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Conservative Win - Second Amendment victory in D.C.
National Review Online ^ | March 12, 2007 | Peter Ferrara

Posted on 03/12/2007 12:15:44 PM PDT by neverdem







Conservative Win
Second Amendment victory in D.C

By Peter Ferrara

The conservative movement won an historic victory last Friday. In the case of Parker v. District of Columbia, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution does, indeed, protect a right for individual citizens to keep and bear arms for self-defense and other legal uses. Consequently, the court struck down a nettle of D.C. gun-control laws which effectively prohibited gun ownership and use within the District by law-abiding citizens.

The media played the case as if it was primarily a local issue for the D.C. area. But this case has national, historic significance because of the doctrine it announced.

For decades now, liberals have argued that the Second Amendment did not protect an individual right to gun ownership and use. Part of the problem they have now is that they never came up with a good explanation for what the amendment does mean if it does not protect just such an individual right.

Does it protect a constitutional right for the states to maintain their own armed militias? Federal law provides that the militias are under the ultimate control of the federal government, and any such state right was certainly not respected during the Civil War. Would liberals really have wanted Alabama and Mississippi to have had such a right during the civil rights struggles of the 1950s and 1960s?

Does it protect a right of soldiers serving in a state militia to be armed? Did the Founders think there was a problem of militias trying to send their troops into battle while denying them arms? Is that what the Founders meant to list second in the Bill of Rights?

The one thing liberals have long been sure of is that anyone who thinks the Second Amendment does protect an individual right to gun ownership and use is an extremist nut. Last Friday, the D.C. Circuit terminated that notion.

The court reached its decision by thorough analysis of the language and history of the amendment. The operative phrase of the Amendment, “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed,” grants a clear individual right. The prefatory phrase “A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state,” does not as a matter of plain English take away the right clearly stated in the rest of the Amendment. Indeed, what sense would the Amendment make if it did?

As the court said,

The Amendment does not protect ‘the right of militiamen to keep and bear arms,’ but, rather ‘the right of the people.’ The operative clause, properly read, protects the ownership and use of weaponry beyond that needed to preserve the state militias. Again, we point out that if the competent drafters of the Second Amendment had meant the right to be limited to the protection of state militias, it is hard to imagine that they would have chosen the language they did. We therefore take it as an expression of the drafters’ view that the people possessed a natural right to keep and bear arms, and that the preservation of the militia was the right’s most salient political benefit—and thus the most appropriate to express in a political document.

The court did not announce an absolute right to gun ownership and use. That can still be regulated to a reasonable though not unrestricted degree. But since the Amendment does provide some constitutional protection, private gun ownership and use cannot be banned completely, as it effectively was in the District.

The Parker case is not the first time a major court has held that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms, contrary to liberal dogma. In 2001, the Fifth Circuit in United States v. Emerson also argued quite thoroughly for this view. But in that case the court held that the federal regulatory statute at issue, regarding interstate transfer of firearms in commerce, was not unconstitutional under Second Amendment rights. Moreover, the Emerson opinion has been treated as an aberration by Texas cowboy yahoos.

Parker is the first time a federal court has struck down a major gun-control regime such as the one in D.C. Moreover, we are now dealing with the highly sophisticated D.C. Circuit that handles all the cases coming out of the federal bureaucracy. With this Parker decision, conservatives have now turned the corner on this long-running intellectual battle with the Left.

Of course, the Supreme Court will ultimately decide this case, and could nullify this victory. But the votes could be in the Second Amendment’s favor. There are four certain votes to affirm there, and I doubt that Justice Anthony Kennedy, appointed by President Reagan, will deny them their majority. This is a case that Justice Breyer’s former Harvard Law School colleague, the liberal constitutional-law expert Lawrence Tribe, has argued for some time that the conservatives are right on; Breyer and Souter may just go with the Second Amendment tribe.

— Peter Ferrara is general counsel for the American Civil Rights Union, on whose behalf he filed briefs in the Parker supporting gun-ownership rights. He is also director of Entitlement and Budget Policy for the Institute for Policy Innovation, and a senior fellow at the Free Enterprise Fund.
Peter Ferrara is a senior fellow at the Free Enterprise Fund, director of entitlement and budget policy at the Institute for Policy Innovation, and general counsel for the American Civil Rights Union.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: banglist; conservative; conservativism; secondamendment

1 posted on 03/12/2007 12:15:54 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Bush is no Reagan, but you have to give him credit for appointing some outstanding judges.


2 posted on 03/12/2007 12:19:26 PM PDT by Tulane
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To: neverdem

The alphabet networks (with the sole exception of NBC) totally ignored this important story.


3 posted on 03/12/2007 12:21:44 PM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: SkyPilot
"The alphabet networks (with the sole exception of NBC) totally ignored this important story."

That's because It'll be easier to ignore the crime decrease when it happens.
4 posted on 03/12/2007 12:32:42 PM PDT by tfecw (It's for the children)
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To: SkyPilot
The alphabet networks (with the sole exception of NBC) totally ignored this important story.

Because there is nothing news worthy about the story; it neither helps the left nor hurts the right. Pertinence and truth are only incidental considerations compared with the potential social impact such information might have on the unwashed masses the annointed look down upon.

5 posted on 03/12/2007 12:32:48 PM PDT by AndyTheBear (Disastrous social experimentation is the opiate of elitist snobs.)
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To: neverdem
Shouldn't say "Conservative Win". Should say "Americans Win".
6 posted on 03/12/2007 12:37:59 PM PDT by BallyBill (Serial Hit-N-Run poster)
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To: SkyPilot
The alphabet networks (with the sole exception of NBC) totally ignored this important story.

I'll take your word on that. I don't watch them much anymore. It was on WABC-AM news, although it just mentioned that it was an individual right. Surprisingly, Bloomberg.com wrote that the Court also decided the requirements for firearms to be either disassembled or secured with trigger locks, etc. was also nonsense.

That's another good kick where it hurts.

7 posted on 03/12/2007 12:40:19 PM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: AndyTheBear

That was a mouth full.


8 posted on 03/12/2007 12:42:05 PM PDT by Integrityrocks
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To: Tulane
Bush is no Reagan, but you have to give him credit for appointing some outstanding judges.

FYI, the majority opinion in this case was written by a Reagan-appointed judge. A Bush 43 judge joined in the opinion. The dissenting judge (who voted NOT to overturn the law) was appointed by Bush 41.

9 posted on 03/12/2007 12:53:11 PM PDT by Texas Federalist (Gingrich '08)
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To: neverdem
The Amendment does not protect ‘the right of militiamen to keep and bear arms,’ but, rather ‘the right of the people.’ The operative clause, properly read, protects the ownership and use of weaponry beyond that needed to preserve the state militias. Again, we point out that if the competent drafters of the Second Amendment had meant the right to be limited to the protection of state militias, it is hard to imagine that they would have chosen the language they did. We therefore take it as an expression of the drafters’ view that the people possessed a natural right to keep and bear arms, and that the preservation of the militia was the right’s most salient political benefit—and thus the most appropriate to express in a political document.

Shout this from the rooftops!

10 posted on 03/12/2007 1:26:38 PM PDT by Conservative4Ever (Hoping my 'carbon footprint' has crushed a few liberals)
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Comment #11 Removed by Moderator

To: neverdem

Another delightful point of the majority opinion was to observe, and thus raise the point on appeal, that the Second has never been given the respect of Incorporation by rulings about the Fourteenth.

As I read the opinion, I was ticking off all the legal points about the Second that I could think of. This opinion covered them all. Incorporation was one that had not been on my list, until now.


12 posted on 03/12/2007 1:58:36 PM PDT by theBuckwheat
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To: Integrityrocks
No it wasn't.

After all, if it isn't worth making an unnecessarily long, and dare I say complex, sentence about, then it may be that it is not entirely worth letting oneself express whatever point it was that the beginning of this sentence was referring to, specifically the referent of the pronoun "it" rather then the point of this sentence--at least not necessarily since one should allow that "it" may be alluding to a similar point that this sentence may be making.

Now that was a mouth full.

13 posted on 03/12/2007 3:38:28 PM PDT by AndyTheBear (Disastrous social experimentation is the opiate of elitist snobs.)
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To: BallyBill

I agree. It is a shame that the Democratic party has become solely a party of the left in all its extremism. There was a time not so long ago that the majority of people and elected officials KNEW what the amendment meant. No so in our sad society now.


14 posted on 03/12/2007 9:01:08 PM PDT by therut
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To: Joe Brower; All
SHELLY PARKER, ET AL., APPELLANTS v. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AND ADRIAN M. FENTY, MAYOR OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, APPELLEES pdf link
15 posted on 03/12/2007 10:14:09 PM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: theBuckwheat

Thanks for the reminder to read and post the decision. I was impressed. I can't see Anthony Kennedy ignoring its logic.


16 posted on 03/12/2007 10:22:59 PM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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