The Second Amendment’s Day in Court: D.C. Gun Case Will Affect All Americans
Thursday, February 14, 2008
By Col. Oliver North
FNC
Washington, D.C. — When the Washington, D.C. City Council enacted the toughest gun-control law in the nation in 1976, the city fathers — according to what they said at the time — believed they were making our nation’s capital a safer place. The measure failed miserably.
Since passage, the murder rate in the District has skyrocketed by more than 200 percent. Now, the U.S. Supreme Court has a chance to both make our capital safer — and ensure that the Second Amendment to our Constitution is enshrined as an individual right for every law-abiding American.
No matter how well intentioned, the D.C. firearms statute has been unfathomable from the start. On its face, the law bans handguns and requires rifles and shotguns to be registered, stored unloaded and either locked or disassembled. While it allows business owners to use a firearm to protect their cash registers at their stores, they cannot use that same firearm to protect themselves and their families in their homes. Individuals who protect federal officials and property in the District with firearms are not permitted to provide similar protection for themselves and their families in their own domiciles.
In fact, the case that the Supreme Court will hear, District of Columbia v. Heller, was brought by Mr. Dick Heller, a security guard. In carrying out his duties, Mr. Heller carries a handgun on Federal property. However, when he sought to register the same weapon to safeguard his home, he was denied. Mr. Heller says the D.C. law has it backwards. "I can protect [federal workers], but at the end of the day they say, 'turn in your gun, you can't protect your home.'" Mr. Heller maintains that disassembled rifles and shotguns are no substitute for handguns, "any more than the government could prohibit books because it permits newspapers and considers them an 'adequate substitute.'"
Last March, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed, 2-1, that the District’s prohibition was not only unreasonable, it was clearly unconstitutional. Attorneys for the District of Columbia promptly appealed the decision. That is why on March 18, for the first time since 1939, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on whether such a gun ban for law-abiding citizens is constitutional. Their verdict, expected later this year, will have profound implications for all Americans.
The case has generated a flurry of unprecedented action in both the Executive and Legislative branches of government. On January 11, the Department of Justice (DOJ), filed an egregiously weak amicus — friend of the court — brief in the case. The argument, submitted by U.S. Solicitor General Paul Clement, essentially urges the Supremes to waffle on the issue and send the case back to the lower courts.
The DOJ softball didn’t sit well with U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX). On February 8, she filed an amicus brief on behalf of Mr. Heller and the exercise of his individual rights under the Second Amendment: "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."
In her lucid and detailed exposition, Sen. Hutchison accurately points out that the Framers never intended that the word "militia" meant that the right to keep and bear arms was some kind of "collective" right that applied only to a particular group. If that had been their purpose, they would have been satisfied with Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution that gives Congress the power "to provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions."
To ensure that that firearms possession was recognized by posterity as an "individual right," the Framers included it as part of the Bill of Rights — an enumeration of every citizen’s personal entitlements: free speech, freedom of religion and a fair trial. The precise location of those famous words — “the right to keep and bear arms” — provides strong evidence for the Founders’ vision.
To foreclose any doubt where Congress comes down on the issue, Sen. Hutchison has introduced a bill to repeal the District of Columbia’s ban on handguns; repeal registration requirements; and restore the ability of law-abiding citizens to keep a loaded, operable firearm in their homes. Doing less denies the meaning of the words "shall not be abridged."
Her argument was so persuasive that 54 additional senators and 250 members of the House of Representatives — including 68 Democrats — signed on. Vice President Dick Cheney — apparently at odds with the administration’s DOJ did so as well. Hopefully the Supreme Court will agree with these enlightened members of Congress — and Abraham Lincoln who said, "Don't interfere with anything in the Constitution. That must be maintained, for it is the only safeguard of our liberties."
"Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." John Adams
A very important issue which will have a great impact on the future here.
It looks like there is a little momentum in our favor and, I hope it will increase into a tidal wave in favor of peoples rights which are becoming incresingly eroded.
Col. Oliver North is, without question, an American hero and a Patriot of freedom in every sense. He stands for the spirit and intent of the Constitution and he has personally and literally fought for it.
It is good to have role models like him.
In the end, in the somewhat near future, I believe the Second Amendment will have to be implemented to restore our freedom which means FREEDOM FROM GOVERNMENT. Freedom to live our lives without the control and manipulations of a bureaucracy that thinks that we are far too stupid than to be able to think for ourselves, make our own decisions, decide what kind of food we should or even can eat, soon to decide what doctor or hospital we can or can not go to, decide through taxation how much of our earnings we are "allowed" to have, decide through taxation and legislation what kind of vehicle we are "allowed" to drive, decide through taxation and legislation what type of fuel we are "allowed" to use to heat our homes and decide how much that is going to cost us, decide where it is illegal to explore for and drill for oil - in some of the most oil rich regions of our entire planet - ANWR, Western National Park areas consisting of hundreds of thousands of square miles of oil rich land, and most especially the seas surrounding America (Where China is, right at this moment, pumping millions of barrels of oil and gas for their country, yep, right off of our Florida shoreline. Think how much cheaper oil and natural gas would be for your home and car if Congress, the tyrants, would rescind the law banning American companies from exploring for and harvesting our oil and gas that China is getting right now), decide through legislation who is allowed to get a particular job or be allowed to go to a college (affirmative action), decide what we are "allowed" to spend "our" money on - in fact they think we are so stupid that they should take our money RIGHT OUT OF OUR PAYCHECKS to spend it the way they think it should be spent. Yes today we are being so controlled it is as if we are remote controlled with a radio control unit. Why heck, I heard that California is seriously considering making a LAW that every home is to have a remote control thermostat, for crying out loud, and guess who has the remote! Is this what you call freedom?
In any case I believe that the Second Amendment, the right that protects the rest, which is why it is the second. It will one day soon, bring back our freedom and prosperity for all Americans willing to put in a hard day's work and willing to love and help our neighbors and really care about their fellow man, personally and not through a d*mn bureaucracy that is completely de-humanizing and does little right and does everything it does as expensively, to Americans, as possible.
The Second Amendment is absolutely critical to the security of a free State and to keep a State and We The People free (from Government).
SAF SAYS D.C. RESIDENTIAL GUN SEARCH AN EXERCISE IN ‘POLICE STATE DEMAGOGUERY’
BELLEVUE, WA – A plan to conduct “consent searches” for guns in District of Columbia residences is “an outrageous exercise of police state demagoguery,” the Second Amendment Foundation said today.
SAF founder Alan Gottlieb condemned the plan as “a public relations effort designed to influence, through crass dramatics, Tuesday’s scheduled oral arguments on the constitutionality of the District’s handgun ban before the Supreme Court.”
“Launching this effort,” he stated, “on the eve of Supreme Court arguments over the city’s horribly failed handgun ban underscores the Draconian mentality that lies at the root of gun laws like the District handgun ban. Arthur B. Spitzer with the American Civil Liberties Union in Washington, D.C. was right when he told the Washington Post that this ‘sends a message to the public that the police ought to be able to search your house anytime for any reason’.”
Spitzer suggested that citizens will be intimidated into allowing police into their homes without warrant. He said it “cheapens civil liberties and privacy for everyone.” District resident Ronald Hampton, executive director of the National Black Police Association, told the newspaper that he would not allow his home to be searched.
“How dare Mayor Adrian Fenty and Police Chief Cathy Lanier launch this program within days of oral arguments challenging a 31-year-old extremist gun law that has already been declared unconstitutional by a federal court,” he continued. “District citizens, as well as members of Congress, should be furious.
“Calling this project the ‘Safe Homes Initiative’ is an insult to our intelligence,” Gottlieb stated. “If District residents allow this to happen, no home will be safe from warrantless fishing expeditions by police, because that’s exactly what this thinly-disguised program is really all about. We think Congress should step in immediately and stop this from happening.
“Isn’t it ironic that the District heads to the Supreme Court next week in an effort to destroy one-tenth of the Bill of Rights,” Gottlieb concluded, “while they prepare to launch the kind of police state exercise the Bill of Rights was designed to prevent.”
"The right of a citizen to keep and bear arms has justly been considered the palladium of the liberties of the republic, since it offers a strong moral check against the usurpation and arbitrary power of the rulers, and will generally, even if these are successful in the first instance, enable the people to resist and triumph over them."
Joseph Story, 1833 U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Second Amendment - 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.