And what have you found?
"Neither is it [the right to keep and bear arms] in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence."
You found that the right to keep and bear arms exists.
Yes, we know you think that NYC should be exempt from the US Constitution.
Sorry, it doesn't work that way as you will find out in due course.
The USA has had a standing army since 1792, the Bill of Rights was not ratified until December 1791, which kind of puts a damper on that interpretation.Easy. Let's rewrite the second, here: "The right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed because we need a well-regulated militia."
It could be argued that the part after the "because" is no longer true, due to the presence of a US standing army. Therefore, the second amendment is no longer valid.
Or, you could just rewrite the amendment to be more fitting to today's situation, but there is no doubt in my mind as to what the wording means. That's what they wrote because that's what they meant.
You can't have it both ways. You agree Cruikshank said the Constitution doesn't confer the right to keep and bear arms. Then you say the Constitution does.
Currently handguns are all but banned in New York City and have been since 1911 under the Sullivan Act.
Sorry, it doesn't work that way as you will find out in due course.
A good post, I'm just going to address this part before I lay down for a bit. Reading all those 'f' for 's' documents has given me a headache...
This is true. There is a clear way to address the issue of arms or tomatoes without tearing down the house. If the militia thing has changed an Amendment is the clear legal way to say it has. It probably hasn't because most on one in the house likes tomatoes anyway and they keep misspelling it. Ftupid fhitheadf. What was I saying? I'm going to lay down...
I've been consistent throughout. I never, ever said the US Constitution created the right to keep and bear arms, it protects that right from government infringement.
I've been consistent throughout. I never, ever said the US Constitution created the right to keep and bear arms, it protects that right from government infringement.
You see a straw man, I see an analogy. If the constitutional protection does not extend to all arms, IMO it's valid to speculate on where that protection stops.
What a weird case.
I still don't see the problem with establishing a database, but again, that is off topic.
No, because it cannot survive even intermediate scrutiny under the 2nd Amendment.Why is it going to change? Because there's a new sheriff in town?
Yes, the basic human rights our Constitution assumes all people are born with. Why does that idea repulse you so?So if the Constitution doesn't confer the right to keep and bear arms how was the right get created?
By natural means?![]()
The USA has had a standing army since 1792, the Bill of Rights was not ratified until December 1791, which kind of puts a damper on that interpretation.
Yes, the basic human rights our Constitution assumes all people are born with.
Yes, the basic human rights our Constitution assumes all people are born with. Why does that idea repulse you so?
Yes, the basic human rights our Constitution assumes all people are born with. Why does that idea repulse you so?
Yes, the basic human rights our Constitution assumes all people are born with.
OK, how is that justification currently relevant? And if it is no longer relevant does that have any impact on the second part?
Minoosh, they had bombs back then, you know. The 2nd amendment doesn't say "and bombs, and artillery, and battleships..."
Kim Jong Un agrees.
Amazing how people are so willing to toss away the entire legal basis for the freedoms we enjoy just because they don't like guns!
And yet no court has ever noticed that? This thread has gone on a long time, and neither you nor anyone else has provided anything whatsoever to support the claim that self defense wasn't a core right of the 2nd Amendment, or that it was entirely about militia service. Evidence has been shown that at the time the people who wrote it did indeed see it as an individual right unconnected to militia service.Not really. It was just obsolete as soon as they ratified it.
Yes it does, and I like it that way.Perhaps you're more comfortable with the idea that all rights come from the government, but I'm not.And that makes no sense. It assumes we're born with it because it says so.
Self defense is a basic human right, and a handgun is an excellent means of self defense. And since we have the right to keep and bear arms we have the right to use a handgun in self defense, just like Bloomberg and all his rich friends he allowed to get handgun carry permits for.The right to carry a handgun is a basic human right? The idea doesn't repulse me, I do find it puzzling.
In the USA it is assumed people are born with rights, deal with it.People are not born with any rights. The idea that God or somebody gave people rights is absurd.
Your position is that there is no such thing as human rights?Then define 'human rights', in this sense, without reference to laws written or assumed by humankind. I've never seen it done without descending into religion, mysticism or highly debatable philosophical principles, and those vary from place to place and from time to time.
You can be the first.
And most people who were against the Citizens United decision did so because they didn't want a movie about Hillary Clinton to be shown. Nevertheless, it is not out of bounds to point out that under the reasoning involved in banning the movie we could also ban newspaper editorials, political opinions aired on CNN, indeed this very forum could be forced to undergo government censorship.That's not a very fair assesment, given that most people who are opposed to gun are of that mind because of gun-related deaths.
Why did you word you post that way ?
Without any basis for that. So the idea is still stupid.In the USA it is assumed people are born with rights, deal with it.