The
Militia Question, Resolved: Second Amendment 101
by
Michael E. Kreca
Previously
by Michael E. Kreca: The
Needless US Pacific War with Japan – Courtesy of Stalin and FDR
"The
most foolish mistake we could possibly make would be to permit the
conquered Eastern peoples to have arms. History teaches that all
conquerors who have allowed their subject races to carry arms have
prepared their own downfall by doing so. Indeed I would go so far
as to say that the underdog is a sine qua non for the overthrow
of any sovereignty. So let's not have any native militia or police.
German troops alone will bear the sole responsibility for the maintenance
of law and order."
~
Adolf Hitler, April 11, 1942, in Hitler's Table-Talk at the
Führer's Headquarters 19411942, Dr. Henry Picker, ed.
(Athenaeum Verlag, Bonn, 1951)
Twenty-seven
words first published in 1790 are now the source of the bitterest
controversy the USA has seen since the 1960s if not since the War
Between the States a century before that. They are central to an
issue that splits left and right, male and female, white and nonwhite,
North and South, East and West, wealthy and not-so wealthy.
They are:
A well regulated
militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the
right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
Lets
get this straight right away. First of all, the inalienable right
of individuals to keep and bear arms as a check on a tyrannical
government predates our Declaration of Independence and Constitution.
This, among other things, was clearly and eloquently expressed in
Sir William Blackstone's 1768 "Commentaries On The Laws of
England. Hence, the Founders were operating within a long
historical tradition based upon English common law.
Secondly, the
term well-regulated meant something quite different
two centuries ago. It is not todays definition of controlled,
limited, or restricted but was instead defined
as having proper kit and provisions or in the case of
objects or machinery, properly maintained and kept in good
repair. The next is the Constitutional definition of the militia,
and this what requires detailed explanation. The militia issue was
extensively debated during the 178789 Constitutional Convention
in Philadelphia and today has sadly been ignored by both sides in
this issue.
Founder George
Mason explicitly wished to have it clearly spelled out that the
militia was of the whole people," in effect, a general
militia that was affirmed in the Second Amendment and the
1792 Militia Act. Mason and his supporters feared the development
of "special militias" ones much like the Puritan
"Roundheads" led by Oliver Cromwell and their opponents,
the Cavaliers, in the English Civil War of 164257.
Special militias are nothing more than state-sanctioned paramilitary
groups witness the German Nazi SA and its successor the SS
as well as the Italian Fascist "Blackshirts." In those
cases, Nazi/Fascist Party membership was strictly required to join
them as well as to legally own a firearm of any kind in either of
those countries at the time.
These two groups
were little different than standing armies. The difference is that
they were created and used by the German and Italian governments
to bypass any laws against using the military domestically against
the people (or in the absence of such laws, to forestall the militarys
unwillingness to do so) in order to crush dissent and terrorize
opponents. (Sound familiar?) Cromwell used his Roundheads to do
much the same thing, even having King Charles I beheaded after a
bogus trial, later closing Parliament and then invading Ireland
with plans to wipe out the Catholic population, killing those of
his comrades and anyone else who refused to comply.
Distressingly,
we now have a lot of special militias in the USA the Secret
Service, FBI, BATF, DEA, IRS, the National Guard and todays
"near federalized" status of most state and local police
departments to name but a few. And they are all unconstitutional,
if the plain meaning of the 2nd Amendment and the 1792 Militia Act
is correct. George Mason's fears about them were well placed and
have come tragically true. All these alphabet-soup special militias
can do and have done (other than freely lapping up taxpayer money
in ever-increasing amounts) is be responsible for numerous cruel
and meaningless tragedies. These range from spying on, harassing
and ruining the lives of anyone deemed an enemy of the state,
to brutally breaking strikes, violently disrupting demonstrations
and killing innocent people in places ranging from Kent State to
Ruby Ridge and Waco.
Even the courts
are beginning to revive this long forgotten but crucial general
vs. special militia distinction. The 1990 Supreme Court case
Perpich vs. Department of Defense is a case in point. Then Minnesota
Gov. Rudy Perpich claimed the DoD violated the Constitution when
it ordered the Minnesota National Guard (which he claimed was the
'state militia') to duty outside the state without his consent or
that of the state legislature.
The Supreme
Court ruled against Perpich. It held the National Guard is an integral
component of the US Army Reserve system (it has been since 1916).
It further supported its ruling by specifying the difference between
the special militia (in this case the Minnesota Guard)
instead of the general militia (citizens with privately
procured and owned arms) as expressed in the 2nd Amendment. Also
in 1990 the Court in another case affirmed the definition of the
people expressed in the Bill of Rights as meaning individual
persons, not a group.
So the statist
left has its militia and the rest of us have ours. No
wonder so many of them cant free themselves from the false
but mesmerizing aura of the Militia = National Guard
equation. The statist left doesnt want to because its
interested not in the right of individuals to protect their lives
and liberty against a tyrannical federal government, but in giving
that tyrannical federal government a blank check, figuratively and
literally, to indulge in state-sponsored terror under the tautological
trinity of crime prevention," "anti-terrorism"
and "national security. And Clinton Defense Secretary
William Cohen has all but told us to get used to the idea.
So there it
is. General militia versus special militia.
Which are you?
Think about
that question the next time you are cajoled by otherwise-idle Million
Mom March mavens to support sensible gun laws or are
exhorted by the denizens of the pseudo-patriotic law-and-order
crowd to back the badge.
Published
in the May 26, 2000 issue of Ether
Zone.
May 26, 2000
Michael
E. Kreca lived in San Diego and had been a financial reporter for
Knight-Ridder, Business Week and the Financial Times
of London. On February 11, 2006, he was shot to death by a government
cop.
Copyright ©
2000 Ether Zone
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