Support Your Local Standing Army?
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: The
Curse of Standing Armies
Why is it that
libertarians – who don’t revere the Constitution – have no
trouble understanding the Constitution but conservatives – who do
revere the Constitution – have so much trouble?
In a letter
to the editor of The New American published in its August
20, 2012 issue, someone who believes "in the constitutional
right of citizens to keep and bear arms for self-defense – the protection
of life and property" and in "the right of a person to
hunt and harvest a natural resource for food" is nevertheless
troubled about Americans having guns for other purposes.
In a letter
sent via e-mail, Richard Moore writes about military-type guns being
the problem. I reproduce his letter here with my observations because
his ideas are typical of many conservatives who have accepted the
legitimacy of federal gun laws.
During the
time of the creating of the Constitution, all people, civilians,
military, and standing armies, had equal access to small arms,
single-shot flintlock firearms, and edged weapons. A person with
training and practice could load and accurately fire three rounds
in one minute with a flintlock firearm, not hundreds of rounds
in minutes.
I believe
in the constitutional right of citizens to keep and bear arms
for self-defense – the protection of life and property. I believe
in the right of a person to hunt and harvest a natural resource
for food. This is also a humane method used to control wildlife
populations.
High-power,
high-capacity, high-tech weapons are for military use and intended
for sales to nations with standing armies, not civilians interested
in defense of life and property, or hunting. A civilian model
of a weapon designed for military use is still a weapon designed
for military use.
Not allowing
people access to weapons capable of mass destruction does not
impede the right to self-defense of life and property or the right
to hunt. Prohibiting access to such weapons protects life and
property. Ask the dead and wounded at the movie theater in Colorado
if they agree.
Yes, it is
true that guns do not kill people. People kill people. It is also
impossible to predict and eliminate such incidents, such as the
one in Colorado. However, imagine the outcome if the shooter did
not have high-power, high-tech, high-capacity weapons.
I have omitted
the writer’s last paragraph because it is not related to gun control.
Some observations.
1. What Moore
writes could just as easily been written by James Brady, Senator
Chuck Schumer, or President Obama.
2. If during
the time of the Constitution everyone had access to the same weapons
then what is the problem with everyone having access to the same
weapons now?
3. If high-power,
high-tech, high-capacity weapons are outlawed, then only outlaws
will have high-power, high-tech, high-capacity weapons.
4. Was the
alleged shooter at the Colorado movie theater concerned about violating
federal gun laws?
5. Couldn’t
the alleged shooter’s Glock .40-caliber handgun alone be capable
of mass destruction? Does Moore think it should be banned as well?
Why not?
6. If not allowing
people access to weapons capable of mass destruction does not impede
property rights, then nothing the federal government does impedes
property rights.
7. Guns don’t
kill people; people kill people – just as Moore says.
8. Imagine
the outcome if the victims in the theater had high-power, high-tech,
high-capacity weapons.
9. The right
of self-defense includes the right to defend oneself against the
greatest aggressor of life, liberty, and property in the history
of the world: governments. If only governments have access to high-power,
high-tech, high-capacity weapons, then all the talk about self-defense
is meaningless.
10. If the
government is going to ban high-power, high-tech, high-capacity
weapons, then it ought to ban them from military use and from sales
to nations with standing armies. Civilians wrongly kill far fewer
people than government soldiers.
11. The Second
Amendment confers no positive right. It is an additional limitation
on federal power to infringe upon gun rights besides the fact that
no authority is granted to the federal government by the Constitution
to infringe upon them in the first place. Even if the Second Amendment
only applied to non-military weapons, even if it only applied to
state militias, and even if it didn’t exist, Americans would still
have the natural right to keep and bear arms of any size, accuracy,
or magnitude.
Under the Constitution,
the federal government has no authority whatsoever to ban high-power
weapons, high-capacity weapons, high-tech weapons, machine guns,
automatic weapons, armor-piercing bullets, "cop-killer"
bullets, sawed-off shotguns, assault rifles, gun sales to felons,
bazookas, armored personnel carriers, grenades, IEDs, bombs, or
tanks. This is because under the Constitution, the federal government
has no authority whatsoever to ban marijuana, cocaine, heroin, crack
cocaine, ecstasy, meth, hazardous waste, poisons, pesticides, toxic
waste, bath salts, incandescent light bulbs, pornography, absinthe,
products containing dog or cat fur, drug paraphernalia, or any other
substance.
Permitting
or prohibiting these substances is a matter for each individual
state to decide. This doesn’t mean that the states should ban any
or all of these substances. It just means that it is for the states
to decide. This is federalism in action.
Why is it that
libertarians are the ones who actually believe that the relation
of the federal and state governments under the Constitution should
be as James Madison wrote in Federalist No. 45:
The powers
delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government,
are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments
are numerous and indefinite. The former will be exercised principally
on external objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce;
with which last the power of taxation will, for the most part,
be connected. The powers reserved to the several States will extend
to all the objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern
the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal
order, improvement, and prosperity of the State.
No, military-type
guns aren’t the problem. Human nature is the problem. Gun laws are
the problem. Government is the problem. Guns themselves are never
the problem.
N.B.: This
was a letter to the editor of The New American, not an editorial
by The New American.
September
6, 2012
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, and Rethinking
the Good War. His latest book is The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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