The other day, Limbaugh damn near RAN away from a caller who articulated the first reason for the Second Amendment.
David French goes there.
...The argument is not that a collection of random citizens should be
able to go head-to-head with the Third Cavalry Regiment. That’s absurd.
Nor is the argument that citizens should possess weapons “in common use”
in the military. Rather, for the Second Amendment to remain a
meaningful check on state power, citizens must be able to possess the
kinds and categories of weapons that can at least deter state overreach,
that would make true authoritarianism too costly to attempt.
I fully recognize that there are many millions of Americans who
flatly disagree with the notion that armed citizens either can or should
try to deter tyranny. Either their trust in the government is so
complete (or their sense of futility in the face of its armed might so
great) that they don’t believe private ownership of weapons is a
meaningful check on lawless government action, or they believe that the
cost of widespread civilian gun ownership is simply too high to pay in
exchange for a theoretical check on state power. That’s a debate worth
having — in the context of a long-term progressive effort to repeal the
Second Amendment. But for now, the Founders have settled question.
As Justice Scalia ably articulated in Heller, the Second
Amendment was designed to protect what Blackstone called “the natural
right of resistance and self-preservation.” Without access to the
weapons in common use in our time, the law-abiding citizen will grow
increasingly — and intolerably — vulnerable to the lawless. Thus, to
properly defend life and liberty, access to assault weapons and
high-capacity magazines isn’t a luxury; it’s a necessity.
As to "the lawless," I can spell a few names for you: Hillary Clinton, Barack Hussein Obama, James Comey, John Chisholm, Lois Lerner, Francis Schmitz.....
Shall I go on?
Yes
ReplyDeleteGo on.
mississippi