Say Goodbye To Your Gun Ban, D.C.
March 18, 2008 at 2:18 pm | In SCOTUS | 2 CommentsTags: D.C. vs. Heller, gun control, Supreme Court
With even the Brady Campaign opposed to D.C.’s decision to take its toughest-in-the-nation gun law to the nation’s highest court, most SCOTUS observers were expecting the Court to rule, at long last, that the right of Americans “to keep and bear arms” is an individual one. Judging by the oral arguments so far — C-SPAN started airing audio around 12:30 p.m. — it seems pretty clear which way the wind is blowing.
The District’s appeal rests heavily on the militia clause — and, in an odd way, on a state of affairs that no longer exists. The Framers intended the Second Amendment to restrict the federal government’s power over its people. It was in part a nod to Great Britain’s ultimately failed attempt to crush the colonies’ militias via blockades. The District is arguing that its gun restrictions are constitutional because they date back to the mid-1800s when all this militia business was still relevant. “No one thought these laws violated the 2nd Amendment… because the right to bear arms was believed to be intended for state militias,” writes David Savage in yesterday’s LA Times.
In other words, the Framers only ever intended for militias or armies to be armed, not individuals. That’s a tough sell, considering many of the Framers were land-owning men who packed heat themselves.
Walter Dellinger, representing the District, gets pretty beat up by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy and Antonin Scalia (Dick Cheney’s hunting buddy). Dellinger is right when he points out that the Second Amendment was more about limiting the federal government’s power and less about enumerating what individuals may or may not do. But then he goes the extra step of arguing that as a consequence, the Second Amendment doesn’t apply to the District’s laws. How can he accept that the Second Amendment may confer an individual right to bear arms but not interfere with the state’s attempt to block that right?
Get Your Guns Ready, D.C.
March 17, 2008 at 5:02 pm | In SCOTUS | Leave a CommentTags: D.C. vs. Heller, guns, Linda Greenhouse, Supreme Court
The D.C. government, Supreme Court scholars, the gang bangers of Columbia Heights and I are counting down the hours until tomorrow’s oral arguments in D.C. vs. Heller, the Second Amendment case that we all hope settles some long-outstanding issues.
In a neat coincidence, HBO’s “John Adams” miniseries launched last night. It features those Founding Fathers of ours, the ones who gave us this confusing language:
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.
If all goes well, the Supremes will get that individual vs. collective rights confusion sorted out. The District and its fellow gun control advocates may be worrying that their case, which involves probably the strictest regulation on handguns in the land, may be a risky one to put before the court. D.C.’s law includes regulations on how guns are stored in private homes. That’s not likely to sit well with the majority conservative-moderate bloc on the court, and could open the door to establishing an individual right to ammo up. Continue reading Get Your Guns Ready, D.C….
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