I support the Second Amendment.
Despite what you may hear, almost
everyone does.
That’s because it is part of the
Constitution, and it would be hard to find any American who does not
support the Constitution. It contains seven original articles and 27
amendments, and virtually every American supports all still in effect
– including the Second Amendment.
Just because you support the
Constitution may not mean that you like all of it. The Fifteenth
Amendment, adopted in 1870, supposedly assured voting rights for
African Americans. Because of opposition in some states, that right
did not begin to take full effect until 1965.
Though bound by the Constitution, some
states refused to apply it for about a century. There’s little
sign that people who favor background checks on gun purchasers would
say the Second Amendment should simply be nullified under state laws,
as was the Fifteenth.
Are there any movements to repeal parts
of the Constitution? Yes, there are people now ardently advocating
repeal of a part of the Fourteenth Amendment giving American
citizenship to any person born within the boundaries of the United
States. They oppose citizenship for such children if their parents
are illegal or undocumented immigrants.
But it is much harder to find similar
groups devoting their efforts as actively to repealing or even
amending the Second Amendment. Even people who are unhappy with the
Supreme Court decision on firearms have accepted it.
So why do some politicians and gun
organizations attack those favoring limits as not supporting the
Second Amendment?
In 2008, the Supreme Court ruled in
favor of people’s right to own and use guns. The decision was
written by the late Justice Scalia, a conservative judge. It
overruled a District of Columbia law that could undermine that right
even in your own home.
The Court said, “Like most rights,
the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited.”
In the decision, Scalia wrote for the
Court that “nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on
longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and
the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in
sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws
impos ing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of
arms.”
The decision also confirmed the
government’s right to control “dangerous and unusual weapons.”
Gun control opponents, while applauding
the Court’s ruling on firearm ownership and use, disagree. They
believe that the Second Amendment, unlike other constitutional
rights, guarantees an “absolute” right on which no limits may be
placed.
The argument about whether you support
the Second Amendment turns on this point.
Without much evidence, “absolute”
gun supporters charge that those favoring limits want to repeal the
Second Amendment and would start by requiring background checks on
purchasers. Simply because they propose any limits, they are
supposedly on the slippery slope to outright repeal.
Absolutists may worry about what
followed the Supreme Court ruling that women may have abortions.
Some state governments disagree, and they have created increasingly
restrictive ways to reduce or eliminate abortions through limits
clearly intended to overrule the Supreme Court decision.
After mass shootings of innocent
people, defenders of an absolute Second Amendment argue against new
limits, claiming we should focus exclusively on the shooters and not
place any obstacles on their easy access to guns.
Can we reasonably expect to identify in
advance every mentally ill or deeply disturbed person in a country of
320 million people? Impossible.
So access to guns, which can be used to quickly kill groups of
people, might be made a little more difficult.
The issue could be seen as a conflict
between the right to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”
for ourselves and our children, promised by the Declaration of
Independence, and the Second Amendment right to “keep and bear
arms.”
Which right would come closer to being
absolute? Must we accept the killing of school children, followed
only by routine and pious expressions of official sympathy, because
the Second Amendment cannot be subject to any limits?
We cannot ignore the Constitution,
including the Second Amendment, and remain “united.” But, as a
civilized people, we should not ignore the increasing plight of
innocent school children shot down by killers with easy access to
guns.
The obvious answer in the vast and
diverse American democracy must be compromise, which would involve
some limits, at least including full-scale background checks, but not
repeal.
I support the Second Amendment. But I
cannot accept that it is the Constitution’s only absolute,
unlimited right.