KingMerv00
Penultimate Amazing
I think it's not so much, in my instance, a case of “read[ing] things into the Constitution because it lacks detail”, as applying basic common sense in recognizing that some times, the practice of one right by one person may violate another right of another person, and that it is necessary, at times, to limit one right in order to protect another. I see the rights outlined in the Bill of Rights as being absolute, only to the degree that they aren't exercised to the point where they clearly violate other rights.
Please explain the difference between "reading into the Constitution" and "applying basic common sense". Seems to me, the only difference is that the latter is the application of YOUR opinion while the former is the application of someone else's.
The Constitution SPECIFICALLY states "NO LAW". How are you getting "no law except when I think common sense should apply". You don't have to like it, but that's what it says. No amount of word twisting changes that. If you are going to be a constitutional literalist with the 2nd amendment, you should be a literalist with the 1st too. (Maybe you should start a campaign to change the amendment to include slander.)
Slander, extortion, fraud, etc., are exercises of free speech which violate other rights of other people, and which are intended to do so. You very clearly have a right not to be robbed; and your right not to be robbed, in this case, I think clearly overrides my right to exercise free speech by saying “Give me all your money, or else I'll kill you.” It's a bad thing that my right to free speech must be curtailed in that case, but it'd be an even worse thing to allow me to use my right to free speech to take what is rightfully yours by the use of threats of violence and murder.
I do not see any similar principle that applies well enough to ordinary weapons, to supersede the Second Amendment's affirmation of my right to own and carry a gun. Even the worst hoplophobe is not going to suffer any actual harm, if I happen to be standing next to him with a loaded gun strapped to my hip; therefore, no similar basis exists to deny me this right as exists to deny me some extreme forms of free speech.
Being robbed, slandered, etc. does not violate your constitutional rights. It violates criminal law and allows you to collect money through civil means. Both of those are applications of common law and/or statutory law. They are not derived directly from any state or federal constitution.
That distinction is not a minor one.
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