It looks to me as though
newyorkguy doesn't realize the quotation whose credibility he questions was written in 1875 by the US Supreme Court.
The right there specified is that of 'bearing arms for a lawful purpose.' This is not a right granted by the Constitution. Neither is it in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence. The second amendment declares that it shall not be infringed; but this, as has been seen, means no more than that it shall not be infringed by Congress.
That's a pretty slender hook to hang the assertion on that, natural law grants people the right to carry a gun. And I'm sorry but my takeaway is that the decision does say that the Second Amendment does not grant people the right to bear arms.
You may be right in some sense, but not in a legal sense.
Cylinder was quoting the SCOTUS decision in
US v Cruikshank. In the United States, decisions rendered by the Supreme Court are as authoritative as it gets.
We've been discussing this for literally years, for page-after-page, and this is the first time I'm seeing, if I can sum up:
The Second Amendment does not grant people the right to bear arms. Natural law does and it supersedes human law.
I admit, to me this claim is a bit startling.
Some of the Supreme Court's decisions have been a bit startling, yes, but expressing incredulity about those decisions is not much of an argument, especially when you're the one who cited that decision in the first place. (You took one sentence of that decision out of context. I'll grant that you did so honestly, and did not know what the next few sentences said.)
But who decides what natural law is? Is it codified anywhere? Is it subject to statutory interpretation? I'm really finding this amazing. To me this sounds like right-wing fantasy.
The Supreme Court decides. In this case, the court's decision is codified within
US v Cruikshank.
I am not a lawyer. I'll let the lawyers answer your question about statutory interpretation.
No matter how amazing you find the court's decision,
United States v. Cruikshank is not a right-wing fantasy.
The right to armed self-defense was understood by all parties? Meaning whom? How can you know it's true if you don't have a citation?
The
citation has been given several times. You cited that decision yourself, although you apparently did not know what it says.
ETA: In case I wasn't clear, my own opinion is that
United States v Cruikshank was indeed an amazing decision, and not one in which the US should take pride. I should also state that I actually agree with
newyorkguy when he says the decision does not mean the Second Amendment grants the right to bear arms; I disagree with
newyorkguy because the decision does say the right to bear arms "shall not be infringed by Congress"—leaving open the possibility of infringement by states and local jurisdictions, but that possibility has been circumscribed by more recent decisions.