Gary Raney: The Slave-Catching Sheriff of Ada
County, Idaho
by
William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: Put
Not Your Trust in Federalized Sheriffs
If Idaho had
been part of the Union in 1850, and Ada
County Sheriff Gary Raney had occupied that office at the time,
he would have dutifully arrested any black man or woman identified
as an escaped slave. Oh, sure, Raney may have expressed agonized
reluctance as he did so but that reluctance would have been
rhetorical window-dressing for his pious invocation of the sacred
responsibility he had to submit to the law of the land.
This is the
inescapable logic of the
position Raney has taken in an op-ed column published last week
in the Idaho Statesman.
I have
been asked many times in the past couple of weeks whether I will
uphold my oath to defend the Constitution and proclaim an intolerance
of federal action against the Second Amendment, Raney writes.
Many others have indulged that pressure and now we see Oregon sheriffs,
Wyoming legislators and others making hollow promises to protect
you from the intrusions of the federal government.
I did
not swear to uphold just part of the Constitution, Raney continues,
before tacitly promising to do that very thing. You see, the Constitution,
on Raneys construction, includes the right to keep and
bear arms, but it also includes the `supremacy clause that
says that every state shall abide by the laws passed by our Congress."
Actually, that
right is not included in the Constitution; it exists independent
of that document or any other government charter, and no government
has the moral right or delegated authority to take it away. What
Raney asserts here is the idea that the existence of that right
is contingent on government approval, and thus can be nullified
by government. From this perspective, the only part of the Constitution
that matters is the supremacy clause, at least as people like Raney
pretend to understand it.
So, despite
the fact that I personally oppose some of the gun control measures
currently under consideration, my oath requires me to uphold the
laws that are passed by our federal and state representatives,
summarizes Raney. The same would have been true, of course, of the
Fugitive Slave Act which was properly enacted and enforced
as the law of the land despite
the heroic efforts of people in some cities and states to nullify
enforcement of that abominable measure.
Give
Raney whatever credit is due to him for his candor: Like the other
sheriffs who have pledged not to carry out unconstitutional federal
gun confiscation measures, Raney receives federal subsidies
but unlike his pro-Second Amendment colleagues, Raney is forthright
about the fact that he is merely a servile tool of the federal leviathan
state. He will confiscate firearms from innocent people if ordered
to, but at least he wont have to walk back any promises he
had made to protect their rights.
January
28, 2013
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2013 William Norman Grigg
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