Friday, January 11, 2019

Ammoland Quoted in the New York Times, on Second Amendment




My words seldom appear in the New York Times. It is interesting when they do. It shows, to use a phrase of the Left "we are making progress".  This occurrence was from the article published on Ammoland about the Third Circuit failing to protect Second Amendment rights.  From nytimes.com:
The 49-year-old Judge Bibas, a former law professor, won plaudits for his dissenting opinion. “It is easy to see why President Trump chose to appoint him,” said an article on the website ammoland.com that appeared under the headline: “Third Circuit: Second Amendment Is a Second Rate Right.” John O. McGinnis, a well-known conservative professor at Northwestern University Law School, writing on the Law and Liberty website, called Judge Bibas’s dissent “the judicial equivalent of a perfect game, a first-round knockout, or a checkmate within 10 moves.” He added, “It will not be the last opinion of the Trump appellate judges that will shake the judiciary from its dogmatic slumber.”
The author of the opinion/editorial above is Linda Greenhouse, a self proclaimed progressive.  Linda Greenhouse is a longtime, highly awarded leftist journalist with a law degree from Yale. She is the ultimate in Supreme Court insider journalists.  She is, unsurprisingly, a doctrinaire Progressive who views the Constitution as a document to be shaped and changed by judges as they see fit.   Consider her writing on Clarence Thomas. From that column:
So no, the court’s future is not already here, not yet. Those of us on the progressive side of the street are unlikely to look back on Justice Kennedy’s final term with nostalgia. But soon enough, we may decide that it was the best we’re going to see for a long time.
She is entitled to her opinion. There is great danger and has been considerable  damage from a Supreme Court considered simply as another political power center, instead of an enforcer of the Constitution as written.

The Supreme Court has been a Progressive power center for the last 70 years.

Progressive dogma is the elites are here to tell us what to do and how to do it.
The Supreme Court is there to enable the elites to change the rules at they see fit, by changing the words and public understanding of the words through control of the information flow.

The concept of the Court as protecting natural law and limited government must seem alien indeed, to Progressives.

The freeing of the information flow from the control of, for, and by Progressives, must be disorienting and disruptive to those who see Progressive control of mass media as natural and certain.

I suspect Linda Greenhouse would point to Supreme Court decisions protecting freedom of speech, as examples of how a Progressive court protected limited government.  Those examples have occurred as the Progressive mass media held control over the flow of information; that Progressives now call for tight suppression of free speech, under the umbrella of "hate speech", now they have lost control of the narrative.

Progressives were all for freedom of speech when it enhanced their power. They have turned against it now that they have competition.

It is nearly impossible for adults to change their assumptions of how the world works, when confronted by evidence to the contrary.

Linda Greenhouse read the dissents she writes about. She is a competent scholar and award winning writer. She likely has a difficult time comprehending the dissents she disagrees with may be correct. They invalidate core assumptions she has about reality, she has held her entire adult life.

One of her principle arguments against Justice Thomas' writing, is he uses precedents from the 19th century to argue against cases today. It is a core believe in Progressive circles that old is wrong.  (But not all "old"; if a precedent can be found to validate a change desired by Progressives, then it is "good".)

If you accept the idea the Constitution is a written contract between the people, the states, and the federal government, the words and meaning of the Constitution are what are important, not the age of the document.

If you believe the Constitution, as written, is an impediment to good government; If you believe it must be reinterpreted to change with the times; then information from a hundred years ago, or 10 years ago, or 10 minutes ago can be ignored; when a different outcome is desired.

The core issue about the Second Amendment is whether we will have a Constitution that means something, instead of an ephemeral document that is re-interpreted, law by law, day by day, to meet the ephemeral political opinions of the people on the Court.  Or, in opposition, if justices on the Court should do their best to maintain the Constitution as what it meant at the time written. That doctrine is known as being an originalist and textualist.

I understand Linda Greenhouse is embarrassed by the Second Amendment. She much preferred when it was locked away in a forgotten attic of the law. She probably read Sanford Levinson's The Embarrassing Second Amendment, written in 1989.

The movement to restore limited government and Second Amendment rights is moving toward the last phase of the wisdom missattributied to Ghandi:
"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win”
Those who value government power above all things attempted to ignore Second Amendment supporters. That gambit failed.

They made jokes about Second Amendment supporters. That gambit failed, but is still attempted.

They are fighting Second Amendment supporters in the Courts, in the Legislatures, and in the Congress.

I believe Second Amendment supporters are winning. I think Linda Greenhouse agrees with me.

©2018 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

Gun Watch






3 comments:

ScienceABC123 said...

Progressives never look back. They view history as an anchor that keeps them from moving forward toward their utopia.

Anonymous said...

I consider my self a constitutional textualist. I am self trained in the laws. I have represented myself seven times and won every time, very difficult with todays corrupt courts. I believe I know when the supreme court went astray. I have studied the national archived documents from the framers, their notes and communications with each other to understand original intent. You have to read the constitution with an understanding of the English language of 1787. Understand English contract law and understand the framers wrote the constitution as a contract between the government it created and the people it was meant to serve. Read the entire constitution and find the written authority for any one to interpret it. The word interpret does not exist any where in the original constitution or the bill of rights. in 1803 the United States Supreme Court ruled it had the authority to interpret the constitution In the Marbury v Madison case. violating their oath of office as to ad that authority would require a constitutional amendment. all courts have been interpreting the laws ever since. The framers left that authority out for good reason, they lived through the kings magistrates abuses of the authority to interpret. They wrote the constitution and the bill of rights to be enforc3ed as written, without bias or opinion. like any legal contract of that time. Read the preamble of the constitution. It makes it very clear the constitution was written for all future generations. It states "we do ordain and establish this constitution for ourselves and our posterity" Posterity means all succeeding generations. Citizenship is passed from one generation to the next by the legal citizens created at the time of ratification. They made the authority to determine naturalization of foreigners the responsibility of the federal government, specifically the congress with no authority to the states. As I have said before to ad words to the second amendment requires a constitutional amendment. What this means is there are no constitutionally valid guns laws or restrictions. Congress does not have the authority to amendment the constitution by passing an act. What does this mean? all acts concerning the second amendment are constitutionally invalid. In the Marbury v Madison case it actually states " a law repugnant to the constitution is void" since the second amendment has never been legally changed there are no valid federal laws or acts and because of the tenth amendment there is no states right to place limitations on the second amendment. they are all repugnant to the constitution because there is no written authority to do so. The supreme court has also ruled that your rights travel with you even across state lines and all federally guaranteed right are equal in force of effect. This means you have the right to keep and bear arms any where at any time without restrictions. to exercise your guaranteed constitutional rights no permit or license can be required. Do you have your right to speak license? Do you have your license to attend the church of your choice. Do you have your license to travel any where in this country? The government stopped the mandatory study of the constitution, civics classes, in the 1970s.

Anonymous said...

The united states congress and the state legislatures are forbidden to write laws concerning the second amendment by the Phrase "Shall Not Be Infringed. In the language of 1787-89 Shall Not is an absolute command.