The Left has challenged the very definition of a Right since before the signing of the Constitution in 1789. The origin of the concept of the Individual’s Right is as old as humanity. The philosophy underpinning the declarations of the preeminence and immutability of Rights has certainly evolved over time but only in the way the subject is presented - not the substance.
The rhetoric has been honed during the build up to every major Revolution in
modern history and the establishment of lists of Rights have been drafted
reflecting the recent experiences of the Authors, Friction between Government
and the Citizenry, Proliferation of Biblical Truth and Strife.
Our unique US experience with Rights, predates our Revolution as several of the
Founders studied the Concept, History and the academic works of people like
John Locke, Edmund Burke (both contemporaries), Greek Philosophy etc. They drew
up and embedded a type of headed outline in the Declaration of Independence
(Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness) from which the Bill of Rights is
naturally derived.
The tension between the Individual and the State has existed for all of human
history. It stems from Man's sinful nature and the divergence in natural
inclinations that we live with every day. In school it manifests in a migration
toward the Arts and a desire to control versus building the Individual and his
naturally occurring Gifts and Talents.
This Tension first manifests in innocuous settings but quickly seeks
established venues where the desire can be nurtured and a herd affected. Our
Founders had learned of this divergence, saw it in one historical example after
another, lived with it and were determined to extract themselves from it;
establish a new model with a new Guard and a new Hierarchy placing the
Individual at the Apex.
The Constitution established three co-equal branches of Government with the
expressed intent of self-scrutiny and ultimately, protection of the individual,
his unhindered access to Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness and the
limits of government in this regard.
The Declaration of Independence, the US Constitution and the extraneous,
prolific writings of the Founders explain in detail their viewpoint, intent and
desire to identify a list of Basic, naturally occurring Rights which allow the
Individual to establish his life, maintain his liberty/freedom and to pursue
ventures in life that are both fulfilling and allow him to sustain and enrich
his life.
Rights therefore, are philosophically acknowledged to be as much a component of
the Individual as his Eyes, Ears, Hands, Feet, Tongue, Heart, Brain and the
very God-Breathed Life within us as opposed to Privileges which are granted by
men, require prerequisites and are finite in duration.
Leftists have for years sought to diminish the immutability characteristic of a
Right to justify the insinuation of government control of Rights starting with
the Second Amendment. It is ironic that while they zealously pursue government
control over the engagement of the Second Amendment, they simultaneously demand
the establishment of a new Right - from new cloth, i.e., unregulated use of
abortion.
It is ironic because their precedent setting attempts to negate a well-established
acknowledgement of the Keeping and Bearing of Arms as a Natural, God-Given,
Appendage to each individual and with it the very concept of the existence of
the Uninfringeable Right makes their demands of no affect.
As to the Founder's Intent, Meaning and understanding of the Rights concept and
how the second fits the other nine, you only must revisit the
clause..."that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of
Happiness." Life requires certain Basics; food, clothing, shelter, freedom
of thought and expression; to choose supplication to, worship of and communing
with God; selecting like-minded fellow citizens who swear to defend the
Constitution and the Nation, the freedom to improve your lot in life and the
ability to defend against all threats to those basics.
In order to decipher the clear intent of the Second Amendment, it requires just
a very little history, etymology of a few words, the future expectations of the
Founders and their dedication to arming the Citizenry with every tool required
to establish, maintain and defend the society at large.
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.”
Well Regulated - the phrase itself has never been argued. However, what is being
regulated has. Punctuation is important and clearly it is the
organization/Militia being described as "well regulated", i.e.,
trained, disciplined...even answerable.
Militia - in the absence of any other Martial terms in language, Militia could
be used to describe any number of assembled individuals, gathered for defensive
action. HOWEVER, given the context, the document and the historical period
during which this is rendered, the Writers, Signers and their recent history,
clearly, Militia refers to an extra-governmental assembly. Additionally, it
defies logic to think the Founders would take the time to essentially plead
with the world that they had the Right to establish an Army.
It also would be inconsistent for them to include collectivist language in a
list of Individual Rights.
History, etymology and language clearly indicate that the American Militia is
manned, armed, trained, fielded, led by civilians without government sanction
and in spite of it.
Keeping - Individual Ownership
Bearing - Keeping on your person, i.e., carrying
Shall not be infringed - Cannot be cordoned, denied, categorized, interfered
with, legislated.
Arms - one of a few words in use today as it was in antiquity. In fact, so much
so that the Leftist argument against private ownership of the Leftist conjured
classification of Assault Weapon is made anathema.
Arms, militarily, historically, traditionally, culturally, and in literature
define a category of weaponry carried and employed by a single Warrior -
without qualification. Interestingly, civilian weapons used for hunting, sport,
personal protection or even Law Enforcement are not categorized as Arms.
Arms can include but are not limited to, daggers, swords, bow and arrow, match
lock, flint lock, cap lock, breech loaded, bolt action, trapdoor, semi-auto,
select-fire, internally fed or magazine fed rifles, handguns etc. that are or
have been issued to Soldiers, Militiamen, Hoplites etc. Ironically, an argument
could be made that only "Weapons of War" are covered by the Second
Amendment.
What is missing from the text in the Second Amendment is the unregulated use
of/discharging of those Arms. Legislation detailing when and where you can
shoot is reasonable being as fellow citizens, in some instances could be
endangered, i.e., on city streets, inside buildings not having a range, near
schools, etc.
In summary, the Founder's personal studies coupled with their recent, shared
history fueled their debate and the resultant Constitution with its delineated,
protected and preeminent Bill of Rights all of which was designed to afford the
Individual guidance for and protection from Government.
SF
jb
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