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Worry about the
freedom to own a gun – even if you don't
Commentary
by
Charley Reese
The most
intense effort to infringe on the right of Americans to keep and
bear arms is now under way, led mainly by Democrats.
This is a
constitutional matter, not a matter of hardware or crime-fighting.
All Americans, including those who don't own guns, should be
concerned with guarding a right that has been recognized in America
for more than two centuries. Some of us might not choose to exercise
a right, such as speech or assembly, but nevertheless we should not
want that right taken away.
So it is with
the right to keep and bear arms. No one has to exercise that right,
but all should rally to its defense. It, more than any other right,
signifies that Americans are a free people and that sovereignty
rests with the people, not with the government. If you are not a gun
owner, then think of the Second Amendment as a symbol of your status
as a free person with unalienable rights, which are a gift of God,
not of the government.
And right here
is a good time to point out that the Constitution does not, I say
does not, grant anyone any rights whatsoever. What the Constitution
does is simply acknowledge already-existing rights. If you read the
first 10 amendments attentively, you can see that the language
itself clearly indicates this. Nowhere will you find language such
as "the right to . . . is granted."
Let's look at
the Second Amendment, for example, from a grammatical point of view.
The text is as follows:
"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."
Notice that it
does not state that the right of the states to have militias
shall not be infringed. This amendment consists of a nominative
absolute and a subject and verb.
The nominative
absolute is the phrase "A well regulated militia, being
necessary to the security of a free State." The subject of the
sentence is "right." The verb is "shall be
infringed" modified by the adverb, "not."
Thus the main
sentence states plainly that the right of the people to keep and
bear arms shall not be infringed. So what's with the nominative
absolute? Does it limit the right to keep and bear arms? Not at all.
It merely answers the question, why should the right to keep and
bear arms not be infringed.
Harper's
English Grammar has this to say about nominative absolutes:
"The
nominative absolute is, as a rule, the equivalent of an adverbial
clause . . . ." Adverbs, you may recall from high school,
modify verbs, other adverbs or adjectives. They do not modify nouns,
which in this case is "right."
A modern way of
writing might state, "Because a well-trained militia is
essential to the security of a free state, the right of the people
to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."
The only
modifiers of the noun "right" are the phrases "of the
people" (note, please, it refers to people, not state, not
militia) and "to keep and bear arms," which tells us which
right.
At the time
these amendments were written and ratified, the militia was the
people. And the word "regulate," in 18th-century usage,
meant to train or discipline. Today, we generally use the word to
mean control.
Some might say
the Second Amendment is obsolete. Our own century shows us that it
is not. Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Fidel Castro, Pol Pot and Mao
all saw to it that people were disarmed prior to commencing
their reigns of terror and tyranny. God forbid, but Americans, too,
could find themselves some day having to choose between submission
or resistance to a tyrant.
An unarmed
people are never a free people.
Send Charley Reese e-mail OSOreese@aol.com Published
in The Orlando Sentinel on July 20, 1999. |