ClakarEQ wrote:I appreciate your opinion but it is just that, your opinion and your spin. It is open to interpretation, that is a fact, and it can be spun fore and against your opinion. The simple fact is the 2nd amendment has not be ratified by our supreme court and that makes it plausible to ban all firearms for the civilian populace (and yes that would be extreme crazy but fact none the less).
You know if you hadn't been around for quite a while, I'd suspect you were a troll and didn't honestly believe some of the things you say. I believe our public school system failed you miserably.
"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."
"A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state" - The justification clause, something found in not only in the U.S Constitution, but also in many state constitutions when addressing the rights of individuals. Why have a justification clause? It stresses the importance of why a right is enumerated. Note that is enumerate, specifically list, NOT give. The rights stated in the bill of rights are not granted to us by government, nor are they the only rights we have, they are a specific list with the intent of "putting them in stone". Giving the reason behind specifically listing a right does not make that right dependent on the justification. But even if this were the case, the process to change these rights is not through the institution of additional laws, but via a constitutional amendment, good luck getting our federal government to amend the bill of rights in such a way to remove one or more, it's much akin to a holy grail.
"the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed." - The statement of rights clause. What is the subject of this clause? If you say "people" or "arms" then you fail. "right" is the subject. "people" and "arms" are used to describe what right it is that the clause is about. The enumeration of the right is inferred, it all ready exists and is only being specifically mentioned to guarantee that it is not infringed upon.
The US Constitution (including the Bill of Rights), has already been ratified. It is not the responsibility of nor within the power of the Supreme Court to ratify it. It became binding law when ratified by the states.
ClakarEQ wrote:I don't get it though, this issue is such a sweet spot for some folks but they never seem to be consistent. We lose minor first amendment rights, we lose "minor" rights of privacy, etc, but this little hot button, o noes, not my guns
sorry, some of that was flame bait.
Arlos wrote:He has a point in one thing though. How many people even on here (Hi lueyen!) have argued positions that accepted loss of civil liberties with regards to things like the patriot act, warrant less wiretapping, etc. which ARE erosions of our rights, and they are OK with that because it "Protecks dis kuntry from der terrerists!" Yet as soon as gun rights are mentioned, suddenly they are inflexible strict constructionists.
Bit of a dichotomy, don't you think?
-Arlos
I'll respond to both of these together. I have argue that mistakes made by law enforcement in what is presented as probably cause do not mean the law requiring it is invalid. I don't recall ever commenting much on the Patriot Act it's self. Like the Military Commissions Act there are some parts that I take issue with, however I do not categorically condemn all aspects of either. It is possible I've pointed out that what is often referred to as "warrant less wiretapping", is not technically warrant less or that members of the FISA court and members of Congress from both parties were aware of the surveillance programs prior to their activation. In regards to the MCA, I did argue extensively that it was not violation the Constitution as the rights guaranteed therein apply to the people of the United States and not foreign nationals. What you view as an apparent contradiction comes from your own view that these things are violations of civil rights, a view that I do not necessarily agree with. I am not in one case arguing if a right exists and in the other arguing it does, but arguing that it is not a violation of those rights in the former.
Essentially the pro-ban argument is that the right does not exist or is contingent upon the justification clause. I haven't seen anyone here argue that if we accept it is the right of the people to keep and bare arms regardless of circumstance that a gun ban is constitutional.