Noah Feldman is a Harvard law professor and a prolific author.
In an op-ed in The Post and Courier, Noah Feldman has penned an article that grudgingly admits that the Second Amendment is a fundamental right deserving as much respect as the First Amendment. Feldman gets much wrong. For example, he declares that the Supreme Court found that the Second Amendment is an individual right for the first time in 2008. From bloomberg.com:
The evolution of gun rights has an internal legal logic to it. The contemporary story starts in 2008 with the case of D.C. v. Heller, a 5-to-4 decision in which the Supreme Court declared for the first time that gun ownership was an individual right, not a collective right of “the people” to organize into militias.That characterization of the Heller decision is a favorite of disarmists, but it is false. The Supreme Court never found that the Second Amendment was a "collective right". The "collective right" theory was created out of whole cloth by the Kansas Supreme Court in 1905. The muddy Miller decision in 1934 did not say that the right was a collective one, even though that test case was heavily manipulated by the Franklin Roosevelt administration. There are plenty of previous Supreme Court decisions that declare the Second Amendment to be an individual right, though they do not strike down laws.
In the Post and Courier article, Feldman is having an difficult time explaining why the Second Amendment should *not* be a fundamental right. From the postandcourier.com:
With that, the court embraced the old slogan that if you outlaw gun ownership, only criminals will have guns. The court then held that the regulation wasn’t narrowly tailored because the city would have to prove that its scheme made people safer than any less restrictive alternative. And it said it was “skeptical” that such proof could ever be possible. The regulation would only be narrowly tailored, he said, if it were “targeted at keeping guns away from people who are likely to misuse them or situations where they are likely to be misused.”Then Feldman writes this bombshell statement, for a person on the left:
City lawyers tried to argue that the regulation simply restricted the time, place and manner of bearing arms, limitations that are permissible even when applied to the free-speech protections of the First Amendment. But the court replied that the analogy was flawed — which of course it is. A law that prohibited you from speaking while on the street but let me speak while at home wouldn’t be permissible. The analogy to free speech is one that belongs to advocates of gun rights, not to the other side.Feldman clearly comes at the issue from a "progressive" lens, with the idea that "rights" are what the government decides, not originating in natural law. In a previous article, he proclaims that rifles such as the AR-15 are not useful for self-defense, without a shred of evidence to back such a claim. He does so out of pure subjective personal preference. From bloomberg.com:
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit will have to review this decision. But it’s worth noting that, astonishing as the reasoning sounds, it makes logical legal sense once the right to bear arms is treated as a fundamental right comparable to free speech.
That leaves the view that there’s something special about weapons that can be used both for self-defense and for militias. According to Scalia, those are the weapons that the people who ratified the Second Amendment had in mind.But that view is nonsense. First, AR-15s are not "assault weapons". They are the civilian version of the M-16, having been altered to make them semi-automatic. That makes them specifically designed for civilian use and useful both for self defense and militia use. Second, many firearms experts extol the virtues of AR-15 and similar rifles as being especially suitable for home defense, for all the reasons that they would be useful in military operations.
Today, that includes handguns. But it doesn’t include assault rifles. They’re great for military purposes, and no doubt fun to shoot on the range. But they aren’t useful for self-defense, almost by definition.
They are light, easily used firearms. They give a defender a fighting chance against superior numbers. There appearance has become so well known that they provide superior deterrence for a home or self defender. They are precisely the firearms that are most useful for spontaneously organized militias to use to assert order after a natural or manmade disaster.
Feldman asserts that the Court will not accept this view, because then they would have to accept rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons as well. But that is a false assumption. The Court has already accepted a limit by allowing more regulation on fully automatic weapons. Feldman does not appear well schooled in weaponry. He makes the novice error of assuming that because AR-15 type rifles are included in legal definitions of "assault weapons" that they are "assault rifles". It is an easy error for a lawyer to make.
Rocket propelled grenades are already in a separate federal legal category from semi-automatic rifles. That line is likely where the current court will hold on Heller and Heller generated challenges to the Second Amendment.
It may be that Noah Feldman will come around to this view. He seems to value intellectual honesty, in spite of his errors.
If he comes to understand that disarming the population does not confer any real advantages to society, he may switch sides. He seems to be moving in that direction.
Definition of disarmist
©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
Link to Gun Watch
Alito and the court admitted that "bearable" arms are what is protected - ALL of them.
ReplyDeleteAre automatics bearable? Yuuuuup. They are not dangerous AND unusual.
It is time to admit, just as the court did, that prohibition under the guise of regulation does not pass muster. Prohibiting entire classes of arms does not pass muster either.
CLASS III is no different.
It is within government's purview to regulate what is done with firearms - outside self defense of course. There is plenty of arena to make all the robbery and rape and murder as illegal and with all the punishment it so desires. That is where government was tasked with authority and that is where is must be exacted.
Prevention ya say? Yeah, that is just "guilty until innocent" talk. Progressive debate framing talk. Violating a first principle, a enumerated right, out of "prevention" is no better than outright banning all guns in the name of prevention.
It is not for us to make a deal to keep what we have, it is for us to stand for the right as it is. Nothing more and nothing less.