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The Wait-Just-A-Goddam-Second Amendment |
20 Dec 2012: posted by the editor - United States | |
By David Swanson
George Mason's original draft reads:
Mason's Virginia Declaration of Rights had put it this way 12 years earlier:
The Right-To-Bring-Assault-Weapons-to-School Second Amendment turns out to have its origins in an attempt to avoid maintaining standing armies. In place of standing armies, the states of the new United States were to create well-regulated militias. The first half of the Second Amendment explains why people should have a right to bear arms:
Bearing arms in a well-regulated militia did not mean bearing guns that can reliably shoot well, since such didn't exist. It certainly didn't mean bearing guns that can kill entire crowds of people without reloading. It didn't mean bearing arms outside of the well regulated militia. Much less did it mean bearing arms in school and church and Wal-Mart. By "free state" many supporters of this bill of rights meant, of course, slave state. And by "people" they meant, of course, white male people—specifically people who would be taking part in well regulated militias. The Third Amendment reads:
The Second and Third amendments originated as restrictions on what we would later create and come to call a Military Industrial Complex, a permanent war machine, a federal tool of abusive power. The militias of the Second Amendment are meant to protect against federal coercion, popular rebellions, slave revolts, and—no doubt—lunatics who try to mass-murder children. The descendants of those militias that we call the National Guard are meant, in contrast, to recruit ill-informed young people who imagine they'll be rescuing hurricane victims into endless occupations of oil-rich lands far from our shores. To comply with the Second Amendment we must end federal control over the National Guard, regulate such state militias and police forces well, regulate their weapons well, and deny such weapons to all others and for any other use. The Second Amendment has been made to mean something very different from what was originally intended or what any sane person writing a Constitution would intend today. This means that we must either reinterpret it, re-write it, or both. Tags: US Constitution, 2nd Amendment |
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