Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Dershowitz is a disgrace masquerading as a law professor. The Supreme Court has never recognized a special fundamental individual right to own a gun over and above the constitutional property right to own a gun. He knows that. But he's a spotlight hound and he's clearly grandstanding. He knows that states have terrific deference when legislating the health, safety and welfare of its citizenry.I like the quote that a user posted:
"Foolish liberals who are trying to read the 2nd Amendment out of the Constitution by claiming it's not an individual right or that it's too much of a public safety hazard don't see the danger in the big picture. They're courting disaster by encouraging others to use the same means to eliminate portions of the Constitution they don't like." -- Alan Dershowitz
I think those people in (1)(2) do exist, but so what. He knows how the Court has held re the right to bear arms--a state right and not an individual right. If he wants to criticize SCT reasoning, that's fine with me.I think what Dershowitz is trying to say is that that there are two types of people who don't believe the Second Amendment protects individuals: (1) people who think it never protected individuals, and (2) people who argue that it is a relic, that it was written in the time of single shot black powder rifles, that it is no longer necessary, etc.
If you are making the second argument, essentially you are saying that the Bill of Rights can be disregarded when someone decides it is no longer necessary. Thats the "courting with disaster" he is talking about.
That 'relic' argument can be taken in another direction. The right to bear arms could conceivably include nuclear arms. That would likely require some regulation.
I'm sorry but of all Amendments I don't think that "the right to keep and bear arms," could be any clearer....![]()
I guess I'm a little lower functioning today than I normally am ... help me out here. How does your analogy apply?You would think that.
Here is an analogy I found, that I think illustrates it well:
"A well-educated electorate being necessary to the preservation of a free society, the right of the people to read and compose books shall not be infringed."
Obviously this does not mean that only well-educated voters have the right to read or write books. Nor does it mean that the right to read books of one's choosing can be restricted to only those subjects which lead to a well-educated electorate.
I guess I'm a little lower functioning today than I normally am ... help me out here. How does your analogy apply?
Gotchya. Thanks.The full text of the 2nd Amendment is something like:
"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 people try to claim that it only applies to militias, or that it only applies to weapons that are necessary for a militia.
The most obvious interpretation, in most peoples opinions, is that normal citizens make up militias in times of crisis, and that normal citizens should be allowed to keep guns for that purpose. If the founding fathers intended it to apply to states or militias, they wouldn't have said "the right of the people."
The Supreme Court should not have any power in DC.
No taxation without representation
That's an entirely different issue.
This topic NEEDS to be ruled on by the SCOTUS because it impacts the entire country.
Agreed. This is not an issue that falls within the federally sensitive issues of DC. It's an issue that affects American civil rights at the national level ...That's an entirely different issue.
This topic NEEDS to be ruled on by the SCOTUS because it impacts the entire country.
They are still bound by US SC rulings and are therefore not excluded from seeing their issues served by it. Just the facts ...They have no senators so they have no power in who gets affirmed to the court. just the facts
same issue
They are still bound by US SC rulings and are therefore not excluded from seeing their issues served by it. Just the facts ...
They have no senators so they have no power in who gets affirmed to the court. just the facts
same issue
You lost me here. How does having access to the Judicial branch of the federal gov become something you would dissent too?doesn't mean its right.They die in Iraq too even though they have no representation in Congress great country