The Second Amendment’s Right to Bear Arms: What It Means

Guest Post by John W. Whitehead

“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.”—The Second Amendment to the US Constitution

You can largely determine where a person will fall in the debate over gun control and the Second Amendment based on their view of government and the role it should play in our lives.

In the first group are those who see the government as a Nanny State, empowered to look out for the best interests of the populace, even when that means overriding our rights as individuals and free will.

These individuals tend to interpret the Second Amendment to mean that only members of law enforcement and the military are entitled to own a gun. Case in point: President Biden recently (and wrongly) asserted that “the Second Amendment, from the day it was passed, limited the type of people who could own a gun and what type of weapon you could own. You couldn’t buy a cannon.”

In the second group are those who see the government as inherently corrupt.

These individuals tend to view the Second Amendment as a means of self-defense, whether that involves defending themselves against threats to their freedoms or threats from individuals looking to harm them. For instance, eleven men were recently arrested for traveling on the interstate with unlicensed guns that were not secured in a case. The group, reportedly associated with a sovereign citizens group, claimed to be traveling from Rhode Island to Maine for militia training.

And then there is a third group, made up of those who view the government as neither good nor evil, but merely a powerful entity that, as Thomas Jefferson recognized, must be bound “down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” To this group, the Second Amendment’s assurance of the people’s right to bear arms is no different from any other right enshrined in the Constitution: to be safeguarded, exercised prudently and maintained.

How to exercise this right is the question that keeps jockeying for supremacy before the U.S. Supreme Court. After declaring more than a decade ago that citizens have a Second Amendment right to own a gun in one’s home for self-defense, the Court has now been tasked with deciding whether the Constitution also protects the right to carry a gun outside the home. The case, NY State Rifle & Pistol Assoc. v. Corlett, takes issue with a state law that requires a license in order to carry a concealed gun outside the home.

On the heels of Corlett is another legal challenge to the state’s authority to regulate—or ban outright—gun ownership outside the home. The attorneys general of 21 states—including Louisiana, Arizona, Montana, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming—have filed an amicus brief in Young v. Hawaii asking the Supreme Court to uphold Hawaiians’ Second Amendment rights to bear arms outside their homes.

Unfortunately, while the various federal circuit courts of appeal continue to disagree over the exact nature of the rights protected by the Second Amendment, the government itself has made its position extremely clear.

When it comes to gun rights in particular, and the rights of the citizenry overall, the U.S. government has adopted a “do what I say, not what I do” mindset. Nowhere is this double standard more evident than in the government’s attempts to arm itself to the teeth, all the while viewing as suspect anyone who dares to legally own a gun, let alone use one in self-defense.

Indeed, while it still technically remains legal to own a firearm in America, possessing one can now get you pulled over, searched, arrested, subjected to all manner of surveillance, treated as a suspect without ever having committed a crime, shot at, and killed. (This same rule does not apply to law enforcement officials, however, who are armed to the hilt and rarely given more than a slap on the wrists for using their weapons against unarmed individuals.)

Now the Biden Administration is setting its sights on gun control.

Mark my words: gun control legislation, especially in the form of red flag gun laws, which allow the police to remove guns from people “suspected” of being threats, will become yet another means by which to subvert the Constitution and sabotage the rights of the people.

Giving police the power to preemptively raid homes in order to neutralize a potential threat is a powder keg waiting for a lit match.

Under these red flag laws, what happened to Duncan Lemp—who was gunned down in his bedroom during an early morning, no-knock SWAT team raid on his family’s home—could very well happen to more people.

At 4:30 a.m. on March 12, 2020, in the midst of a COVID-19 pandemic that had most of the country under a partial lockdown and sheltering at home, a masked SWAT team—deployed to execute a “high risk” search warrant for unauthorized firearms—stormed the suburban house where 21-year-old Duncan, a software engineer and Second Amendment advocate, lived with his parents and 19-year-old brother.

The entire household, including Lemp and his girlfriend, was reportedly asleep when the SWAT team directed flash bang grenades and gunfire through Lemp’s bedroom window.

Lemp was killed and his girlfriend injured.

No one in the house that morning, including Lemp, had a criminal record.

No one in the house that morning, including Lemp, was considered an “imminent threat” to law enforcement or the public, at least not according to the search warrant.

So what was so urgent that militarized police felt compelled to employ battlefield tactics in the pre-dawn hours of a day when most people are asleep in bed, not to mention stuck at home as part of a nationwide lockdown?

According to police, they were tipped off that Lemp was in possession of “firearms.”

Thus, rather than approaching the house by the front door at a reasonable hour in order to investigate this complaint—which is what the Fourth Amendment requires—police instead strapped on their guns, loaded up their flash bang grenades and acted like battle-crazed warriors.

This is what happens when you adopt red flag gun laws, which Maryland did in 2018, painting anyone who might be in possession of a gun—legal or otherwise—as a threat that must be neutralized.

Meanwhile, the government’s efforts to militarize and weaponize its agencies and employees is reaching epic proportions, with federal agencies as varied as the Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security Administration placing orders for hundreds of millions of rounds of hollow point bullets. Moreover, under the auspices of a military “recycling” program, which allows local police agencies to acquire military-grade weaponry and equipment, $4.2 billion worth of equipment has been transferred from the Defense Department to domestic police agencies since 1990. Included among these “gifts” are tank-like 20-ton Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles, tactical gear, and assault rifles.

Ironically, while the Biden administration’s gun control efforts have helped to spike gun sales nationally, the government has made no effort to curtail its own addiction to weapons of war, a significant number of which have conveniently been “lost” and used in violent crimes in communities across the U.S.

We’re talking about rifles, pistols, machine guns, shot guns, and grenades. Some of these weapons were lost through gross negligence. Others, however, were trafficked by military police.

The U.S. military boasts weapons the rest of the world doesn’t have, and it continues to develop even more weaponry, each deadlier than the last.

Make no mistake: every last one of these weapons will eventually make its way back to domestic police forces to be used against the American people.

Included in the government’s military arsenal are armed, surveillance Reaper drones capable of reading a license plate from over two miles away; an AA12 Atchisson Assault Shotgun that can shoot five 12-gauge shells per second and “can fire up to 9,000 rounds without being cleaned or jamming”; an ADAPTIV invisibility cloak that can make a tank disappear or seemingly reshape it to look like a car; a PHASR rifle capable of blinding and disorienting anyone caught in its sights; a Taser shockwave that can electrocute a crowd of people at the touch of a button; an XM2010 enhanced sniper rifle with built-in sound and flash suppressors that can hit a man-sized target nine out of ten times from over a third of a mile away; and an XM25 “Punisher” grenade launcher that can be programmed to accurately shoot grenades at a target up to 500 meters away.

What the government has yet to acknowledge, however, is that its own gun violence—inflicted on unarmed individuals by battlefield-trained SWAT teams, militarized police, and bureaucratic government agents trained to shoot first and ask questions later—is not making America any safer.

Indeed, the U.S. government may be the most egregious perpetrator of gun violence in America, bar none.

All the while gun critics continue to clamor for bans on military-style assault weapons, high-capacity magazines and armor-piercing bullets, the U.S. military is passing them out to domestic police forces.

Under the auspices of a military “recycling” program, which allows local police agencies to acquire military-grade weaponry and equipment, more than $4.2 billion worth of equipment has been transferred from the Defense Department to domestic police agencies since 1990. Included among these “gifts” are tank-like, 20-ton Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles, tactical gear, and assault rifles.

There are now reportedly more bureaucratic (non-military) government agents armed with high-tech, deadly weapons than U.S. Marines.

While Americans have to jump through an increasing number of hoops in order to own a gun, the government is arming its own civilian employees to the hilt with guns, ammunition and military-style equipment, authorizing them to make arrests, and training them in military tactics.

Among the agencies being supplied with night-vision equipment, body armor, hollow-point bullets, shotguns, drones, assault rifles and LP gas cannons are the Smithsonian, U.S. Mint, Health and Human Services, IRS, FDA, Small Business Administration, Social Security Administration, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Education Department, Energy Department, Bureau of Engraving and Printing and an assortment of public universities.

This is the double standard at play here.

How is it that while violence has become our government’s calling card, from the more than 80,000 SWAT team raids carried out every year on unsuspecting Americans by heavily armed, black-garbed commandos and the increasingly rapid militarization of local police forces across the country to the drone killings used to target insurgents, “we the people” are the ones who must be regulated, restricted and banned from owning a weapon?

If we’re truly going to get serious about gun violence, why not start by scaling back the American police state’s weapons of war?

I’ll tell you why: because the government has no intention of scaling back on its weapons.

We’ve allowed ourselves to get so focused on debating who or what is responsible for gun violence—the guns, the gun owners, or our violent culture—and whether the Second Amendment “allows” us to own guns that we’ve overlooked the most important and most consistent theme throughout the Constitution: the fact that it is not merely an enumeration of our rights but was intended to be a clear shackle on the government’s powers.

When considered in the context of prohibitions against the government, the Second Amendment reads as a clear rebuke against any attempt to restrict the citizenry’s gun ownership.

As such, it is as necessary an ingredient for maintaining that tenuous balance between the citizenry and their republic as any of the other amendments in the Bill of Rights, especially the right to freedom of speech, assembly, press, petition, security, and due process.

Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas understood this tension well. “The Constitution is not neutral,” he remarked, “It was designed to take the government off the backs of people.”

In this way, the freedoms enshrined in the Bill of Rights in their entirety stand as a bulwark against a police state.

To our detriment, these rights have been steadily weakened, eroded and undermined in recent years. Yet without any one of them, including the Second Amendment right to own and bear arms, we are that much more vulnerable to the vagaries of out-of-control policemen, benevolent dictators, genuflecting politicians, and overly ambitious bureaucrats.

When all is said and done, the debate over gun ownership really has little to do with gun violence in America. It’s also not even a question of whether Americans need weapons to defend themselves against any overt threats to our safety or wellbeing.

Truly, the debate over gun ownership in America is really a debate over who gets to call the shots and control the game.

In other words, it’s that same tug-of-war that keeps getting played out in every confrontation between the government and the citizenry over who gets to be the master and who is relegated to the part of the servant.

The Constitution, with its multitude of prohibitions on government overreach, is clear on this particular point. As 20th century libertarian Edmund A. Opitz observed in 1964, “No one can read our Constitution without concluding that the people who wrote it wanted their government severely limited; the words ‘no’ and ‘not’ employed in restraint of government power occur 24 times in the first seven articles of the Constitution and 22 more times in the Bill of Rights.”

In a nutshell, as I make clear in Battlefield America: The War on the American People, the Second Amendment’s right to bear arms reflects not only a concern for one’s personal defense, but serves as a check on the political power of the ruling authorities.

It represents an implicit warning against governmental encroachments on one’s freedoms, the warning shot over the bow to discourage any unlawful violations of our persons or property.

As such, it reinforces that necessary balance in the citizen-state relationship. As George Orwell, who plays a starring role in my new novel The Erik Blair Diaries, noted, “That rifle hanging on the wall of the working-class flat or labourer’s cottage is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays there.”

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10 Comments
gatsby1219
gatsby1219
July 7, 2021 7:17 am

All gun laws are unconstitutional, treat them as such.

Not Sure
Not Sure
July 7, 2021 8:03 am

I wasn’t aware of the next generation of weapons. Impressive.

Hopefully, there will be enough time to plan for counter measures to weaken their superiority factor, but in the end, the odds of defending your family and property may not be so much in your favor, but at least your life will be lived on your terms and not on the terms the government offers.

“Come and take it.”

very old white guy
very old white guy
  Not Sure
July 7, 2021 8:28 am

Primitive people in Afghanistan have fought the greatest armies in the world to a standstill and they left. Just most people’s lifetime, Russia and now the US. Massive and amazing weapons do not always carry the day. Nukes will, but will anyone be foolish enough to use them with so many potential nukes aimed at them.

Stucky
Stucky
  very old white guy
July 7, 2021 12:31 pm

Here is what your Trillion Dollar War taxes (or, is it $2 trillion?) gets you ….. Afghan armed forces surrendering to the Taliban even before the Last American Soldier goes home.

'Reality' Doug
'Reality' Doug
  very old white guy
July 7, 2021 1:15 pm

You are delusional, old whitey. The American revolutionaries knew the woods better than British and German soldiers. They had better guns, called rifles. They had better training and tactics for the terrain. They had practice fighting Indians and slapping unruly women.

The Afghans are harden and adapted to their terrain. They would strike a woman. Their lack of scholarship frees their minds to handle the challenges of that cruel environment better than any foreigners. American citizens (really subjects now) can’t function without electricity or gas and have no friends in the world. The Taliban presumably had supplies for free from brother Muzzies and perhaps the U.S. taxpayer.

The best precedent of an instructive paradigm is the fall of the Roman Republic. We don’t even hear of Roman patriots or freedom fighters. I don’t think there were any, at least of consequence. Pretenses don’t count. Neither do we. The culture is completely wrong. The facts are completely wrong. Cut the psychological losses and give the kids a fighting chance in reality.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Not Sure
July 7, 2021 9:24 am

those fancy toys wont amount to much of use for the ruling class when the grid goes down and the people who’d be using them either set up as bandits on their own or stay home to mind higher priorities.
and probably within a day or two of those still serving tptb will want their pay in real money, and maybe a week after that at the latest theyll figure out they can just take what they like for themselves and do away with the masters.

'Reality' Doug
'Reality' Doug
July 7, 2021 12:57 pm

We’ve allowed ourselves to get so focused on debating who or what is responsible for gun violence—the guns, the gun owners, or our violent culture—and whether the Second Amendment “allows” us to own guns that we’ve overlooked the most important and most consistent theme throughout the Constitution: the fact that it is not merely an enumeration of our rights but was intended to be a clear shackle on the government’s powers.

In a nutshell, as I make clear in Battlefield America: The War on the American People, the Second Amendment’s right to bear arms reflects not only a concern for one’s personal defense, but serves as a check on the political power of the ruling authorities.

I am the broken record of consistent principles, oh dear. (((Textual authority))) has killed us as a viable people. At the moment, there is no viable us. I try to lay down the essential cultural foundation.

On my world-view post courtesy of Stucky, Da Perfessor said:

Well then, if the switch gets thrown from “Just Leave me Alone” to “Shoot Everyone” (and I doubt there’s an in-between setting) then the devolution of Yugoslavia may just look like a Friday night sleepover compared to what happens here.

That is impossible. The U.S. military and police have been training with all the money in the world for 100 years. They are far ahead of the cuckold citizenry. There is no we that knows who we are and will act to defend our interests. Our cuck interests are the interests of the U.S. Government corporate body, all you fucking patriots. The only thing the current whitey we can do is aid and abet the enemy destroying Western white people by cultural deconstruction (no cooperative self-interest) and psychological abuse. On the Left there is not only white deference but white libtardfa destroying white heritage (so they can get killed last, the morons). On the Right, well what fine patriots waving your American flag as the Stazi shoot you dead or starve you out or sexualize and pervert the children you could not figure out how to raise culturally and socially.

The Laws of the Jungle may be bent with a gentlemen’s agreement, but if you won’t be a gentleman to yourself, you don’t even have the iota of a gentlemen’s agreement. Nipping in the bud is cheaper than this. Now we are fucked. You higher dumbasses know it but only superficially. If you cling to your Bibles, your guns are politically neutralized. Political home defense that begins at the property line has already failed. You have already failed. Build success on a solid foundation. The capitulated past is a false god and false foundation. Become more dangerous and unassuming, more independent and selfish. You are running out of office space, and the subhumans will be more friendly with you.

This is a higher form of manhood than what I see here for the most part. This guy was some 50 years ago, that’s why. Government discipline is not the same as child discipline. Your child is presumably somewhat human.

Notice the constant implication of the virtual holiness of law enforcement. Government bullets will penetrate fabrics with a red, white, and blue motif.

This is the civilization cycle: patriarchy -> nice police state -> police state. There is no guilt-tripping the Left or the perverts into swinging the imaginary political pendulum the other way. There is only the right way, like prepping a surface for paint. You have no foundation upon which to build. Build yourself in a partially patriarchal foundation and pass it on. Organic strength is slow to accrue. There are not quick solutions for you. If your legacy something other than bottom-up patriarchal restoration, you won’t have one within a century.

Henry Ford
Henry Ford
July 7, 2021 2:06 pm

Health and Human Services may be armed as they go door-to-door pushing the jab. Be aware.

'Reality' Doug
'Reality' Doug
  Henry Ford
July 7, 2021 4:23 pm

I can visualize the media coverage of the seemingly inevitable limited skirmish not given the due it deserves, even here.

anthony aaron
anthony aaron
July 7, 2021 9:38 pm

The ammunition-buying spree that b h o put into place for even the most minuscule of Federal agencies was barely known to the public. Thankfully, we had at the time enough folks who brought US the truth — about the billions of rounds of ammunition that he ordered purchased and put into the hands of every tin-star twit in the government … with no mention of their training in the use of those weapons.

Since all of those agencies work here in the US — as opposed to the military, which operates across the globe — the ammo had only one targeted use: against US Citizens and Taxpayers — folks that b h o and the mooch loathed beyond words.

Given the shortage of both guns (especially handguns) and ammo today, I wouldn’t be surprised if there aren’t a lot of straw purchases being done by the very same government agencies … all to be used against US.