Constitution Day and the Second Amendment
By Dr. Bernard James Mauser, Ph.D.
Today marks the anniversary of Constitution Day in America. One may ask,
why have a particular day set aside for the Constitution? There are
many ways to answer such a question. Those reasons most relevant to
current events hinge on the importance of restoring the rights of the
people listed in the Constitution. The Founding Fathers of the U.S.
recognized the dangers that a tyrannical government with ever expanding
powers posed to individual citizens. For this reason, the Constitution
should not only be viewed as explaining the things the federal
government is allowed to do, it also informs the citizens of the rights
it has that the federal government is not permitted to take away.
Today is not only Constitution Day. It is also the day after a psychotic
naval contractor opened fire in a U.S. Naval yard killing 12 and
wounding 14. This individual had a long history of mental illness and
according to some reports was taking anti-psychotics. There are many
grieving the loss of loved ones, including those in the family of the
alleged gunman. We are right to mourn with those who mourn.
Let us step back for a second and evaluate how this tragedy will be
politicized. There are already some in Congress that are using this
event as an excuse for calling for more gun-control legislation.
Essentially what this legislation is intended to do is to keep those in
America safer. Regardless of where a person falls into the debate about
whether or not the proposed legislation does what it is intended to do,
there is a major barrier that those in Congress may have to work around
(although we can recognize that some simply ignore it). This barrier is…
you guessed it- the Constitution!
So, on this Constitution Day, let us review what the Founding Fathers
had to say about Americans and their right to bear arms. The text of the
Second Amendment of the Bill of Rights says: “A well regulated
Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of
the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” This
Amendment is what pro-gun groups constantly try to bring to the
forefront in debates with Congress about a person’s gun rights. There is
rightly a concern of some trying to alter the public perception of this
Amendment by altering the words in textbooks (indeed this very week
there were news stories exposing some AP History Books for rewriting the
Second Amendment). This perceived barrier between some in the federal
government’s desire to take away the firearms of U.S. citizens is not
where pro-gun groups should take their stand.
The basis for the Second Amendment goes much deeper than mere
Constitutionality. If one concludes that a law is necessarily right or
wrong simply because the Constitution says it, then one would not be
justified in opposing immoral laws. This is not to say that those in
government should not follow the Constitution. On the contrary, we
should change immoral laws if they are found in the Constitution. The
Constitution is not the ultimate authority for discovering whether or
not something is moral. Thus, those that support the Second Amendment
should do so on the basis of the moral law supporting it and not
simply on the basis of the Constitutionality of it.
There is a long tradition in English common law that established
self-defense as a foundational right. As the most effective means of
self-defense is a firearm, it would be recognized that the Second
Amendment is simply expressing what everyone knew. Consider also the
words of a few political philosophers that influenced the Founders. John
Locke in “Two Treatises of Government” (1689) writes, “Self-defense is
part of the law of nature, nor can it be denied the community, even
against the king himself.” Baron de Montesquieu in “The Spirit of the
Laws” (1748), “Who does not see that self-defense is a duty superior to
every precept?” Sir William Blackstone in his “Commentaries on the Laws
of England” (1765) wrote, “Self defense is justly called the primary law
of nature, so it is not, neither can it be in fact, taken away by the
laws of society.”
Thus, the natural moral law under-girding the Constitution and its
provisions should be recognized as the primary way to defend those
aspects that are seen as good- including the Second Amendment- and we
should not resort to thinking something is necessarily good just because
it is Constitutional. Let us be aware that we want everything good to
also be Constitutional, and not make the mistake of thinking that
everything that is Constitutional is necessarily good.
I originally posted this on another site a couple days ago on Constitution Day for those that wonder.
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