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Western
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![]() ![]() http://www.townhall.com/columnists/KenBlackwell/2008/03/13/the_roe_v_wade_of_gun_rights |
The Roe v. Wade of Gun Rights |
| By Ken Blackwell Thursday, March 13, 2008 |
The two red-hot issues fused by the District of Columbia v. Heller case -- guns and judges -- are two of the most divisive in American politics. D.C. v. Heller could become one of the most important cases in American history, with profound political and policy implications.
The case will directly affect 90 million American gun owners.
Whether they have a constitutional right to own guns immediately makes
their ownership either a protected right or merely a privilege that the
government can restrict at will. Either way everyone else in our
society is indirectly affected.
Gun bans fall particularly heavily on women, minorities, the
elderly, and the disabled who own guns for self defense purposes.
Though stereotypical gun owners are white adult males in the prime of
life, the reality is that these are the people who need guns the least.
Most people are more likely to be a victim of violent crime, and thus
have a greater need for a tool that neutralizes any would-be criminal’s
greater size, strength, or speed.
The short-term political impact of Heller might turn the
2008 presidential election. Either Senators Clinton or Obama would the
most anti-gun Democrat nominee in American history. The Second
Amendment is a pivotal issue in a half-dozen swing states, and other
swing states have smaller gun votes, but gun owners could easily tip
those states in a close election.
Heller will heat up twice during the presidential campaign,
first when the case is argued in March and second when the Court hands
down its decision, most likely in June. Gun owners will either be
emboldened, pressing forward for policies recognizing their rights, or
outraged that an activist Court has denied them their cherished right,
holding rallies, and taking to the streets. Either way, gun rights
could dominate the news.
In addition to guns, this evaluation of the party nominees’ records is true for federal judicial nominations. Heller
will fuse the issues of guns and judges in America. The four
conservative justices -- Justices Roberts, Scalia, Thomas, and Alito --
are expected to support an individual’s right. Most or all of the
liberal justices -- Justices Stevens, Ginsburg, Souter, and Breyer
--will oppose an individual’s right. That leaves Justice Kennedy -- the
only moderate on the Court -- as the swing vote who could decide the
meaning of the Second Amendment.
It cannot be overstated how much Heller will make judicial
nominations a campaign issue for tens of millions of gun owners,
millions of whom usually vote Democrat. With John McCain naming
Justices Roberts and Alito as models of who he would nominate to the
Supreme Court and Senators Obama and Clinton both naming Justice
Ginsburg as their model, it will be impossible to be pro-gun yet fight
for a liberal Supreme Court at the same time. This also will be true
for Senate seats as well, where pro-gun states will demand that their
U.S. senators support nominees who will uphold their gun rights.
Heller’s impact could go well beyond Election Day. It could
actually have a lasting impact on our culture itself as one of the
cases that reshapes the national dialogue.
Take the example of Everson v. Board of Education. This
1947 case created the doctrine of separation between church and state,
launching 60 years of the radical secularization of our culture and an
all-out war against people of faith, especially conservative
Christians. What’s important about Everson is that the
religious people actually won that case, but the rule the Court
proclaimed in it has systematically stripped religion of its social
influence ever since. Though the idea of separating church and state
was almost unheard of in 1947, it has now become a widely accepted
concept in our culture. That is the power of a landmark Supreme Court
case.
There have been a handful of cases that have shaped America. Roe v. Wade, Dred Scott, Plessy v. Ferguson, Brown v. Board, and Marbury v. Madison are more than just history book entries; they actually changed the nation. For good or ill, District of Columbia v. Heller might join that list. It could become the Roe v. Wade of gun ownership.
And Heller is just the beginning. There will be more Second
Amendment cases. If the Court finds that the Second Amendment
guarantees an individual’s right to own firearms, 20 years of major
cases will follow, fleshing out the contours of this right.
District of Columbia v. Heller is in the hands and minds of
nine judges who sit on the highest court in the land and whose majority
opinion could change the course of American history, one way or the
other. As with abortion, affirmative action, and gay rights, the
biggest battles over gun rights will hereafter be fought not in
Congress or state legislatures but in the courts. |

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