I should never disagree with our host.  Eugene is both smarter and vastly
more educated than I, and I enter into his realm of expertise.  It would be
foolish to debate . which has never stopped me before (Comedian Ron White
once said "I had the right to remain silent, I just didn't have the
ability."  I fear I suffer from the same disorder).

The express federal restriction in the 1st Amendment seems odd given the
lack of such compartmentalization in the following seven.  If expressly
stated federal restrictions are taken as such, then the founding fathers
intended the states to have the power to establish religion, restrict the
press, suppress free speech, and deny peaceful assembly.  Likewise the lack
of specific federal/state restriction in Amendments two through eight would
then mean that those amendments applied to all levels of government.

The anti-Federalist desire to restrict federal powers is clear.  But since
these restriction echoed restrictions already in place against state powers,
and thus redundantly restricted the states via Article VI, then I doubt the
sates would have objected, and debate/explanation would have been moot --
the absence of debate is more supportive of universal restraint than a mere
federal restriction.  Likewise is the case of Madison's jettisoned list of
state restrictions.  If viewed as natural rights and universal restrictions
on government power, then two sets of constraints (one federal and one
state) would be superfluous, leading toward the more compact and ubiquitous
set of amendments that were created.  Madison was if anything succinct.

The disturbing bit that remains is why he specified a restriction on
Congress in the 1st Amendment and not the others.  

  _____  

From: Volokh, Eugene [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2007 10:18 PM
To: Guy Smith; List Firearms Reg
Subject: RE: The REPUBLICAN ... from New York.

 

    How could it possibly "be a stretch ... to believe that ... any part of
the Bill of Right[s] would not have been viewed [as] both a federal and
state restriction of power"?  The First Amendment *expressly* says that it's
a limit only on the power of Congress.  There is no question about that.

 

    The only question is whether somehow -- (1) after having rejected
Madison's attempt to implement a limited set of constraints on the states,
(2) having mostly accepted Madison's proposals for limiting the federal
government, and (3) having been prodded into changing the Constitution by
anti-Federalists who were worried that the *federal government* would be
oppressive -- the Framers decided, with no debate and no explanation, to
enact a *federal* prohibition constraining the states as well as the federal
government.  Seems to me the answer is pretty clearly no.

 

    Eugene

 

  _____  

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Guy Smith
Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2007 9:21 AM
To: 'List Firearms Reg'
Subject: RE: The REPUBLICAN ... from New York.

I wanted to take a day or two to ponder this.  I fear I must disagree.  I
believe we can stipulate the following:

1) The 2nd Amendment was derived from state RKBA constitution clauses, and
distilled in convention, and thus reflected the general will of The People.

2) The nation had recently ratified the Constitution itself, with a great
deal of public debate.

3) Much of that debate revolved around Article VI and the supremacy clause
and how "Judges in every State" were bound to the new constitution.  After
all, The People were ceding the powers of their states to the new
government, and this was not taken lightly.

Thus, it would be a stretch for me to believe that - having just analyzed
and voted in approval of the federal constitution forcing subjugation of
certain state powers to federal law - that any part of the Bill of Right
would not have been viewed and both a federal and state restriction of
power.  The People were recently, fully, and acutely aware of the
implications of Article VI, and knew that the Bill of Rights added a layer
of protection to their assumed natural rights.

Guy Smith

Author, Gun Facts

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

www.GunFacts.info <http://www.gunfacts.info/> 

 


  _____  


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Volokh, Eugene
Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2007 1:40 PM
To: List Firearms Reg
Subject: RE: The REPUBLICAN ... from New York.

 

    By the way, here's one reason that Barron strikes me as an entirely
correct given the original understanding:

 

    Madison originally proposed the Bill of Rights as amendments to the body
of the Constitution.  The bulk of the amendments that now form the Bill of
Rights would have gone into article I, section 9, which lists constraints on
the federal government; but the provision "No state shall violate the equal
rights of conscience, or the freedom of the press, or the trial by jury in
criminal cases" would have gone into article I, section 10, which lists
constraints on state governments.  See
http://www.let.rug.nl/~usa/P/jm4/speeches/amend.htm .  

 

    The former provisions were mostly accepted; the latter were rejected.
Concluding that amendments 2 through 8 were nonetheless understood by people
in 1791 as applying to the states would require us to think that (1) the
Congress's revisions to Madison's proposals were understood as vastly
*broadening* the scope of most of Madison's proposals (by making most of the
federal constitution's new prohibitions applicable to the states as well as
the federal government), and (2) the Congress's revisions to Madison's
proposals were understood as vastly *narrowing* the scope of some of
Madison's other proposals (by making the federal constitution's new
prohibitions on free speech or religious prosecution applicable only to the
federal government, not the states).  That would be an utterly remarkable
result, and yet none of the Congressional debates or any other
contemporaneous sources remarked on it.  Rather, those sources seem to me
most consistent with the view that Madison's proposals were largely accepted
(with some changes) as to federal limits on federal action, and entirely
rejected as to federal limits on state action.

 

    Eugene

 

 


  _____  


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Joseph E. Olson
Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2007 12:59 PM
To: List Firearms Reg
Subject: RE: The REPUBLICAN ... from New York.

I don't think it is clear.

 

It depends on your view of the correctness of a broad reading of Barron
beyond its facts.  Many (most?)  nineteenth century state Supreme Court
justices thought the Second Amendment, at least, did apply to the states.
I'm not aware of any cases [prior to] Barron that say otherwise.  Perhaps on
the basis of a distinction between "shall not be infringed" vs. "Congress
shall make no" although the state cases don't, IIRC, articulate a rationale,
they just say it.  

 

Some of the early commentators also support this view, I believe.  In fact,
outside Barron and its progeny, this may have been the dominant view but I
haven't read enough of those cases to say for sure.


>>> "Volokh, Eugene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 07/25/07 2:11 PM >>>

Joe:  I'm puzzled -- isn't it clear that before the Fourteenth Amendment,
the dominant view (not the only view, but the dominant one, eventually
adopted in Barron v. Baltimore) was that gun control was indeed a matter for
state-by-state decisionmaking (at least setting aside conflicts with federal
law), and that the Second Amendment, like other amendments, bound only the
federal government?

 

One can fault Giuliani for not being attentive to how the Fourteenth
Amendment was interpreted, and what its Ratifiers would have said, but it
sounds to me like he's quite right as to the Founding Fathers.

 

Eugene

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