If the Supreme Court takes the Washington, DC. 2nd Amendment case it will one of the most important rulings ever.
http://www.iht.com/bin/printfriendly.php?id=8287410
http://www.iht.com/bin/printfriendly.php?id=8287410
The question is whether the Second Amendment to the Constitution protects an individual right to "keep and bear arms."
I find it kind of ironic that the first amendment says congress shall not pass laws against free speach and religion which could conceiviably allow the states the right to pass laws against speach and religion, yet the second amentment specifically says the right of the people to own and bear arm shall not be infringed which precludes even the states from passing laws against private ownership of firearms. Yet it is always assumed it is the other way around and freedom of speach is untouchable while private ownership of firearms is considered free for the states to mess with.
From what I can tell, you're simply presenting the opposing argument, so I'm not asking you to defend your own position. I am curious what the argument for a "right" of the body politic is. How does that work? Isn't any right that can only be exercised under the scrutiny of the state by definition a "privilege" and not a "right?" Is there more to the argument than this?The arguments against the 2nd Amendment implying individual gun owership.
1. "Militia means an organized military body." - But, the Militia that freed this nation from the King's tyranny were made up of regular people, farmers and merchants. We used to hear of them all of the time, the Minutemen, and taught in school how a ragtag group of citizens stood up to the strongest army in the world.
2. "In the 2nd Amendment "the people" means the body politic, not the individual." - The Supreme Court looks at the Founder's Original Intent when deliberating Constitutional Issues. It was a long Revolution where the ordinary citizen/individual took up arms and spilled blood for Liberty. I believe the founders saw the "people" as the individual.
So we have arrived at the time where everything is going to be revealed to us. Are we going to continue to be freemen or become serfs.
From what I can tell, you're simply presenting the opposing argument, so I'm not asking you to defend your own position. I am curious what the argument for a "right" of the body politic is. How does that work? Isn't any right that can only be exercised under the scrutiny of the state by definition a "privilege" and not a "right?" Is there more to the argument than this?
By the way, anyone had success with presenting Paul slim jims or other documents at gun-related outlets? What sort of gun-related outlets are there that might not be immediately obvious? I'm thinking of gun stores and firing ranges. Anything else I should cover?
What a disgrace if there are infringements on this right.