How Brady Really Won

Dennis Henigan explains:

LaPierre may also be contemplating the future of the gun debate now that handgun bans are “off the table,” in the words of the Heller majority opinion. How long will the NRA’s leadership be able to argue, with anything approaching a straight face, that the Second Amendment precludes gun regulations like background checks, limits on large-volume sales, safe storage requirements, assault weapon bans, owner licensing, and registration of gun sales, when both Heller and McDonald read like legal briefs for the constitutionality of those laws? And, more importantly, how long will the NRA’s leadership be successful in using its legendary scare tactics to convince gun owners to oppose every gun regulation as a step down the “slippery slope” to a gun ban, when Heller and McDonald have taken gun bans “off the table”?

Wayne’s really scared, you see. The gig’s about to be up. This was a secret plan to win it all on the part of the Bradys all along!  I am the Great Oz! Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. But how is the Brady Campaign going to keep raising money based on an end product they can no longer deliver? How many people are going to give to close the gun show loophole? How many people even understand it? No, the fight isn’t over. Not by a long shot. I don’t know anyone at NRA who believes that, or is worried about too many people without enough to do. But let’s go down the list anyway:

“like background checks”

No one, to my knowledge has made that argument yet. But what if the system goes down for a few days? For those two days, the Second Amendment is cancelled? I that case it defaults to the Brady waiting period. But is a waiting period unconstitutional? Can you delay exercise of a constitutional right? If so, by how much? The Supreme Court in Casey upheld a waiting period for abortions of twenty-four hours, but rejected a forty-eight hour period.

“limits on large-volume sales”

What other constitutional right can you ration? If you want to buy a gun for your vacation home, and a gun for your regular home, and of course we don’t have carry, because the Bradys tell us a ban on that is constitutional, so you can have your Second Amendment rights at your home, but not your vacation home, unless you wait a month?

“safe storage requirements”

Already largely thrown out in Heller because it substantially burdens self-defense with a firearm.

“assault weapon bans”

Assault weapons are in common use, and used for lawful purposes. They are useful for self-defense, otherwise the police would not use them.

“owner licensing, and registration of gun sales”

The only other fundamental right that’s licensed is marriage. There are some rights you have to register to exercise. This one they might have the strongest case on. But it’s not open and shut, like they make it out to be. There’s ample reasons with other rights why you can’t be required to get a license or register. This is one area that’s probably smarter to fight in the political arena rather than the Courts.

More on NRA “Gag Order”

This is an update from the post from yesterday about an alleged “gag order” from NRA to its Board of Directors, as reported by Red State. From Tom King, President of New York State Rifle and Pistol Association, and also a member of the NRA Board.

NRA Members of New York,

There are a myriad of rumors regarding the NRA cluttering the internet but one in particular is causing me personal anguish. That rumor reports that the NRA staff has issued a gag order to the NRA Board of Directors regarding comments on the nomination of Elena Kagen to the Supreme Court. Let me explain something about the structure of the NRA; authority to do anything within the NRA comes from you the members of the NRA. That authority is delegated to your elected Board of Directors who in turn elects officers and formulate policy that is then issued to the Executive Vice President/CEO who then turns that policy into action through the professional staff. Gag orders for the Board of Directors do not exist.

Friends; those of you close to me should know by now that telling me I can’t speak up on an issue of vital importance to the 2nd Amendment is going to get you into a war. I spoke vociferously regarding the nomination of Sonya Sotomayor to the Supreme Court; in fact I joined a number of national 2nd Amendment leaders protesting the appointment and urging through a nationally published letter she not be confirmed. I did that because of her ties to New York State and the position she took, on then recent, anti 2nd Amendment decisions. I have not taken a position on Elena Kagen’s nomination to the Supreme Court because I find it absurd that anyone with no judicial experience would be nominated to the Supreme Court and fervently hope the Republican Senators will block this nomination.

The 2nd Amendment protects all the rest. Why would the NRA, the protector of the 2nd Amendment, attempt to limit the 1st Amendment rights of its’ own Board of Directors? It does not but if you think the Board members you voted for could be gagged then you voted for the wrong guys.

Tom King
NRA Board of Directors
President
NYS Rifle & Pistol Association
Μολὼν λαßέ

So I think it’s safe to say that no such gag order exists. Like I said, really, the best NRA staff can do is ask. They’re not really in any position to demand. NRA has stated its position on this nomination, and we’re still going through the confirmation hearings currently.

Next Step

Alan Gura has revealed his next move. This is an interesting case, involving North Carolina’s emergency powers provision, which appears very broad:

In February 2010, the City of King and Stokes County declared a state of emergency due to heavy snowfall and local power outages. The proclamation from the City of King forbade the sale or purchase of firearms and ammunition, as well as the possession of firearms and ammunition off an individual’s premises. If you had a North Carolina Concealed Handgun Permit, it didn’t matter as the state of emergency proclamation superseded it.

This will be interesting to watch, especially after the election. One of NRA’s legislative priorities has been fixing emergency powers provisions in states that have had bad ones. Democratic control of the North Carolina legislature, with anti-gun reps heading up key committees, has prevented substantial improvement in North Carolina law to date. If the North Carolina legislature flips to Republican control, I would expect NRA to move for a legislative fix. I’m not sure if that would moot this case or not. Either way, there’s no reason to not use the Courts, and Gura is always very careful about putting together good cases that win. It’ll be interesting to see how this one plays out.

Congratulations and Thanks are in Order

First, to Otis McDonald, Adam Orlov, David and Colleen Lawson, the Second Amendment Foundation and the Illinois State Rifle Association for winning their case. Congratulations and thanks also to the attorney who brought, argued, and won the case, Alan Gura. That two landmark cases with his name on it now. I would also take a moment to recognize Paul Clement, who NRA brought in, over the objections of the petitioners, to argue Due Process, which you might remember I had disagreed with. I think it would be unfair not to recognize his contribution to oral arguments, and also for his amicus brief on behalf of Members of Congress, which was cited in the opinion.

But aside from the folks who won the case, there are many who built the solid foundation upon which these victories stand. They should not go unrecognized. First, I should recognize Steven Halbrook. Halbrook was cited multiple times in the opinion, but his academic work on the 14th Amendment was much of the foundational basis for this opinion. Fellow blogger Dave Hardy was cited twice, in Justice Thomas’ opinion, and the opinion. He wrote one of the Amicus briefs on behalf of Academics for the Second Amendment. Dave’s involvement in this issue goes back to the early 70s, and he was one of the few individuals publishing law reviews on the Second Amendment, long before it was fashionable. Clayton Cramer was cited in both the opinion and dissent. Clayton has been writing on this subject for years, and came to be well known with his involvement in taking down Michael Bellesiles. Bob Cottrol was cited multiple times in Justice Thomas’ opinion, and has done extensive academic work on this subject, along with Ray Diamond, who co-authored one of the cited sources. We also should not forget the work of Don Kates, Joe Olsen, Dave Kopel, Glenn Reynolds, Eugene Volokh, Joyce Lee Malcom, and probably half a dozen other folks I’m forgetting.

I’d also like to take time to thank some folks at NRA for their work on this case, namely Sarah Gervase and Carol Bambery, who’s brief on behalf of Women Academics was cited in the Court’s opinion. We also should not overlook the work of NRA General Counsel himself, Bob Dowlut, who’s work on this issue goes back to the 70s, and has contributed much to this issue academically and in his role as NRA General Counsel, a position I believe he has held since I was in elementary school.

ASHA Shills

Sensibly Progressive points out that American Hunters and Shooters Association once assured us that Sotomayor was going to be our justice, and presumably we self-defense whackos just needed to quiet down and accept her. Well, as the decision yesterday has shown, she doesn’t believe Americans have a fundamental right to keep a handgun in their home according to our constitution. From the dissent she joined:

In my view, JUSTICE STEVENS has demonstrated that the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of “substantive due process” does not include a general right to keep and bear firearms for purposes of private self-defense. As he argues, the Framers did not write the Second Amendment with this objective in view. See ante, at 41–44 (dissenting opinion). Unlike other forms of substantive liberty, the carrying of arms for that purpose often puts others’ lives at risk. See ante, at 35–37. And the use of arms for private self-defense does not warrant federal constitutional protection from state regulation. See ante, at 44–51.

The Court, however, does not expressly rest its opinion upon “substantive due process” concerns. Rather, it directs its attention to this Court’s “incorporation” precedents and asks whether the Second Amendment right to private self-defense is “fundamental” so that it applies to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment. See ante, at 11–19.

I shall therefore separately consider the question of “incorporation.” I can find nothing in the Second Amendment’s text, history, or underlying rationale that could warrant characterizing it as “fundamental” insofar as it seeks to protect the keeping and bearing of arms for private self-defense purposes. Nor can I find any justification for interpreting the Constitution as transferring ultimate regulatory authority over the private uses of firearms from democratically elected legislatures to courts or from the States to the Federal Government. I therefore conclude that the Fourteenth Amendment does not “incorporate” the Second Amendment’s right “to keep and bear Arms.” And I consequently dissent.

We’ve known for a while the Emperor has no clothes when it comes to AHSA. Now the Emperor’s pasty white skin is blinding people.

What Objectivity Looks Like

I have never heard of the Alyona Show, but apparently it exists on the RT network. and Ladd Everitt from Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, and J.P. Freire from the Washington Examiner appeared on it in regards to the McDonald ruling:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QuLaeCMN0zo[/youtube]

She asked tough questions of both sides, and was intelligent and informed about the issue. Not to mention kind of hot. Note that RT is Russia Today. What is Russia today?

RT was launched as Russia Today by an autonomous non-profit organization in 2005. However, much the funding to this organization, ANO TV-Novosti is injected from Russian Federal Budget (2.4 Billion Rubles in 2007 [1]). In 2007, RT’s monthly audience share exceeded that of CNN and Bloomberg TV among NTV-PLUS satellite subscribers in Moscow.

Get that? The former commies are managing to have better coverage of our issues than CNN and Bloomberg. This is a sad, friggin state of affairs for our media here when the Russian Government manages to fund media that’s more objective and informed than our own. God help us.

Commentary in the New York Times

Includes commentary from Glenn Reynolds, who notes:

Even after the Supreme Court’s 2008 landmark opinion in District of Columbia v. Heller, it remained possible that the right to arms wouldn’t be incorporated against state and local governments. But after McDonald, the Second Amendment joins other provisions of the Bill of Rights that are routinely enforced against both federal and state infringements.

It may wind up being protected fairly well — as, say, First Amendment speech rights generally are — or poorly, as Fourth Amendment rights against search and seizure often are, but it is now a full-fledged part of the Bill of Rights, not a neglected stepchild that has been interpreted out of existence.

Read the whole thing. I’m still working my way through the opinion. Been reading off and on all day. My eyes are getting tired, so I may have to save the dissent until later.

Thomas’ Privileges or Immunities Opinion

Thomas agreed with the majority in McDonald in judgement, but he wrote his own opinion suggesting that the Court ought to incorporate the Second Amendment under the Privileges or Immunities clause of the 14th Amendment, as the petitioners in McDonald wanted.

I cannot accept a theory of constitutional interpretation that rests on such tenuous footing. This Court’s substan- tive due process framework fails to account for both the text of the Fourteenth Amendment and the history that led to its adoption, filling that gap with a jurisprudence devoid of a guiding principle. I believe the original mean- ing of the Fourteenth Amendment offers a superior alter- native, and that a return to that meaning would allow this Court to enforce the rights the Fourteenth Amendment is designed to protect with greater clarity and predictability than the substantive due process framework has so far managed.

I acknowledge the volume of precedents that have been built upon the substantive due process framework, and I further acknowledge the importance of stare decisis to the stability of our Nation’s legal system. But stare decisis is only an “adjunct” of our duty as judges to decide by our best lights what the Constitution means. Planned Par- enthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U. S. 833, 963 (1992) (Rehnquist, C. J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in part). It is not “an inexorable com- mand.” Lawrence, supra, at 577. Moreover, as judges, we interpret the Constitution one case or controversy at a time. The question presented in this case is not whether our entire Fourteenth Amendment jurisprudence must be preserved or revised, but only whether, and to what ex- tent, a particular clause in the Constitution protects the particular right at issue here. With the inquiry appropri- ately narrowed, I believe this case presents an opportunity to reexamine, and begin the process of restoring, the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment agreed upon by those who ratified it.

I wish we had four more on the Court like him, because I generally agree with Thomas that stare decisis should not stand when it’s in clear conflict with the text and meaning of the Constitution, as it is here. Thomas’ opinion goes into a detailed analysis of Privileges and Immunities, and what types of rights it could conceivably cover. He also goes into the Reconstruction history of the 14th Amendment:

As a whole, these well-circulated speeches indicate that §1 was understood to enforce constitutionally declared rights against the States, and they provide no suggestion that any language in the section other than the Privileges or Immunities Clause would accomplish that task.

When read against this backdrop, the civil rights legis-
lation adopted by the 39th Congress in 1866 further sup- ports this view. Between passing the Thirteenth Amend- ment—which outlawed slavery alone—and the Fourteenth Amendment, Congress passed two significant pieces of legislation. The first was the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which provided that “all persons born in the United States” were “citizens of the United States” and that “such citizens, of every race and color, . . . shall have the same right” to, among other things, “full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and prop- erty, as is enjoyed by white citizens.” Ch. 31, §1, 14 Stat. 27.

Both proponents and opponents of this Act described it as providing the “privileges” of citizenship to freedmen, and defined those privileges to include constitutional rights, such as the right to keep and bear arms. See 39th Cong. Globe 474 (remarks of Sen. Trumbull) (stating that the “the late slaveholding States” had enacted laws “de- priving persons of African descent of privileges which are essential to freemen,” including “prohibit[ing] any negro or mulatto from having fire-arms” and stating that “[t]he purpose of the bill under consideration is to destroy all these discriminations”); id., at 1266–1267 (remarks of Rep. Raymond) (opposing the Act, but recognizing that to “[m]ake a colored man a citizen of the United States” would guarantee to him, inter alia, “a defined status . . . a right to defend himself and his wife and children; a right to bear arms”).

Three months later, Congress passed the Freedmen’s Bureau Act, which also entitled all citizens to the “full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings concerning per- sonal liberty” and “personal security.” Act of July 16, 1866, ch. 200, §14, 14 Stat. 176. The Act stated expressly that the rights of personal liberty and security protected by the Act “includ[ed] the constitutional right to bear arms.” Ibid.

Next we have a cite in Thomas’ opinion for Dave Hardy:

First, however consequential we consider the question today, the nationalization of constitutional rights was not the most controversial aspect of the Fourteenth Amend- ment at the time of its ratification. The Nation had just endured a tumultuous civil war, and §§2, 3, and 4—which reduced the representation of States that denied voting rights to blacks, deprived most former Confederate officers of the power to hold elective office, and required States to disavow Confederate war debts—were far more polarizing and consumed far more political attention. See Wilden- thal 1600; Hardy, Original Popular Understanding of the Fourteenth Amendment as Reflected in the Print Media of 1866–1868, 30 Whittier L. Rev. 695, 699 (2009).

Thomas’ opinion is an excellent piece of originalist writing, very similar to Heller, in that regard. It goes into serious historical detail to make its case, highlighting the racist origins of gun control laws in this country every step of the way.

Cruikshank’s holding that blacks could look only to state governments for protection of their right to keep and bear arms enabled private forces, often with the assistance of local governments, to subjugate the newly freed slaves and their descendants through a wave of private violence designed to drive blacks from the voting booth and force them into peonage, an effective return to slavery. Without federal enforcement of the inalienable right to keep and bear arms, these militias and mobs were tragically suc- cessful in waging a campaign of terror against the very people the Fourteenth Amendment had just made citizens.Take, for example, the Hamburg Massacre of 1876. There, a white citizen militia sought out and murdered a troop of black militiamen for no other reason than that they had dared to conduct a celebratory Fourth of July parade through their mostly black town. The white mili- tia commander, “Pitchfork” Ben Tillman, later described this massacre with pride: “[T]he leading white men of Edgefield” had decided “to seize the first opportunity that the negroes might offer them to provoke a riot and teach the negroes a lesson by having the whites demonstrate their superiority by killing as many of them as was justifi- able.” S. Kantrowitz, Ben Tillman & the Reconstruction of White Supremacy 67 (2000) (ellipsis, brackets, and inter- nal quotation marks omitted). None of the perpetrators of the Hamburg murders was ever brought to justice.22[…]

The use of firearms for self-defense was often the only way black citizens could protect themselves from mob violence. As Eli Cooper, one target of such violence, is said to have explained, “‘[t]he Negro has been run over for fifty years, but it must stop now, and pistols and shotguns are the only weapons to stop a mob.’” Church Burnings Fol- low Negro Agitator’s Lynching, Chicago Defender, Sept. 6, 1919, in id., at 124. Sometimes, as in Cooper’s case, self- defense did not succeed. He was dragged from his home by a mob and killed as his wife looked on. Ibid. But at other times, the use of firearms allowed targets of mob violence to survive. One man recalled the night during his childhood when his father stood armed at a jail until morning to ward off lynchers. See Cottrol, 354. The experience left him with a sense, “not ‘of powerlessness, but of the “possibilities of salvation”’” that came from standing up to intimidation.

In my view, the record makes plain that the Framers of the Privileges or Immunities Clause and the ratifying-era public understood—just as the Framers of the Second Amendment did—that the right to keep and bear arms was essential to the preservation of liberty. The record makes equally plain that they deemed this right necessary to include in the minimum baseline of federal rights that the Privileges or Immunities Clause established in the wake of the War over slavery. There is nothing about Cruikshank’s contrary holding that warrants its retention.

I agree with the Court that the Second Amendment is fully applicable to the States. I do so because the right to keep and bear arms is guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment as a privilege of American citizenship.

Congratulations to Bob Cottrol for being cited in Thomas’ opinion. I sincerely hope that Thomas’ opinion doesn’t get overlooked because it was not the majority view. It’s well worth reading, even for laymen, and deserves an equal place to the rest of the McDonald ruling.

Reactions

I will get to Justice Thomas’ concurring opinion in a minute, which is the only opinion based on Privileges or Immunities of the majority, as well as the two dissenting opinions in the case a bit later. But first some reactions. I think Jacob had the money quite earlier when he said, “Who will have the most outrageous outburst? Daley, Bloomberg or Meano?” Well, Bloomberg’s statement is here, in which he declares victory in McDonald. This reflects the opinion of the Brady Campaign, who are also declaring victory. Doesn’t look like Daley has commented yet, and neither has Menino, so I guess Bloomberg gets the win!

Josh Sugarmann, head of the Violence Policy Center, to his credit, at least has the ability to call a spade a spade and show they understand who won. Give the Bradys lemons they’ll make lemonade. Give Josh lemons he’ll just get more sour. VPC’s official statement is very much them, and can basically be summed up as “The gun lobby won, so now everyone is going to die!!!”

On our side, The Tribune notes that residents they asked were pleased about the decision. NSSF is pleased, no doubt, if you ask Josh, so they can continue to produce their baby killing bullet hoses and sell them to criminals. Also see this release from the Attorney General of Texas, Greg Abbott, who filed a brief in this case along with 38 other states’ attorneys general. SAF has every right to be proud of their accomplishment in this case as well, being the main backers of Alan Gura’s efforts on behalf of gun rights. NRA has issued two statements, one by Wayne LaPierre, and the other by ILA, noting they are pleased with the results in the case. ISRA, who was a party to the case, reaction is “utter delight.”