'The
Unlimited Power of the Sword'
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
A
couple of loyal readers asked me, in response to my recent evisceration
of the discredited "militia clause" argument, "But
Vin, do you think the Founders would have written the Second Amendment
that way if they'd known we'd have Uzis"?
Leaving aside
the fact that it takes extraordinary dedication and commitment (and
loot) for a "civilian" of average means to legally acquire
a fully automatic Israeli machine pistol in America today, the answer
is, "Yes."
The Founders had every opportunity to add "except for bombs,
mortars, artillery and other devices that can kill more than one
person at a time" all of which were well-known by 1787.
They did not. Quite to the contrary, Tench Coxe, noted federalist
and friend of James Madison, wrote in defense of the proposed Constitution,
in the Pennsylvania Gazette of Feb. 20, 1788: "Their swords,
and every other terrible instrument of the soldier, are the birth
right of an American. ... The unlimited power of the sword is not
in the hands of either the federal or the state governments, but,
where I trust in God it will ever remain, in the hands of the people."
Note "unlimited."
Note "every terrible instrument."
Under the form
of government that we're told Americans still enjoy, the government
can exercise only those powers that are delegated to it by the people.
You cannot delegate a right or power that you do not already possess.
Therefore, if members of the U.S. Army have legitimate authority
to "keep and bear" Uzis and nuclear weapons, they can
only have gotten that right from the individual Americans who delegated
it to them.
It doesn't
matter whether you "think this is a good idea." If you
want to contend we now have a form of government in which our rulers
start with all rights and powers, and allow to the peasantry only
those lesser included liberties as they see fit, say so out loud
now, please. And tell me when the original Constitution was voided,
and by what legal process.
Nor do we usually
or necessarily abdicate a right when we delegate it: We delegate
to police the duty to chase down fleeing felons, but each citizen
retains the right to go ahead and do this himself if circumstances
dictate.
Similarly,
the Second and 14th amendments guarantee that we have not given
up our private, individual right to keep and bear howitzers and
really big machine guns just because we have also delegated this
right to the Army.
Of particular
interest is the fact that several of my questioners work in the
newspaper business. How would they respond, I wonder, to the proposition
that the First Amendment protects only the freedom to use old-fashioned
hand presses that the Founders can't possibly have meant
to authorize unrestricted use of today's far more dangerous, high-speed
electrical presses, with their ability to spread lies and seditious,
anti-government propaganda hundreds of times faster than Ben Franklin
or James Madison could ever have imagined?
Speaking of
my (necessarily brief) summary of the inquiries that have gutted
the tired old "militia clause" arguments, noted Alabama
constitutional attorney Larry Becraft writes in:
"Vin,
You did not mention: www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm."
Frankly, I'm
cautious about using Department of Justice filings, because they're
inherently political and could easily shift under some future Hillaryesque
administration. Nonetheless, Larry does offer up an official DOJ
memorandum of opinion, dated Aug. 24, 2004, which finds:
"The Second
Amendment secures a right of individuals generally, not a right
of States or a right restricted to persons serving in militias.
... As developed in the analysis below, we conclude that the Second
Amendment secures a personal right of individuals, not a collective
right that may only be invoked by a State or a quasi-collective
right restricted to those persons who serve in organized militia
units.
"The Amendment's
prefatory clause, considered under proper rules of interpretation,
could not negate the individual right recognized in the clear language
of the operative clause. In any event, the prefatory clause
particularly its reference to the 'Militia,' which was understood
at the Founding to encompass all able-bodied male citizens, who
were required to be enrolled for service is fully consistent
with an individual-right reading of the operative language."
December
30, 2005
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2005 Vin Suprynowicz
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