I
find it extremely hard to believe that our Founding Fathers had the
original intent to allow any American over the age of 18 to possess
the ability to murder dozens and scores of men, women, and children.
In
a withering, indeed breathtaking, succession of recent decisions
rendered by a US Supreme Court now dominated by justices vetted by
the Federalist Society and nominated by presidents who did not win
the popular national vote, most of the past 120 years of legal
progress and precedent have been obliterated.
The
rationale for this assault on common sense and common decency is a
doctrine called “Original Intent,” which states that only
those guarantees intended by the framers of the Constitution in 1787
and set forth in the document ratified two years later are valid.
This is also sometimes defined as “strict construction,”
and is always trumpeted by so-called conservatives as a fundamental
tenet.
I
say “so-called” because their arguments and
interpretations of our Constitution are neither conservative nor
historically true. Abortion in this country, for instance, was legal
from the nation’s founding until well into the 19th century.
But for now, let’s take a closer look at just one example of
the flagrantly lunatic application of original intent and strict
construction.
The
2nd Amendment states: “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
most common firearm of that day was a smooth-bore muzzle-loading
flintlock musket that was over four and a half feet long, weighed
over ten pounds, had a muzzle velocity of 785 feet per second, could
fire no more than three rounds a minute in the hands of a very
skilled marksman, and was accurate up to no more than fifty yards.
Today’s AR-15s and their knock-offs are barely three feet long
and weigh only seven and a half pounds, are fed by magazines holding
20 or more rounds, have a muzzle velocity of 3300 feet per second,
are accurate up to 600 meters, and can fire 60 to 100 bullets a
minute, even in the hands of a rank amateur. All you have to do is
keep pulling the trigger.
I
can’t prove this, but I find it extremely hard to believe that
George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, James Madison, and
all those other Founding Fathers had the original intent to allow any
American over the age of 18 to possess the ability to murder dozens
and scores of men, women, and children.
But
I can prove—because the words are right there in the 2nd
Amendment itself—that what those men had in mind was “a
well regulated Militia.” And what did they mean by that?
While
regulations varied somewhat from state to state, during the late
colonial era and into the 18th century, every able-bodied free male
between the ages of 16 and 50 was required to enlist in his state’s
militia. He was required to provide his own firearm. Local militias
were organized into companies of 32 to 68 men. Companies were
organized into regiments with regimental commanders appointed by
state governors.
Militia
companies were required to train six days a year, with regimental
musters held periodically. Failure to appear for training could
result in fines or corporal punishment. Repeated absentees could be
sent to prison.
That
is what is meant by a well-regulated militia. That was the original
intent of the framers of our Constitution. The right of the people to
keep and bear arms shall not be infringed in order for them to
participate in a well-regulated militia. It’s right there in
front of your eyes, in print, on paper, in every copy of the
Constitution I’ve ever read.
Though
I sometimes find myself scratching my head, in fact I’m pretty
certain that John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil
Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett, and Brett Kavanaugh all read, write,
speak, and understand the English language.
The
National Rifle Association is not a well-regulated militia. The Proud
Boys are not a well-regulated militia. Lauren Boebert, Thomas Massie,
and Marjorie Taylor Greene are not a well-regulated militia. Nor were
Eric Harris, Dylan Klebold, Adam Lanza, Stephen Paddock, Omar Mateen,
Dylann Roof, Nikolas Cruz, Salvador Ramos or any of the other mass
murderers whose names we’ve come to know in the past 25 years.
Clarence
Thomas writes in his decision in New
York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen
that
the 2nd Amendment guarantee of the right to bear arms is “not a
second class right.” Okay, fine, but where’s your
“well-regulated militia”? Where is your “strict
construction”? Where is the framers’ “original
intent”?
Even
the late though hardly lamented in some quarters at least Antonin
Scalia, when asked what the difference was between himself and
Justice Thomas, replied, “Look, I’m an originalist, but
I’m not a nut.” Alas, it seems that at least six members
of our highest court—from which there is no appeal—bear a
remarkable resemblance to a large can of Planter’s Mixed Nuts.
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