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![]() ![]() http://www.townhall.com/columnists/KenBlackwell/2008/01/17/late_betrayal_on_gun_rights |
Late Betrayal on Gun Rights |
| By Ken Blackwell Thursday, January 17, 2008 |
Et tu, Brute? In
the waning days of the Bush Administration, Justice Department lawyers
have filed a curious amicus brief in the DC gun ban case before the US
Supreme Court. The attorneys took a middle-of-the-road approach to
Second Amendment freedoms. They argued that gun ownership is not a
“fundamental” right. Instead, they say, it is a right deserving only
an “intermediate” level of protection.
The brief is a disappointing about face for a Justice Department once lauded for its ardent defense of Second Amendment rights.
Attorney General Michael Mukasey owes gun owners an explanation for this late betrayal.
In a recent Townhall.com column,
former National Rifle Association president Sandy Froman protested the
Justice Department’s misguided action. She correctly explains the
government’s position includes only halfhearted support for the Second
Amendment. If the Supreme Court were to adopt the Department’s
position, it would imperil our civil right to keep and bear arms.
It appears that the Justice
Department is trying to say this is a right that should be protected,
but the level of protection should be low enough to allow government to
broadly restrict or maybe even eliminate your ability to exercise that
right. They try to split the baby of having a right but letting
government do almost whatever it wants to that right.
The problem with splitting a baby in
half is that the baby usually dies. If our rights can be regulated to
the point that we can’t exercise them in our own homes, then they’ve
been regulated out of existence.
So much for civil rights.
The Left refers to racial equality
and voting as “civil rights.” But, civil rights are broader than
that. Our civil rights areall
the rights guaranteed by the Constitution. The Declaration of
Independence tells us that government exists to protect our God-given
rights, and the Constitution created our court system where those
rights are vindicated.
There are three civil rights for
which any attempted regulation should be looked at with great
suspicion. They are religious liberty, political free speech, and the
right to keep and bear arms.
Our country was founded by pilgrims
seeking the religious freedom to worship according to the dictates of
their own conscience, free from government dictates. The highest
promise of free speech is that we may openly discuss the public issues
of the day free of censorship or threat, so that we can hold our
elected leaders accountable and replace those whom we learn have failed
to keep our trust.
And the right to keep and bear arms
was put there so that we could defend ourselves and our loved ones,
provide for ourselves, and have a last resort to defend freedom.
Laws curtailing any of those three
rights should be looked at with the most skeptical and doubting eye,
and we ought not to allow such laws to go further than necessary to
achieve extremely important objectives. For example, as important as
free speech is, it’s clear why the government must be able to stop
television reporters from showing maps of troop locations and movements
in overseas operations. Narrow rules are allowed where such
life-and-death matters are at stake.
But our civil rights can only be
regulated in that minimal fashion, and only when absolutely essential.
We never sacrifice our liberty.
Yet in the face of all that, the city
of DC has a gun ban that forbids having a handgun or any loaded rifle
or shotgun anywhere in your home. If you do, you’ll do more than pay a
fine. You’ll go to jail.
This law plainly violates the Second
Amendment, and ought to be struck down. A federal appeals court did
just that, and now the Supreme Court has taken the case.
My parents loved me too much to
encourage me to go to law school, so I’m not a lawyer. But I have
gotten solid information from some good lawyers at the American Civil
Rights Union, in addition to legal perspective, from a couple of the
best Supreme Court lawyers in the country.
They are gravely concerned about the
Justice Department brief in the Heller case, saying that this could be
a Trojan horse in the Second Amendment. They say that for various legal
reasons if the Supreme Court were to adopt the position in this brief
it would be toxic for gun rights in America. This lawsuit could go
either way off the brief’s argument, but future challenges to firearm
restrictions—no matter how severe—would likely fail.
This brief was a terrible mistake.
Hopefully the lawyers in this case can persuade the Supreme Court to
reject that argument, and give our Second Amendment civil rights the
robust protection they deserve.
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| Last update: 17 January 2008 |