What Part of the Second Amendment Is So Hard to Understand?
Thursday, March 14, 2013
What Part of the Second Amendment Is So Hard to Understand?
By John F. Di Leo -
The Second Amendment is completely misunderstood by half the country. People who would never dream of challenging the meaning of freedom of speech, or the right to be from search and seizure, assume all sorts of imaginary limitations to the right to keep and bear arms, limitations that, upon thoughtful consideration, would be detrimental to the nation’s health and safety.
Others have written whole books on the subject, but for those who don’t need a whole book, just a quick clarification, here it is, part by part.
"A well regulated militia, being necessary for the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."
The 2nd Amendment is part of the Bill of Rights, so let’s start by remembering what the Bill of Rights was. In the days of our Founding, we were part of the British Empire, a limited monarchy in which the monarch had gone off the rails and forgotten (actually, “consciously circumvented” might be nearer the mark) most of his limits. Our Founders therefore set up constitutions for each of their respective colonies, and added bills of rights to each of them, sometimes passing their bills of rights first, because they viewed these as being more important than, say, how many senators they had or how long a judge’s term should be.
The Summer of 1787
In designing a national government for the United States, the Constitutional Convention in 1787 debated whether to include such a list in this final document as well. Many of the delegates had arrived in Philadelphia – George Mason in particular, as the foremost champion of such things – with the natural expectation that such inclusion was a foregone conclusion.
But the Framers made the conscious decision not to do so for a very good reason. A Bill of Rights is a wall built around things that you don’t want the government to get at, when the government is otherwise able to get at anything else. An otherwise unrestricted government needs to be told, point blank, “these things are off limits to you!”
Our Framers, however, were writing a Constitution. The Constitution was a wall, not built around the things that are off limits for their protection, but around the government so that it could not expand beyond its enumerated powers! The Constitution was itself, by its very nature, even better than a Bill of Rights, because if the government can’t expand beyond these seven articles of enumerated powers, then you don’t NEED to list what’s off limits. By definition, everything else is off limits!
So the Framers decided, almost unanimously, that a Bill of Rights would be counterproductive in this document. It would send a mixed message: on the one hand the first seven articles say “the national government can’t exceed these bounds,” but then on the other hand a Bill of Rights would say “but on the off chance that it does exceed these bounds, here are several excesses that are really really off limits, we really mean it here.” The Framers therefore decided that a Bill of Rights in this context would be schizophrenic, and they voted it down (losing the endorsement of the great George Mason as a result).
The Ratification Debates of 1787-88
When the Framers returned to their respective states, however, to pursue ratification, they found that this explanation was too complicated to make in the public square, and found that most states would simply refuse to ratify without a Bill of Rights. So the leading federalists (the supporters of the Constitution) agreed, state by state, to ratify only on the condition that a Bill of Rights would be added, thinking that it would be no serious loss to the logical strength of the Constitution. That choice is debatable to this day, but as the Constitution would not have been ratified without the agreement, it’s probably moot.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
What Part of the Second Amendment Is So Hard to Understand?
By John F. Di Leo -
The Second Amendment is completely misunderstood by half the country. People who would never dream of challenging the meaning of freedom of speech, or the right to be from search and seizure, assume all sorts of imaginary limitations to the right to keep and bear arms, limitations that, upon thoughtful consideration, would be detrimental to the nation’s health and safety.
Others have written whole books on the subject, but for those who don’t need a whole book, just a quick clarification, here it is, part by part.
"A well regulated militia, being necessary for the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."
The 2nd Amendment is part of the Bill of Rights, so let’s start by remembering what the Bill of Rights was. In the days of our Founding, we were part of the British Empire, a limited monarchy in which the monarch had gone off the rails and forgotten (actually, “consciously circumvented” might be nearer the mark) most of his limits. Our Founders therefore set up constitutions for each of their respective colonies, and added bills of rights to each of them, sometimes passing their bills of rights first, because they viewed these as being more important than, say, how many senators they had or how long a judge’s term should be.
The Summer of 1787
In designing a national government for the United States, the Constitutional Convention in 1787 debated whether to include such a list in this final document as well. Many of the delegates had arrived in Philadelphia – George Mason in particular, as the foremost champion of such things – with the natural expectation that such inclusion was a foregone conclusion.
But the Framers made the conscious decision not to do so for a very good reason. A Bill of Rights is a wall built around things that you don’t want the government to get at, when the government is otherwise able to get at anything else. An otherwise unrestricted government needs to be told, point blank, “these things are off limits to you!”
Our Framers, however, were writing a Constitution. The Constitution was a wall, not built around the things that are off limits for their protection, but around the government so that it could not expand beyond its enumerated powers! The Constitution was itself, by its very nature, even better than a Bill of Rights, because if the government can’t expand beyond these seven articles of enumerated powers, then you don’t NEED to list what’s off limits. By definition, everything else is off limits!
So the Framers decided, almost unanimously, that a Bill of Rights would be counterproductive in this document. It would send a mixed message: on the one hand the first seven articles say “the national government can’t exceed these bounds,” but then on the other hand a Bill of Rights would say “but on the off chance that it does exceed these bounds, here are several excesses that are really really off limits, we really mean it here.” The Framers therefore decided that a Bill of Rights in this context would be schizophrenic, and they voted it down (losing the endorsement of the great George Mason as a result).
The Ratification Debates of 1787-88
When the Framers returned to their respective states, however, to pursue ratification, they found that this explanation was too complicated to make in the public square, and found that most states would simply refuse to ratify without a Bill of Rights. So the leading federalists (the supporters of the Constitution) agreed, state by state, to ratify only on the condition that a Bill of Rights would be added, thinking that it would be no serious loss to the logical strength of the Constitution. That choice is debatable to this day, but as the Constitution would not have been ratified without the agreement, it’s probably moot.
Comment