"Speaking Truth to Firepower: How the First Amendment Destabilizes the
Second" ( http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2009125 ) 

Washington University in St. Louis Legal Studies Research Paper No.
12-02-05 ( http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/PIP_Journal.cfm?pip_jrnl=382963
)
GREGORY P. MAGARIAN (
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=273283 ),
Washington University in Saint Louis - School of Law
Email: [email protected]

When the Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Heller declared that
the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms,
it set atop the federal judicial agenda the critical task of elaborating
the new right’s scope, limits, and content. Following Heller,
commentators routinely draw upon the First Amendment’s protections for
expressive freedom to support their proposals for Second Amendment
doctrine. In this article, Professor Magarian advocates a very different
role for the First Amendment in explicating the Second, and he contends
that our best understanding of First Amendment theory and doctrine
severely diminishes the Second Amendment’s legal potency. Professor
Magarian first criticizes efforts to draw direct analogies between the
First and Second Amendments, because the two amendments and their
objects of protection diverge along critical descriptive, normative, and
functional lines. He then contends that the longstanding debate about
whether constitutional speech protections primarily serve collectivist
or individualist purposes models a useful approach for interpreting the
Second Amendment. Under that approach, the language of the Second
Amendment’s preamble, which Heller all but erased from the text, compels
a collectivist reading of the Second Amendment. The individual right to
keep and bear arms, contrary to the Heller Court’s fixation on
individual self-defense, must serve some collective interest. Many gun
rights advocates urge that the Second Amendment serves a collective
interest in deterring – and, if necessary, violently deposing – a
tyrannical federal government. That theory of Second Amendment
insurrectionism marks another point of contact with the First Amendment,
because constitutional expressive freedom serves the conceptually
similar function of protecting public debate in order to enable dynamic
political change. Professor Magarian contends, however, that we should
prefer debate to violence as a means of political change and that, in
fact, the historical disparity in our legal culture’s attention to the
First and Second Amendments reflects a longstanding choice of debate
over insurrection. Moreover, embracing Second Amendment insurrectionism
would endanger our commitment to protecting dissident political speech
under the First Amendment. The article concludes that our insights about
the First Amendment leave little space for the Second Amendment to
develop as a meaningful constraint on government action. 
 
****************************************************************************************************************
Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M.                                    
                    o-   651-523-2142  
Hamline University School of Law (MS-D2037)                            
             f-    651-523-2236
St. Paul, MN  55113-1235                                               
                       c-   612-865-7956
[email protected]                    
http://law.hamline.edu/constitutional_law/joseph_olson.html             
      
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