gun-grabbers try to terrify the soccer moms with visions of
"inner-city street gangs armed with fully-automatic AK-47s," what color
skin do you imagine those soccer moms are picturing on Ernesto, Raoul,
Dante and Ahmad?

You see, those who would ban the private ownership of weapons of military
usefulness to individual American today are not just liars ...  they're
also racists.


Vin Suprynowicz is assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas
Review-Journal.  His book, "Send in the Waco Killers" is available by
dialing 1-800-244-2224.

***


Vin Suprynowicz, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

"The evils of tyranny are rarely seen but by him who resists it." -- John
Hay, 1872

"The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed --
and thus clamorous to be led to safety -- by menacing it with an endless
series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary." -- H.L.  Mencken


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