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Guns and the President
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Guns
and the Government
Here is an
uncomfortable pop quiz: Who has killed more children, Adam Lanza
or Barack Obama? We'll hold off on the answer for a few paragraphs
while we look at the state of governmental excess – including killing
– in America. But you can probably guess the correct answer from
the manner in which I have posed the question.
We all know
that the sheet anchor of our liberties is the Declaration of Independence.
The president himself quoted Thomas Jefferson's most famous line
in his inaugural address earlier this week. He recognized that all
men and women are created equal and endowed by our Creator with
certain inalienable rights and that among these are life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness.
The president
would no doubt like to modify the word "created" to read "shall
be maintained," since his presidency seems dedicated to keeping
us equal, not in terms of equality of rights and opportunity but
of outcome. He has dedicated himself to using the coercive power
of the federal government to take from those who have and give to
those who don't. Under the Constitution, charity is a decision for
individuals to make, not the government.
This forced
egalitarianism was never the purpose of government in America. When
the people in the original 13 states gave up some of their personal
liberties to create their state governments so they could perform
the services that governments in the West do, and when the states
themselves gave up some of their liberties to create the federal
government of limited powers to address the issues of nationhood,
they never authorized government to impose taxes to transfer wealth
to those who lack it or need it.
This may sound
harsh, but there is simply no authority in the Constitution for
the feds to tax Americans or to borrow money in their names to rebuild
private homes in New Orleans or at the Jersey Shore. And there is
no moral authority for that, either. If folks want to give money
to those whose properties were damaged by natural disasters and
lacked adequate insurance coverage, they are free to do so, but
nowhere does government have the authority to compel us to do so.
This shows
how far we have come from the Constitution the Founders gave us.
They "constituted" a government of limited powers, and they did
so because they wanted the government to protect our freedoms, since
they understood that personal responsibility and freedom – not government
handouts – are the soundest routes to prosperity. Hence, they limited
the government because they knew the lessons of history. And those
lessons informed them that often it is the government itself that
is the greatest threat to personal freedom.
One hundred
years ago, during the Progressive Era, Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow
Wilson turned the concept of limited government on its head. They
argued that the Constitution could be disregarded because the federal
government possesses unlimited powers to address the people's needs.
Barack Obama is their ideological heir. As their heir, he is not
only the head of the executive branch of the federal government,
but he is also the head of one of the two dominant political parties.
That political
party has dedicated itself to making certain killing legal. The
Democrats have continually celebrated the abominable decision of
the Supreme Court in Roe vs. Wade, issued 40 years ago this week.
They have championed abortion for the past 40 years. They have assaulted
the greatest and most fundamental of human rights: the right to
live. In doing so, they have succeeded in causing the government
to permit the killing of more than 50 million American babies in
their mothers' wombs in the past 40 years – for the sake of convenience
and sexual activity without consequence, in a manner that is antiseptic
and lawful. And no one hears the babies' cries of pain or anguish.
The president
himself has more directly killed about 176 children in Pakistan
by the use of CIA drones. These drones have been dispatched by him
alone – not pursuant to any congressional declaration of war. At
least two of these murdered children were Americans. But since the
cameras were kept away, since all of this takes place 10,000 miles
from America, and since the survivors are legally and politically
helpless, no one here hears the Pakistani children's cries of pain
and anguish.
One of the
reasons we have the constitutionally guaranteed right to keep and
bear arms is to enable us to resist a drone sent to the path of
our children by shooting it down, no matter who sent it. But you
can't stop a drone with a BB gun. Hence the need for serious firepower
in the hands of ordinary Americans – to give tyrants pause and to
stop tyrants when they don't pause. The president wants to use Lanza's
horrific slaughter of 20 babies in a public school in Connecticut
with a stolen gun as an excuse to restrict the freedoms of all law-abiding
gun-owning Americans, any one of whom would have stopped Lanza in
a heartbeat with a lawful gun, before the police could, had they
been in that school.
Now back to
our pop quiz: Who has killed more children, Lanza or Obama? Does
a president with blood on his hands have any moral standing to infringe
upon the natural right to self-defense of those whose hands are
clean? Would you sacrifice your liberty to defend yourself and your
children so that the government can kill whom it pleases?
The answers
are obvious.
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
January 24, 2013
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is Theodore
and Woodrow: How Two American Presidents Destroyed Constitutional
Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano and to read
features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit
creators.com.
Copyright
© 2013 Andrew P. Napolitano
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