Second Amendment Rights not Assured Despite Court Victories

Posted By Mike McDaniel On May 15, 2011 

In any attempt to create the socialist/Marxist administrative state, what
kind of "fundamental change" would be necessary?  The goal, of course, must
be to greatly increase the power of the centralized state and simultaneously
to greatly decrease the power - the rights - of the individual. Individuals
capable of compelling the state to recognize their rights, to hinder or
subvert the designs of the state in any way, cannot be tolerated. In any
such attempt, paramount must be the reduction and eventual elimination of
the Second Amendment. Near-ultimate or ultimate state power cannot be
attained and held if the people can resist with force of arms. But how can
this be accomplished in the face of Supreme Court decisions affirming and
incorporating the Second Amendment as a fundamental right?

In the aftermath of the
<http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/07-290.ZS.html> Heller decision [1],
which established the Second Amendment as a fundamental individual right,
and the  <http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/09pdf/08-1521.pdf> McDonald
decision [2], which incorporated that right, applying it to the states, some
have felt that the debate over guns in American life is essentially over.
Anti-gun groups such as the Brady Campaign have had no real successes in
years, and with Heller and McDonald decided, they seem likely to be
relegated to being a nuisance around the margins of a debate that no longer
holds the limelight. Unfortunately, such thinking ignores the realities of
the administrative state and of the imperial judiciary.

Despite the aforementioned decisions, state and local legislators and
bureaucrats in cities such as Chicago and Washington, D.C., continue to
ignore the clear intent of the Supreme Court decisions and impose
regulations, such as licensing requirements, excessive fees, and zoning
regulations, so restrictive as to effectively prevent the sale and
possession of firearms for all but the politically connected and the very
hardy and determined few.

Note that virtually all of these enclaves of anti-gun sentiment - such as
New York and Chicago - are Democrat-controlled, some might say
Democrat-ruled - and have been for decades. That crime rates in such areas
are commonly far higher than in cities that respect the Second Amendment
rights of their citizens is a well-established fact, but a fact which has no
determinative effect on the bureaucratic mind.

Few of these politicians or bureaucrats will think or say "the Constitution
doesn't allow that," or "the Supreme Court's decisions have limited my power
and actions." They will simply do what they want, secure in the knowledge
that it will take many years and many millions for their edicts to be
overturned, and even then, they will suffer nothing for imposing them. They
are quite likely to merely start over with the most minute of adjustments to
policies they knew to be unconstitutional from the start.

As is its usual practice, the Supreme Court kept the parameters of each case
quite narrow, deciding only the major question raised rather than
delineating details. It is here that the administrative state has
substantial room to make mischief and rules. For the moment, Heller and
McDonald have affirmed essentially only that individual citizens not
prohibited by law, such as through felony convictions or having been judged
mentally impaired, have a right to keep and bear arms for any lawful
purpose, including self-defense. However, that right is explicitly operative
only within the home, leaving an enormous range of mischief making for
anti-gun activists and power-hungry politicians and bureaucrats.

It is not absolutely clear, for example, if the right extends to the limits
of one's property. Theoretically, a gun-bearing citizen stepping onto his
front porch might be liable for arrest in any jurisdiction that cares to
enact such a restrictive law. The poor citizen might eventually have such a
conviction overturned, but that's thousands of dollars and many years (even
many years in prison) later, surely a proposition beyond the means and
determination of most people, even those willing to fight for principle.

The logical man would reason that a right as important as the right to keep
and bear arms for self defense - and this portion of the right has been
clearly delineated - must encompass not only the interior of the home, but
at the very least the entirety of a homeowner's property and their person.
The defense of self and the defense of property are two entirely different
matters. What good is a fundamental right that begins and ends at one's
front door or property line? A right to free speech, for example, limited to
haranguing one's family within the walls of one's own home isn't a right at
all.

If one of the underlying purposes of the right is self-defense - and the
Supreme Court has made this much clear - must it not necessarily apply to
wherever the "self" is at any given moment? If it does not, can it be said
to actually be a right rather than a whimsically granted and rescinded
privilege bestowed by government?

And if one has a right to self-defense wherever they may be, what
restrictions are allowable? The aforementioned cities prohibit concealed
carry of handguns by all but an elite, politically favored few. Other
jurisdictions make the carrying of firearms in vehicles so burdensome -
requiring, for example, that they be unloaded and carried in locked
containers inaccessible to the driver, and that ammunition must be stored
separately - that they are practically useless for self-defense.

Such laws make for obviously absurd realities. Imagine if the Fourth
Amendment right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures was so
narrowly construed. The moment one stepped out of their home or off their
property, might they not be subject to strip searches at the whim of the
state? Might not every vehicle in which they were traveling be subject to
unrestricted search and seizure?

Imagine similar limitations on the First Amendment right to peaceably
petition the government for redress of grievances. What would keep the state
from allowing such protest only on the Internet - with prior approval and
control of content - or via telephone, essentially within the confines of
the home, but not off one's property?

That such narrow interpretations of fundamental rights render them something
other, something less than fundamental rights is unquestionably true.  Such
is not the case with most of the Bill of Rights because such issues have
long ago been decided and incorporated into the laws of the states. Second
Amendment jurisprudence is still in its infancy, allowing the administrative
state enormous latitude in infringing on a fundamental right that in its
clearly understood text brooks no infringement, despite the apparent
inability of the self-imagined better classes to understand the written
English of the late 1700s.

The greatest danger lies with the imperial judiciary. President Obama has
already appointed two stealth anti-Second Amendment Supreme Court justices
in Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor. Because they were replacements for
equally liberal justices, the balance of the court has not shifted, and for
the moment, the fundamental right affirmed and incorporated in Heller and
McDonald stands, but on shaky ground indeed. Even though most of the
justices conceded in deciding Heller that the Second Amendment is an
individual right, there was not similar consensus on its application. Many
of those in the minority were quite willing to interpret the Amendment in
ways that would render it a fundamental right without any meaningful,
practical application for the individual. It likely would, should the Heller
minority become the majority, become a right on paper only.

Should the balance of the court shift from those who decide cases based on
American law and the facts to those who seek to impose what they consider to
be worthy social policies unobtainable through the legislative process, it
would be a brave new world indeed. It is not outside the realm of
possibility that they would actually overturn Heller and McDonald rather
than nitpick it out of practical existence.

If they maintained any respect for precedent and the institution of the
Court, such an outright reversal would be less likely, but interpreting away
any practical application of the right would be a virtual certainty. It
would leave citizens liable to arrest and felony conviction merely for
possessing a firearm at the wrong place and time regardless of their intent.
Unfortunate citizens unknowingly stepping over a municipal or state boundary
line could easily become instant felons. Those who fail to see the danger
inherent in this might visit my previous Pajamas Media
<http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/on-the-court-leftist-justice-vs-the-rule-of-la
w/>  [3] article on Supreme Court Justice Breyer, whose willingness to do
just as I have suggested is more than clear and more than chilling.

This problem is exacerbated by the tactics employed by the respective
parties: Republicans tend to believe that a president should be allowed to
appoint any candidate who is objectively qualified to sit on the court.
Democrats recognize no such restraints, and will go to any end to obstruct
or eliminate any but those who share their "social justice" dogma. Democrats
play to win while Republicans play to uphold the Constitution, a document
that far too many Democrats see as merely an antiquated impediment to the
realization of their policy goals.

Assuming the current interpretation balance of the Supreme Court remains
unchanged, it is likely that lower courts that stray too far from Heller and
McDonald will be overturned for a less restrictive understanding of the
realities of self-defense. However, such decisions might be many years away,
and entire portions of the nation, many of millions of citizens, might be
subject to freedom-strangling regulations and unjust criminal convictions
until the jurisdiction that imposed them are forced to abandon them by a
future Supreme Court.

It should not be forgotten that it is in the appointment of lower court
judges that a president can do great harm to liberty. Therefore, no one
concerned about the sanctity of the entire Bill of Rights may rest easy
until Mr. Obama is retired to play golf, write his memoirs, and assume the
worldwide leadership and adulation that he and his minions believe to be his
destiny. Four more years of hope and change would be likely to change the
balance of the Supreme Court toward the kind of social engineering
indispensable to the goals of socialism.

Even if ObamaCare is eventually repealed, turning the Supreme Court into a
subsidiary of the Democratic Party could very well be Mr. Obama's greatest
accomplishment. It is an accomplishment he must be denied if the inalienable
right to self-defense is to survive. Ben Franklin may well have been right.
Whether we can keep a republic remains an open question, and a question that
will be measured, in large part, by the near future of the Second Amendment.

  _____  

Article printed from Pajamas Media: http://pajamasmedia.com

URL to article:
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/second-amendment-rights-not-assured-despite-cou
rt-victories/

URLs in this post: 

[1] Heller decision: http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/07-290.ZS.html

[2] McDonald decision:
http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/09pdf/08-1521.pdf

[3] Pajamas Media:
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/on-the-court-leftist-justice-vs-the-rule-of-law
/

 



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