Criticisms of Eugene Volokh’s Framework, Part I

Eugene Volokh is highlighting his recent law review article detailing a framework in which to think about the Second Amendment in terms of self-defense (he does not go into the resistance to tyrannical government arguments).  I read this in draft, and believe it to be a very thorough and coherent conception of the Second Amendment from the perception of self-defense.  I encourage everyone to take the time to read it (it’s long).  I do, however, have some minor issues with his reasoning as I will lay out over a series of posts.  I will begin with assault weapons.  Let’s start on page 1484 (or 42 on the PDF) of Prof. Volokh’s review:

This is clearest when we look at bans on so-called “assault weapons.” Such bans have been hotly controversial, but the dispute about them is largely symbolic. The laws generally define assault weapons to be a set of semiautomatic weapons (fully automatic weapons have long been heavily regulated, and lawfully owned fully automatics are very rare and very expensive) that are little different from semiautomatic pistols and rifles that are commonly owned by tens of millions of law-abiding citizens. “Assault weapons” are no more “high power” than many other pistols and rifles that are not covered by the bans. Definitions of assault weapons reflect this functional similarity: They often focus on features that have little relation to dangerousness, such as folding stocks, pistol grips, bayonet mounts, flash suppressors, or (for assault handguns but not assault rifles) magazines that attach outside the pistol grip or barrel shrouds that can be used as hand-holds.

It’s therefore hard to see how assault weapons bans would do much to decrease crime, since even a criminal who complies with the ban could easily find an unbanned gun that is as criminally useful as the unbanned gun, and is as dangerous to victims as is the banned gun. The class of assault weapons is indeed not “typical,” at least in the sense of common use. But there is no reason to think that most assault weapons owners have them for criminal purposes. And assault weapons are not more dangerous than the usual gun, which in my view makes them fit within the category of “arms.”

Nonetheless, the availability of close substitutes for assault weapons— the very reason why assault weapons bans are unlikely to work—also makes it hard to see how assault weapons bans would materially interfere with self- defense, at least given definitions such as those in the 1994 federal statute. And the reasons the Court gave for why handgun bans are impermissible—that handguns are “easier to hold and control (particularly for persons with physical infirmities), easier to carry, easier to maneuver in enclosed spaces, [or easier to handle while] still hav[ing] a hand free to dial 911”—do not apply to assault weapons bans: Assault weapons are no more useful for self-defense than are many other handguns, rifles, and shotguns that aren’t prohibited by assault weapons bans. Assault weapons bans might well be pointless, and might offend gun owners who want the freedom to choose precisely what sorts of guns they own. But this need not make assault weapons bans unconstitutional, if the courts focus on whether the law substantially burdens self-defense.

I disagree.  Prof. Volokh does an excellent job of outlining why so-called assault weapons are neither more dangerous or unusual than other types of firearms, but I think his conclusion that easy substitutes are available overlooks an important factor, and a factor that I do not think should be readily discounted by the courts.  The courts ought to categorically reject any substitution arguments, in determining the burden on self-defense, because substitution arguments will invariably overlook the multitude of factors that go into determining which gun is right for someone.  It’s a complex equation that the courts ought not intrude themselves into, once the dangerousness argument has been dealt with.  Let me tell you a tale of two rifles.

One of the most popular semi-automatic rifles on the market is the SKS.  I can hardly think of any of the gun safes I know that doesn’t have at least one, and they are becoming increasingly popular for hunters on a budget in states that allow hunting with semi-autos.  While in some states, they are banned in certain configurations, the SKS remains cheap and popular because they are considered “curios” under federal law, they can be imported into the country largely in tact from surplus stocks in Eastern Europe.  They require no additional work to comply with federal or most state laws once they are imported.  A decent rifle can be had for under 200 US dollars in most gun shops.

In contrast, we can look at the semi-automatic Kalashnikovs.  A decade ago, most of these rifles could be had for around 300 dollars.  By all rights, the Kalashnikov should be no more expensive than the SKS, but is because manufacturers can’t import them legally, but have to do a great deal of assembly in the United States, with American made parts, to get around the import restrictions.   In fact, due to increasing restrictions by the federal government in importation of receivers, under the still standing importation ban instituted under the first Bush Administration, the price of these has risen to more than 600 dollars, since it’s forced manufacturers to do more of the work here.   They are now, because politicians and bureaucrats have deemed them “assault weapons”, out of the price range for a lot of individuals who lack the means the buy them.

As tempting as it might be to argue, because the SKS is available, and cheap, it’s a reasonable substitute for the Kalashnikov, that overlooks several factors.  For one, the Kalashnikov takes a detachable magazine, which has a lot of advantages for self-defense.  Chief is that the magazine can be stored already loaded, separate from the firearm, eliminating the need to store the rifle loaded.  It also allows for quicker reloading, if necessary, or if a magazine fails.  There are conversions for the SKS to give it a detachable magazine, but they make the gun less reliable, and make it illegal in a few states.  Second, the Kalashnikov is much shorter than the SKS, which makes it more convenient to store, and makes it easier to maneuver around tight corners.  More importantly, perhaps, the shorter rifle makes it harder for an assailant to grab.  The pistol grip on a Kalashnikov makes it easier to wield for most people, and particularly easier to wield by someone who has arthritis of the hands, or who perhaps isn’t quite strong enough to get a firm grip on a standard rifle stock.  Along that same vein, the Kalashnikov is also lighter, and easier to mount accessories to.

I think it’s also reasonable to argue that the right to keep and bear arms also must include the right to practice with them, and with the Kalashnikov being available in many more calibers than the SKS, it offers advantages in that regard.  The firearm I can find the most ammunition for right now is my 5.45x39mm Kalashnikov.  It’s one of the few rounds that’s still cheap and relatively available.  I don’t shoot my SKS as much because the ammunition it takes is harder to come by right now.

It’s quite easy to suggest that the courts can consider the substitution argument, which from the comfort of the bench, seems to be a tempting game to play.  But it’s not so easy if the proffered substitute doesn’t work for a specific individuals needs, limitations, stature, etc.  What works best for the individual should be left to the individual.  That is, after all, why it’s an individual right, is it not?  Once the courts dispose of the “dangerous and unusual” argument when it comes to semi-automatic rifles, that’s where the analysis should end.  If semi-automatic rifles are judicially noticed as being useful for self-defense, then the Second Amendment should protect their ownership in any configuration that may suit a specific individual need.  To do otherwise would be doing the Second Amendment rights of a great many Americans a grave disservice.

UPDATE: Part II is here.

UPDATE: Part III is here.

Seal: It’s What’s For Dinner

There’s a controversy up in the Great White North about whether restaurants ought to be serving seal meat.  Personally, if you’re killing the animal for the fur, what’s the sense in wasting the rest of the animal if people want to eat it?

He has since taken a deep, almost protective interest in the way seal reaches his restaurant, traveling to the islands to meet the hunters, and visiting the abattoir where the meat is butchered. Mr. Lenglet also sought out local purveyors who could smoke the meat.

You can smoke seal?  Hey, I have a smoker now.  Seal BBQ anyone?  Apparently it has a somewhat fishy taste, which is odd for a mammal, but I’m guessing it’s because seals eat mainly fish.

On the Blogosphere 2.0

Megan McArdle points out this interesting article over at 11D on where blogs have evolved to, that I think is largely correct.  Here are some interesting points, but go read the whole thing:

1. The A-List Doesn’t Matter Anymore. I just read a really nice paper that came up with a new method for determining the top 20 bloggers.[…]

I think this is mostly correct, but I wouldn’t discount the fact that most of these blogs have traffic into the stratosphere compared to niche blogs like mine, or even SayUncle’s for that matter.  The A-Listers still matter, but my understanding from Bitter, who was doing this long before me, is that the assertion that A-List blogs don’t drive the readers they used to is true.  Many of their original blogs have also disappeared, and were subsumed by new media projects like Pajamas Media, or Hot Air.

2. It’s all about niche blogs. If you have a particular expertise and unique perspective, they you can quickly gain a following. Everyone else is out of luck.

This is absolutely true, and largely because there will never be another Instapundit.  The nature of the ‘sphere has changed too much, and I don’t think anyone who’s not a niche blog is going to be able to rise to that level.  When I “blogged” on LiveJournal, I covered generic political topics and guns occaistionally.   When I launched into blogging two and a half years ago, I stuck strictly to gun blogging because I thought it was the only area I’d have a unique perspective to offer.

3. Norms and practices. Bloggers have undermined the blogosphere. Bloggers do not link to each other as much as they used to.

This is true, and it makes it a lot harder for someone to become successful in this medium.  I would have not found success if it hadn’t been for SayUncle and Bitter, who linked to me heavily in the beginning.  The problem is, finding things to link to is extremely time consuming.  I have several dozen blogs on my RSS feed, and it’s been whittled down as of late because I couldn’t keep up with everything.  I have 785 unread posts in total right now, even with a reduced number of blogs.  There’s no way I can go through everything.

4. Blogger Burn Out. Many of the top bloggers have been absorbed into some other professional enterprise or are burnt. It’s a lot of work to blog. Most bloggers, and not just the A-listers, spend 3-5 hours every day blogging. That’s hard to maintain, especially since there is no money in this.

It’s true.  It takes a tremendous amount of work to find things to blog about.  Truth is, since Bitter is no longer blogging, she helps me with that a great deal.  I probably couldn’t keep this up if she weren’t constantly scouring Al Gore’s Internets during the day looking for things.  If she ends up getting a job, it will cut down my free time in the evenings and in the mornings greatly if I have to do this all myself.  Having Bitter largely stop gun blogging, and having one of us unemployed, is good for the blogging, and taking the pressure off me.

9. Link Monitoring. In the past, I could easily figure out which blogs had linked to me and then send them a reciprocal link. For whatever reasons, Google Blog and Technorati aren’t picking up the smaller blogs, and I have no idea who’s linking to me.

This is a big pet peeve of mine.  Technorati tracking is no longer worth squat, and Google picks up too many useless spam blogs, forcing me to have to pick through to find the real people who are linking.  In the past, linking was a way to get noticed, and way to keep a conversation moving through the blogosphere.  A great traffic driver was writing something everyone else wanted to talk about.  Now I have little idea who’s linking to me.  Trackbacks are pretty much dead too, thanks to trackback spammers.

Who’s Drinking Beer?

A guide to which states consume the most beer.  Seems that Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota and Nevada drink more than most.  You’d think for people that drink so much beer, Montana would have better microbreweries.  Maybe this is my excuse to move out there.

Parking Lot Thing in Arizona

Dustin looks at all the successes this year.  Many of these are great victories, but among those are the Parking Lot bill.  From the “not sure why NRA makes this a priority” department, the Goldwater Institute, normally a friend of gun rights, is planning on challenging the legitimacy of the law.

“The Goldwater Institute strongly supports the right to keep and bear arms,” Bolick stated, adding that the Institute filed a brief in Heller v. District of Columbia, the U.S. Supreme Court case that strengthened Second Amendment rights. “But it is a right against government, not against private individuals. This bill does violence to private property rights.”

As I’ve said, I don’t think the issue is really about property rights, but is really about employment law.  Whatever is in your car is your property, and your employer has no legal power to search your vehicle.  But your employer doesn’t have to continue a relationship with you if you do something that’s a violation of the employee agreement.  That employers bar guns in their workplaces and on their property is no more a violation of my right to bear arms than if a friend has the same rule for his house.  My response to a friend who wanted to search my vehicle would be the same as it would be to an employer, namely a to very nicely and politely tell them to go to hell.

As a society, we do accept government intrusion into the employer/employee relationship for a number of things, chief among those to prevent discrimination.  But that is a special case.  As a rule, I’m not comfortable with the government interfering in private relationships.  It is a restriction on freedom of association that should not occur in a free society.  There are better ways to make companies reconsider anti-gun policies than by government meddling in private relationships.

On the Original Purpose of the Second Amendment

Let’s say that a future government has decided to incarcerate wrong thinking people into “reeducation camps,” to try to get people thinking right, and to quietly “take care” of all those who can’t be rehabilitated.  Free speech is suppressed, the media made an arm of the state, and the government refuses to stand for free and fair elections.  In that situation, most people would recognize the government has forfeited any claim to legitimacy.  We fought a World War, and a risky, expensive, and protracted cold war against such governments.  Most people, I would wager, would agree such a government ought to be resisted, and violently if necessary.  But I have to question how some view the form that would take on.

Do folks really believe that if the proverbial shit were to hit the fan, that the people will prevail by the people bringing out their privately owned tanks, RPGs, anti-tank missiles, artillery, mortars, F-16s, helicopter gunships, surface-to-air missiles, to fight and defeat a modern army, or even part of one, on its own terms in conventional military operations?  I would posit that warfare has changed a great deal since 1776, and even if the courts agreed the Second Amendment protected all of these things, it would be entirely symbolic and meaningless.  Very few people could afford them, or even if they could afford them, they wouldn’t own such things in large enough numbers to make any real difference.

This is not to say that I think the Second Amendment’s purpose of enabling people to resist a criminal government is completely obsolete, just that it’s not going to happen the same way it did in 1776, only with modern weapons.  Any resistance to a criminal government in the modern age will take conventional small arms, explosives, information, intelligence, and will.  Small arms we have to ensure are protected under the Second Amendment.  Explosives are impossible to control in such a situation, and will be available no matter what laws regulate them under a legitimate government.  Intelligence and will are organizational qualities that are unrelated to arms.  Hell, I would argue that the ability to tinker with model airplanes is more important to the modern concept of “militia” than knowing the principles of artillery, and knowing RF communication principles far more important than knowing logistics.

In the history of 20th century warfare, this has played out more than a few times.  The Vietcong engaged in an extensive and largely successful guerrilla campaign, with only what their fighters could carry on their backs.  In fact, the fatal mistake of the Vietcong was to come out of the jungle, and fight an offensive against the U.S. military on conventional terms.  Militarily, Tet was a defeat for the VC, and it destroyed them as a fighting force.  But Tet broke the American will, and in that sense was not a failure.  It is, however, a harsh lesson what happens when a guerrilla force tries to fight a conventional army on its own terms.

What I advocate here is not an extinction of the original purpose of the Second Amendment, but to emphasise that the priority has to be on protecting conventional small arms.  I don’t think whether destructive devices are protected or not really makes all that much difference in the overall scheme of things.  The nature of modern warfare has not made the Second Amendment’s “defense against tyrannical government” obsolete, but it has changed the equation enough that appeals to how things were in 1776 aren’t much use in figuring out how it would be applied in a modern context.