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Rewording the Second Ammendment

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28 comments

  • givette
    "Citizens well trained and proficient in the use of firearms are more able to defend themselves, their community, and their nation from a threat than those not proficient. Therefore, no one, including the government, will in any way limit or restrict the right of a citizen to own a gun."

    Good job! (But you havn't addressed the 'and bear arms' part of the original document).

    Quite a substantial omission, if you'd care to think on it....
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  • Sav99
    The people were so divided whether the military should be armed or not that they finally had to settle the arguement by making it an Amendment to The Constitution.
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  • Don McManus
    Lets take Scalia's words from Heller (one part he got right)

    Held:

    1. a) The Amendment's prefatory clause announces a purpose, but does not limit or expand the scope of the second part, the operative clause. The operative clause's text and history demonstrate that it connotes an individual right to keep and bear arms.'

    In short, any discussion of militia, the armed forces, or anything other than the operative clause is a distraction. Any distraction is unproductive.

    There for, rewording the 2nd Amendment can only be the elimination of the prefatory clause, thus clarifying intent and giving less footing to those that wish to restrict a right. The 2nd actually reads:

    'The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.'

    No re-wording is necessary.

    Simple comprehension is all that is required.

    Amazing that 9 out of 9 Supreme Court Justices lack that skill.
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  • Rack Ops
    quote:Originally posted by Sav99
    The people were so divided whether the military should be armed or not that they finally had to settle the arguement by making it an Amendment to The Constitution.


    LOL
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  • Queen of Swords
    quote:Originally posted by Sav99
    The people were so divided whether the military should be armed or not that they finally had to settle the arguement by making it an Amendment to The Constitution.


    Priceless!!!
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  • jonk
    quote:Originally posted by givette
    "Citizens well trained and proficient in the use of firearms are more able to defend themselves, their community, and their nation from a threat than those not proficient. Therefore, no one, including the government, will in any way limit or restrict the right of a citizen to own or responsibly use a gun."

    Good job! (But you havn't addressed the 'and bear arms' part of the original document).

    Quite a substantial omission, if you'd care to think on it....
    Done. [:)]
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  • cccooper
    Cold hard facts will soon make the obscure most glaringly apparent.

    When the bad guys come to kill you, no one else will save yiou except yourself. The bad guys have guns. The bad guys MAY be the government. They will also have guns. A gun is a tool to kill someone efficiently. They will kill you efficiently if you don't have a gun to prevent this from happening. Do not use a gun to scare them away. They will returm w/ more bad guys. Learn to be proficient. The bad guys will be proficient. Take responsibility for yourself. IT IS YOUR JOB, NO ONE ELSE LOVES YOU OR CARES ABOUT YOUR LIFE AS MUCH AS YOU DO!

    Remember, there WILL be blood. Don't let it be yours.
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  • mrseatle
    How about,

    The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
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  • cccooper
    quote:Originally posted by mrseatle
    How about,

    The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.


    How abouut: YOU CAN HAVE A GUN
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  • gary wray
    jonk......it just tickles me how we try to play around with the perfect words of the founders and we struggle and struggle and still come back to their words....I mean, what part of "....the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed" don't your liberal friends understand? Pretty damn clear to me! Case closed.
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  • RtWngExtrmst
    You're logic is laboring like a Judge. Are you a Judge? The 2A doesn't need updating. The jackasses who can't read need updating. They need to be replaced by those with at least a 3rd grade reading comprehension.

    The 2A is not flawed. Your logic is flawed.
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  • 7.62x39Lover
    Truth is stranger than fiction. I can't believe that after about 250 years of "Constitutional living" is when the Supreme Court comes to the realization that the Bill of Rights applies to all levels of government. That is written in the Constitution!
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  • freedomfighter
    quote:Originally posted by Don McManus
    Lets take Scalia's words from Heller (one part he got right)

    Held:

    1. a) The Amendment's prefatory clause announces a purpose, but does not limit or expand the scope of the second part, the operative clause. The operative clause's text and history demonstrate that it connotes an individual right to keep and bear arms.'

    In short, any discussion of militia, the armed forces, or anything other than the operative clause is a distraction. Any distraction is unproductive.

    There for, rewording the 2nd Amendment can only be the elimination of the prefatory clause, thus clarifying intent and giving less footing to those that wish to restrict a right. The 2nd actually reads:

    'The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.'

    No re-wording is necessary.

    Simple comprehension is all that is required.

    Amazing that 9 out of 9 Supreme Court Justices lack that skill.


    I agree, completely. However, Jonks points are well made for those who might think like the supremes.

    I would say that the word "liberal" can probably be left to past, as far as describing fellow Americans. "Conservative" can be left there too. Both are generalizations that have been used to divide, and do so without understanding the underlying issues.

    Good thread, it works towards an understanding of the INTENTION the founders forged in our social contract.
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  • jonk
    quote:Originally posted by gary wray
    jonk......it just tickles me how we try to play around with the perfect words of the founders and we struggle and struggle and still come back to their words....I mean, what part of "....the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed" don't your liberal friends understand? Pretty damn clear to me! Case closed.
    Well... the problem they have is that first part of it about militia. They just don't have any historical perspective, nor do they gramatically understand the difference between a dependent non-limiting clause and an independent one.
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  • jonk
    quote:Originally posted by RtWngExtrmst

    You're logic is laboring like a Judge. Are you a Judge? The 2A doesn't need updating. The jackasses who can't read need updating. They need to be replaced by those with at least a 3rd grade reading comprehension.

    The 2A is not flawed. Your logic is flawed.
    My logic is not flawed. My logic understands the Second Ammendment just fine. My friends' and acquaintances though may not be as intelligent. I'm using the forum as a sounding board to write a definition to allow them to comprehend that which they currently clearly don't.
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  • Don McManus
    quote:Originally posted by freedomfighter

    I agree, completely. However, Jonks points are well made for those who might think like the supremes.

    I would say that the word "liberal" can probably be left to past, as far as describing fellow Americans. "Conservative" can be left there too. Both are generalizations that have been used to divide, and do so without understanding the underlying issues.

    Good thread, it works towards an understanding of the INTENTION the founders forged in our social contract.


    I am beyond caring what the intention of the founders was. Any discussion that brings intention into the argument is fraught with danger. While it is true that there is a vast body of work that reveals the intention of some of the founders on some subjects, the bottom line is that the end result, and thus their only important intention, was what was written in the Constitution and BOR.

    It is beyond obvious that the 1st Amendment applies only to Congress. It is beyond obvious because it limits Congress and only Congress. The states are free to ignore the First Amendment because they are excluded by its specificity.

    It is equally beyond obvious that the States were and are bound by the restrictions of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th because these are rights guaranteed to 'people', 'property 'Owners', 'persons', 'the accused', etc. In all cases, the governments that would deny these rights were State and Local Governments.

    Enforcement was lax until the Civil War and the 14th Amendment because there was always the possibility of a State refusing such enforcement and leaving the Union. With that pesky problem of actual freedom behind it, SCOTUS decided they could flex their national muscles absent the fear of fragmenting the Nation.

    Sure there is 200 years of Constitutional Law that suggests otherwise, but think about it:

    Who would have infringed upon a citizens right to own a firearm? There was no Federal Police force - it would have been State and Local Authorities.

    Who would station troops in some-one's home?
    We had no standing national army, we had State Militias.

    Who would have unreasonably search a person's home?
    Local and State authorities.

    Who prosecuted people for crimes?
    Local and State Officials.

    Who conducted the criminal trials?
    Local and State Courts.

    Who conducted the Civil Trials?
    Local and State Courts.

    Who set bail?
    Local and State Judges.

    Who was the greatest threat to the Right Retained by the People?
    Local and State Governments.

    Therefore, if the original B.O.R. was not to restrain Local and State Governments, what in God's name was its purpose????

    The words so matter. The words ensure the rights and freedoms of the people. The words do not say from whom these rights and freedoms are ensured, so there cannot be an a-political finding that excludes any governmental agency.

    Sorry for the rant. I fully expected the McDonald case to come down exactly as it did, but had held out just a little hope that SCOTUS would make the right decision. That hope was quashed this morning, and I'm just a bit unsettled.
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  • brickmaster1248
    quote:Originally posted by Don McManus
    quote:Originally posted by freedomfighter

    I agree, completely. However, Jonks points are well made for those who might think like the supremes.

    I would say that the word "liberal" can probably be left to past, as far as describing fellow Americans. "Conservative" can be left there too. Both are generalizations that have been used to divide, and do so without understanding the underlying issues.

    Good thread, it works towards an understanding of the INTENTION the founders forged in our social contract.


    I am beyond caring what the intention of the founders was. Any discussion that brings intention into the argument is fraught with danger. While it is true that there is a vast body of work that reveals the intention of some of the founders on some subjects, the bottom line is that the end result, and thus their only important intention, was what was written in the Constitution and BOR.

    It is beyond obvious that the 1st Amendment applies only to Congress. It is beyond obvious because it limits Congress and only Congress. The states are free to ignore the First Amendment because they are excluded by its specificity.

    It is equally beyond obvious that the States were and are bound by the restrictions of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th because these are rights guaranteed to 'people', 'property 'Owners', 'persons', 'the accused', etc. In all cases, the governments that would deny these rights were State and Local Governments.

    Enforcement was lax until the Civil War and the 14th Amendment because there was always the possibility of a State refusing such enforcement and leaving the Union. With that pesky problem of actual freedom behind it, SCOTUS decided they could flex their national muscles absent the fear of fragmenting the Nation.

    Sure there is 200 years of Constitutional Law that suggests otherwise, but think about it:

    Who would have infringed upon a citizens right to own a firearm? There was no Federal Police force - it would have been State and Local Authorities.

    Who would station troops in some-one's home?
    We had no standing national army, we had State Militias.

    Who would have unreasonably search a person's home?
    Local and State authorities.

    Who prosecuted people for crimes?
    Local and State Officials.

    Who conducted the criminal trials?
    Local and State Courts.

    Who conducted the Civil Trials?
    Local and State Courts.

    Who set bail?
    Local and State Judges.

    Who was the greatest threat to the Right Retained by the People?
    Local and State Governments.

    Therefore, if the original B.O.R. was not to restrain Local and State Governments, what in God's name was its purpose????

    The words so matter. The words ensure the rights and freedoms of the people. The words do not say from whom these rights and freedoms are ensured, so there cannot be an a-political finding that excludes any governmental agency.

    Sorry for the rant. I fully expected the McDonald case to come down exactly as it did, but had held out just a little hope that SCOTUS would make the right decision. That hope was quashed this morning, and I'm just a bit unsettled.



    WOW! So perfectly explained Mr Mcmanus. +1!!!!!!
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  • dthhal
    +2. Well stated.
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  • Rocklobster
    To me the 2nd Amendment is quite plain and simple, no advanced degrees or intensive semantic study needed. It means that free citizens have the right to band together and defend themselves against, and be as well-armed as, any threat to their liberty.
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  • Highball
    Don ;
    Thank you, Sir.

    I have been at this game a long time...and I just never thought about the subject in quite the fashion you structured it.

    That appears to me to put the final touch on the question...for all time.
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  • Rockatansky
    quote:Originally posted by Don McManus

    Therefore, if the original B.O.R. was not to restrain Local and State Governments, what in God's name was its purpose????


    No, it was not the original intent. The original intent was to restrict federal government. It's throughout all of the historical writings.
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  • Don McManus
    quote:Originally posted by Rockatansky
    quote:Originally posted by Don McManus

    Therefore, if the original B.O.R. was not to restrain Local and State Governments, what in God's name was its purpose????


    No, it was not the original intent. The original intent was to restrict federal government. It's throughout all of the historical writings.


    Yes, Rock, and the first and the 10th do just that.

    The 2nd - 9th, however, specifically protect the rights of the people without an exception for local and state governments. It is how they are written, it is what they say. It is exactly why we are a nation of law, not a nation of laws or of men.

    It is also why intent needs to be ignored, and our governing document needs to be respected.
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  • Rockatansky
    quote:Originally posted by Don McManus

    It is also why intent needs to be ignored, and our governing document needs to be respected.


    I agree with you here. The rest I have to revisit, as it's not my day today, and I barely understand wth is going on.
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  • CA sucks
    Look at the regulations and definitions for the militia in 1792, one year after the 2nd was passed.

    The militia is all able bodied male citizens.

    Able bodied male citizens should procure for themselves a weapon and ammunition conforming to military regulations, ie, a musket or rifle capable of firing a 1/8 oz lead ball (the standard military round at the time) and a specific amount of powder.

    A well regulated militia is a male citizenry possessing arms equivalent to those used by the regular soldier.

    There is nothing in the decade following the amendments adoption to suggest otherwise.
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  • freedomfighter
    quote:Originally posted by Don McManus
    quote:Originally posted by freedomfighter

    I agree, completely. However, Jonks points are well made for those who might think like the supremes.

    I would say that the word "liberal" can probably be left to past, as far as describing fellow Americans. "Conservative" can be left there too. Both are generalizations that have been used to divide, and do so without understanding the underlying issues.

    Good thread, it works towards an understanding of the INTENTION the founders forged in our social contract.


    I am beyond caring what the intention of the founders was. Any discussion that brings intention into the argument is fraught with danger. While it is true that there is a vast body of work that reveals the intention of some of the founders on some subjects, the bottom line is that the end result, and thus their only important intention, was what was written in the Constitution and BOR.

    It is beyond obvious that the 1st Amendment applies only to Congress. It is beyond obvious because it limits Congress and only Congress. The states are free to ignore the First Amendment because they are excluded by its specificity.

    It is equally beyond obvious that the States were and are bound by the restrictions of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th because these are rights guaranteed to 'people', 'property 'Owners', 'persons', 'the accused', etc. In all cases, the governments that would deny these rights were State and Local Governments.

    Enforcement was lax until the Civil War and the 14th Amendment because there was always the possibility of a State refusing such enforcement and leaving the Union. With that pesky problem of actual freedom behind it, SCOTUS decided they could flex their national muscles absent the fear of fragmenting the Nation.

    Sure there is 200 years of Constitutional Law that suggests otherwise, but think about it:

    Who would have infringed upon a citizens right to own a firearm? There was no Federal Police force - it would have been State and Local Authorities.

    Who would station troops in some-one's home?
    We had no standing national army, we had State Militias.

    Who would have unreasonably search a person's home?
    Local and State authorities.

    Who prosecuted people for crimes?
    Local and State Officials.

    Who conducted the criminal trials?
    Local and State Courts.

    Who conducted the Civil Trials?
    Local and State Courts.

    Who set bail?
    Local and State Judges.

    Who was the greatest threat to the Right Retained by the People?
    Local and State Governments.

    Therefore, if the original B.O.R. was not to restrain Local and State Governments, what in God's name was its purpose????

    The words so matter. The words ensure the rights and freedoms of the people. The words do not say from whom these rights and freedoms are ensured, so there cannot be an a-political finding that excludes any governmental agency.

    Sorry for the rant. I fully expected the McDonald case to come down exactly as it did, but had held out just a little hope that SCOTUS would make the right decision. That hope was quashed this morning, and I'm just a bit unsettled.



    Very good points about who would deprive people of their rights, that ended up being defined in the Constitution.

    I've learned something related to the Magna Carta (MC) that explains and provides context for this.

    quote:Originally posted by Don McManusThe words do not say from whom these rights and freedoms are ensured, so there cannot be an a-political finding that excludes any governmental agency.

    Explaining it is not that simple however and amounts to a major change of subject.

    Essentialy history completely misrepresents the MC and those that forced its creation are left out and how they forced it is almost rejected as possible now because of religious issues/programming.

    Your words, "from whom these rights and freedoms are ensured" echo the omissions of the MC and its intent just as the circularity of the MC (mis) defines the process of accountability.

    Those that forced the MC to be created did not write it. They simply would not leave the elites in peace until it was written then signed and the elites aquiesed. Afterwards they simply worked to remove the truth of the situation, which was deeply shameful to them, from history.
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  • freedomfighter
    quote:Originally posted by CA sucks
    Look at the regulations and definitions for the militia in 1792, one year after the 2nd was passed.

    The militia is all able bodied male citizens.

    Able bodied male citizens should procure for themselves a weapon and ammunition conforming to military regulations, ie, a musket or rifle capable of firing a 1/8 oz lead ball (the standard military round at the time) and a specific amount of powder.

    A well regulated militia is a male citizenry possessing arms equivalent to those used by the regular soldier.

    There is nothing in the decade following the amendments adoption to suggest otherwise.


    The most reasonable and accurate definition of "a well regulated militia" I've seen yet.

    Now, if mental health care was allowed to advance to the point where the best human instincts each of us possess controlled the population, then many American households would have fully automatic weapons, and that would be okay.

    I propose, . . . more I DEMAND that states honor their own laws serving the peoples health and interest for the creation of a safer and more Constitutional environment.

    http://forums.gunbroker.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=434277
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  • Don McManus
    quote:Originally posted by freedomfighter
    Explaining it is not that simple however and amounts to a major change of subject.

    Essentialy history completely misrepresents the MC and those that forced its creation are left out and how they forced it is almost rejected as possible now because of religious issues/programming.

    Your words, "from whom these rights and freedoms are ensured" echo the omissions of the MC and its intent just as the circularity of the MC (mis) defines the process of accountability.

    Those that forced the MC to be created did not write it. They simply would not leave the elites in peace until it was written then signed and the elites aquiesed. Afterwards they simply worked to remove the truth of the situation, which was deeply shameful to them, from history.

    Exactly the situation we face today, freedomfighter. My knowledge of the Magna Carta is limited, so I'll take what you say at face value.

    We know that Madison fought tooth and nail to ensure that the BOR was to be incorporated upon each and every State and Local governing body and we know that many disagreed. I don't care.

    We know that there is over 230 years of learned SCOTUS decisions that nip and tuck and parse the words of the Constitution, including its Amendments, fundamentally changing the meaning of the words as written. Again, I don't care.

    We know the founders looked to sample government from around the world and to their faith to construct a governing document through which to build a Republic. Not surprisingly, I don't care about this either.

    What we also know is that we have a governing document with 27 fairly simple Amendments that the average 14 year-old can read and understand. Just as the elites of Merry Old England twisted the intent of the MC to advance their power and control, so have the pseudo-elites in our judiciary twisted and manipulated the words of the Constitution over the years, clouding its meaning, and vastly increasing the power of the Federal Government as well as the power of State and Local Governments.

    It is unconscionable that the justices of the Supreme Court feel it necessary to go back 137 years to a flawed decision based upon a poorly worded Amendment to divine the intent and meaning of the 15 simple words in the operative clause of the 2nd Amendment. It is a game that is being played to obfuscate the meaning of the words as written. I don't know why it is being done. Perhaps to mystify and enhance the perceived intellect of the justices. Perhaps it is because the average person will not read 30,000 words and will sit back and assume that his betters do know better than he. Perhaps it just a sinister method to incrementally increase the power of government.

    Guess what? I don't care.

    It is wrong. It changes the Constitution every time it is done, and it should be called what it is by every Senator who interviews a potential SCOTUS justice. We will continue to have a continually changing governing document until this silly and self-aggrandizing practice is brought to an end.

    OK, perhaps I do care, maybe a little.
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  • chaoslodge
    Any rewording is merely giving in to the collectivist agenda. Congratulations on your capitulation.
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