
...hopefully
the Supreme Court will make the right decision and the 2nd Amendment
will finally be recognized without a doubt to mean what the Founding
Fathers intended...
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Wishing Our Rights, and America, Away
Joseph
Pickett
The
San Francisco Gate recently ran this blaring headline, "9th
Circuit Rules Individuals Have No Right to Bear Arms." So that's
that for the 2nd Amendment?
Not
quite yet. This is, after all, the 9th Circuit Court.
I attach about as much meaning to the utterances of that wacky and
wily bunch of judicial jihadists in San Francisco as they apparently
do to the precise, elegant words of the 2nd Amendment.
After all, the 9th is the most overturned circuit court
in our Republic. They ruled last year that people in states in their
jurisdiction can't pronounce the 'G' word in the Pledge of Allegiance
in a public building. In response, the United States Senate actually
voted on a resolution 99-0 that the Pledge should have 'under God'
in it. It would be a 50-50 proposition that the Senate would agree
the sun rises in the east, so the 9th clearly stepped
in it.
In
December, the 9th continued this novel approach to constitutional
jurisprudence when it issued a ruling on a lawsuit that challenged
the California semi-auto rifle ban on the basis of Second Amendment
protection of our individual right to keep and bear arms. The court
ruled there was no constitutional problem, because the 2nd
Amendment does not grant individuals the right to own firearms.
A few weeks ago, the 9th declined to reconsider its decision,
thus the ruling held.
The
joyous headline of the San Francisco Gate not withstanding,
what was remarkable in the recent action was not what the majority
said, but what the 6 judges said in their dissent. Each strongly
objected to the ruling and maintained that individuals do indeed
have a right to bear arms, and two of them produced some of the
most elegant, devastating, defenses of the 2nd Amendment
that we have seen in decades. And this from the most liberal federal
court in the nation.
One
judge in dissent points out that some Americans, including certain
judges, have routinely granted certain amendments in the Bill of
Rights the widest possible interpretation to support rights important
to them, yet ignored plainly stated constitutional principles that
make them squeamish. For example, a right to abortion was found
'implied' in the nooks and crannies of the Constitution, but the
right to bear arms, clearly written in ink, is ignored and disregarded
by some as an anachronism.
Judge
Kozinski said:
"Judges
know very well how to read the Constitution broadly when they are
sympathetic to the right being asserted. We have held, without much
ado, that "speech, or . . . the press" also means the
Internet, see Reno v. ACLU, 521 U.S. 844 (1997), and that "persons,
houses, papers, and effects" also means public telephone booths,
see Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967).
...it
is wrong to use some constitutional provisions as springboards for
major social change while treating others like senile relatives
to be cooped up in a nursing home until they quit annoying us.
...the
able judges of the panel majority are usually very sympathetic to
individual rights, but they have succumbed to the temptation to
pick and choose. Had they brought the same generous approach to
the Second Amendment that they routinely bring to the First, Fourth
and selected portions of the Fifth, they would have had no trouble
finding an individual right to bear arms.
Theirs
is a tempting game. Personally, I'm not so hot about that pesky
5th Amendment; I'm getting tired of guilty-as-sin defendants
retreating behind 'archaic' constitutional protections. As soon
as the prosecution gets the goods on the defendant, he spouts that
mumbo-jumbo about self-incrimination. Still, I recognize the need
for this vital protection of American citizens, and I refuse to
cherry pick the amendments I will support. I embrace all of them,
because intellectual honesty requires that we view the Constitution
objectively, with our political filters and personal biases removed.
If we pick and choose which amendments have value, we diminish the
value of them collectively.
Because
Kozinski so precisely pointed out the blinders worn by the majority
regarding the right to bear arms, Silveira v. Lockyer is
most likely headed to the Supreme Court. Our highest court hasn't
heard a case on the 2nd Amendment since the United States
vs. Miller in 1939, and there are long-standing conflicts between
federal courts on the right to bear arms that need to be resolved.
Also, the Silveira v. Lockyer decision was written by the
most over-turned federal court in the land, so odds are good that
the Supreme Court will hear this case.
When
they do, hopefully the Supreme Court will make the right decision
and the 2nd Amendment will finally be recognized without
a doubt to mean what the Founding Fathers intended when they wrote
it in 1791. No less than every one of Americans' constitutional
rights depends upon it.
[Posted
June 5, 2003]
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