The Gun Nuts
Nope, Not The Ones You Expected
By Pejman Yousefzadeh Posted in Featured Stories | Law — Comments (1) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
The common conception of those who support an interpretation of the Second Amendment that affords an individual right to bear arms--as opposed to a collective right--is that such supporters are drooling Neanderthals, "wingnuts" and probably candidates for inclusion in a local secessionist militia.
Evidently, nothing could be further from the truth.
Read on . . .
In March, for the first time in the nation's history, a federal appeals court struck down a gun control law on Second Amendment grounds. Only a few decades ago, the decision would have been unimaginable.
There used to be an almost complete scholarly and judicial consensus that the Second Amendment protects only a collective right of the states to maintain militias. That consensus no longer exists -- thanks largely to the work over the last 20 years of several leading liberal law professors, who have come to embrace the view that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to own guns.
In those two decades, breakneck speed by the standards of constitutional law, they have helped to reshape the debate over gun rights in the United States. Their work culminated in the March decision, Parker v. District of Columbia, and it will doubtless play a major role should the case reach the United States Supreme Court.
Laurence H. Tribe, a law professor at Harvard, said he had come to believe that the Second Amendment protected an individual right.
"My conclusion came as something of a surprise to me, and an unwelcome surprise," Professor Tribe said. "I have always supported as a matter of policy very comprehensive gun control."
The first two editions of Professor Tribe's influential treatise on constitutional law, in 1978 and 1988, endorsed the collective rights view. The latest, published in 2000, sets out his current interpretation.
Several other leading liberal constitutional scholars, notably Akhil Reed Amar at Yale and Sanford Levinson at the University of Texas, are in broad agreement favoring an individual rights interpretation. Their work has in a remarkably short time upended the conventional understanding of the Second Amendment, and it set the stage for the Parker decision.
The earlier consensus, the law professors said in interviews, reflected received wisdom and political preferences rather than a serious consideration of the amendment's text, history and place in the structure of the Constitution. "The standard liberal position," Professor Levinson said, "is that the Second Amendment is basically just read out of the Constitution."
The Second Amendment 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." (Some transcriptions of the amendment omit the last comma.)
If only as a matter of consistency, Professor Levinson continued, liberals who favor expansive interpretations of other amendments in the Bill of Rights, like those protecting free speech and the rights of criminal defendants, should also embrace a broad reading of the Second Amendment. And just as the First Amendment's protection of the right to free speech is not absolute, the professors say, the Second Amendment's protection of the right to keep and bear arms may be limited by the government, though only for good reason.
Of course, this interpretation of the Second Amendment is quite correct. And as Professor Tribe indicates, that is a mortifying conclusion for someone like him to have to reach. I can only imagine his consternation if, say, he were offered a complimentary membership in the NRA. But in any event, kudos to Professors like Tribe, Amar and Levinson, whose analysis has led them down this path and who have the courage to advocate a Constitutional viewpoint that is against their own policy preferences.

....thank God for natural term limits.
Regarding Mr Tribe's change of opinion, Winston Churchill summed it up most aptly:
"It is good for a young man of twenty to be a Liberal, because it proves he has a heart.
It is equally as bad for that same young man at forty to not be a Conservative, because it proves he has no brain."