http://lewrockwell.com/napolitano/napolitano82.1.html
The right of
the people to keep and bear arms is an extension of the natural
right to self-defense and a hallmark of personal sovereignty. It
is specifically insulated from governmental interference by the
Constitution and has historically been the linchpin of resistance
to tyranny. And yet, the progressives in both political parties
stand ready to use the coercive power of the government to interfere
with the exercise of that right by law-abiding persons because of
the gross abuse of that right by some crazies in our midst.
When Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence that we are endowed by our Creator with certain inalienable rights, he was marrying the nation at its birth to the ancient principles of the natural law that have animated the Judeo-Christian tradition in the West. Those principles have operated as a break on all governments that recognize them by enunciating the concept of natural rights.
As we have
been created in the image and likeness of God the Father, we are
perfectly free just as He is. Thus, the natural law teaches that
our freedoms are pre-political and come from our humanity and not
from the government, and as our humanity is ultimately divine in
origin, the government, even by majority vote, cannot morally take
natural rights away from us. A natural right is an area of individual
human behavior – like thought, speech, worship, travel, self-defense,
privacy, ownership and use of property, consensual personal intimacy
– immune from government interference and for the exercise of which
we don’t need the government’s permission.
The essence of humanity is freedom. Government – whether voted in peacefully or thrust upon us by force – is essentially the negation of freedom. Throughout the history of the world, people have achieved freedom when those in power have begrudgingly given it up. From the assassination of Julius Caesar to King John’s forced signing of the Magna Carta, from the English Civil War to the triumph of the allies at the end of World War II, from the fall of Communism to the Arab Spring, governments have permitted so-called nobles and everyday folk to exercise more personal freedom as a result of their demands for it and their fighting for it. This constitutes power permitting liberty.
The American
experience was the opposite. Here, each human being is sovereign,
as the colonists were after the Revolution. Here, the delegation
to the government of some sovereignty – the personal dominion over
self – by each American permitted the government to have limited
power in order to safeguard the liberties we retained. Stated differently,
Americans gave up some limited personal freedom to the new government
so it could have the authority and resources to protect the freedoms
we retained. Individuals are sovereign in America, not the government.
This constitutes liberty permitting power.
But we did
not give up any natural rights; rather, we retained them. It is
the choice of every individual whether to give them up. Neither
our neighbors nor the government can make those choices for us,
because we are all without the moral or legal authority to interfere
with anyone else’s natural rights. Since the government derives
all of its powers from the consent of the governed, and since we
each lack the power to interfere with the natural rights of another,
how could the government lawfully have that power? It doesn’t. Were
this not so, our rights would not be natural; they would be subject
to the government’s whims.
To assure that no government would infringe the natural rights of anyone here, the Founders incorporated Jefferson’s thesis underlying the Declaration into the Constitution and, with respect to self-defense, into the Second Amendment. As recently as two years ago, the Supreme Court recognized this when it held that the right to keep and bear arms in one’s home is a pre-political individual right that only sovereign Americans can surrender and that the government cannot take from us, absent our individual waiver.
There have been practical historical reasons for the near universal historical acceptance of the individual possession of this right. The dictators and monsters of the 20th century – from Stalin to Hitler, from Castro to Pol Pot, from Mao to Assad – have disarmed their people, and only because some of those people resisted the disarming were all eventually enabled to fight the dictators for freedom. Sometimes they lost. Sometimes they won.
The principal
reason the colonists won the American Revolution is that they possessed
weapons equivalent in power and precision to those of the British
government. If the colonists had been limited to crossbows that
they had registered with the king’s government in London, while
the British troops used gunpowder when they fought us here, George
Washington and Jefferson would have been captured and hanged.
We also defeated
the king’s soldiers because they didn’t know who among us was armed,
because there was no requirement of a permission slip from the government
in order to exercise the right to self-defense. (Imagine the howls
of protest if permission were required as a precondition to exercising
the freedom of speech.) Today, the limitations on the power and
precision of the guns we can lawfully own not only violate our natural
right to self-defense and our personal sovereignties; they assure
that a tyrant can more easily disarm and overcome us.
The historical reality of the Second Amendment’s protection of the right to keep and bear arms is not that it protects the right to shoot deer. It protects the right to shoot tyrants, and it protects the right to shoot at them effectively, thus, with the same instruments they would use upon us. If the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto had had the firepower and ammunition that the Nazis did, some of Poland might have stayed free and more persons would have survived the Holocaust.
Most people in government reject natural rights and personal sovereignty. Most people in government believe that the exercise of everyone’s rights is subject to the will of those in the government. Most people in government believe that they can write any law and regulate any behavior, not subject to the natural law, not subject to the sovereignty of individuals, not cognizant of history’s tyrants, but subject only to what they can get away with.
Did you empower the government to impair the freedom of us all because of the mania and terror of a few?
Guns and Freedom
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Government
Spying Out of Control
When Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence that we are endowed by our Creator with certain inalienable rights, he was marrying the nation at its birth to the ancient principles of the natural law that have animated the Judeo-Christian tradition in the West. Those principles have operated as a break on all governments that recognize them by enunciating the concept of natural rights.
The essence of humanity is freedom. Government – whether voted in peacefully or thrust upon us by force – is essentially the negation of freedom. Throughout the history of the world, people have achieved freedom when those in power have begrudgingly given it up. From the assassination of Julius Caesar to King John’s forced signing of the Magna Carta, from the English Civil War to the triumph of the allies at the end of World War II, from the fall of Communism to the Arab Spring, governments have permitted so-called nobles and everyday folk to exercise more personal freedom as a result of their demands for it and their fighting for it. This constitutes power permitting liberty.
To assure that no government would infringe the natural rights of anyone here, the Founders incorporated Jefferson’s thesis underlying the Declaration into the Constitution and, with respect to self-defense, into the Second Amendment. As recently as two years ago, the Supreme Court recognized this when it held that the right to keep and bear arms in one’s home is a pre-political individual right that only sovereign Americans can surrender and that the government cannot take from us, absent our individual waiver.
There have been practical historical reasons for the near universal historical acceptance of the individual possession of this right. The dictators and monsters of the 20th century – from Stalin to Hitler, from Castro to Pol Pot, from Mao to Assad – have disarmed their people, and only because some of those people resisted the disarming were all eventually enabled to fight the dictators for freedom. Sometimes they lost. Sometimes they won.
The historical reality of the Second Amendment’s protection of the right to keep and bear arms is not that it protects the right to shoot deer. It protects the right to shoot tyrants, and it protects the right to shoot at them effectively, thus, with the same instruments they would use upon us. If the Jews in the Warsaw ghetto had had the firepower and ammunition that the Nazis did, some of Poland might have stayed free and more persons would have survived the Holocaust.
Most people in government reject natural rights and personal sovereignty. Most people in government believe that the exercise of everyone’s rights is subject to the will of those in the government. Most people in government believe that they can write any law and regulate any behavior, not subject to the natural law, not subject to the sovereignty of individuals, not cognizant of history’s tyrants, but subject only to what they can get away with.
Did you empower the government to impair the freedom of us all because of the mania and terror of a few?
January 10, 2013
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is Theodore
and Woodrow: How Two American Presidents Destroyed Constitutional
Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano and to read
features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit
creators.com.
Copyright
© 2013 Andrew P. Napolitano
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