Court's historic gun ruling affirms our most basic freedom

In the first major decision on gun rights in U. S. history, the Supreme Court of the United States yesterday shot down the District of Columbia's draconian 32-year-old ban on the private ownership of handguns — ruling once and for all that American citizens have an individual right to own guns, not a collective one limiting such ownership to entities affiliated with governments.

The District's gun law was among the nation's harshest — and silliest — denying its citizens the right to protect themselves against criminal invasion of their very homes.

Typical of the approximate 20,000 gun laws already on the books across the nation, the District's foolish restrictions did absolutely nothing to reduce crime or protect the law-abiding citizenry.

Washington, D. C., has been for decades, and remains the murder capital of America. That dubious distinction will likely get adjusted downward now that its citizens are allowed to arm themselves against the predators who so far have enjoyed the government's blessing to prowl its streets and suburbs with carefree impunity.

Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for four colleagues, said the Constitution does not permit "the absolute prohibition of handguns held and used for self-defense in the home."

National Rifle Association Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre announced immediately after the decision that the NRA will file lawsuits in Chicago, all its suburbs and elsewhere to eliminate the current hodgepodge of discriminatory gun-control laws.

"This is a great moment in American history," LaPierre said.

"It vindicates individual Americans all over this country who have always known that this is their freedom worth protecting. Our founding fathers wrote and intended the Second Amendment to be an individual right. The Supreme Court has now acknowledged it. The Second Amendment as an individual right now becomes a real permanent part of American Constitutional law."

U. S. Supreme Court Patriot Heroes:
Chief Justice John Roberts
Justice Antonin Scalia
Justice Samuel Alito
Justice Anthony Kennedy (who swung in the right direction)
Justice Clarence Thomas

Dissenting Dolts:
John Paul Stevens
Stephen Breyer
Ruth Bader Ginsburg
David Souter


That latter group of liberal scum doesn't deserve the title "Justice" before their names. They should be vilified and condemned by every fair-minded American for yet another radical left-wing attempt to legislate from the bench.

The high court has managed to pussyfoot around any clearer interpretation of the issue since the Second Amendment was ratified in 1791.

The amendment reads:

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.

The basic issue for the justices was whether the amendment protects an individual's right to own guns no matter what, or whether that right is somehow tied to service in a state militia.

Whatever reason the Founders had for prefacing the meat and potatoes of the amendment with that introductory phrase ("A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state..."), it has served for decades as the tenuous toehold for tyrannical gun-control fanatics to argue that possession of firearms is limited to some kind of military outfit rather than private citizens.

Finally, for the first time in American history, Justice Scalia has parsed the grammar and syntax of the Second Amendment into the only meaning that makes any sense, and the nation's highest court has settled the matter once and for all.

Scalia logically reasoned that the "militia" reference in the first part of the amendment merely "announces the purpose for which the right was codified: to prevent elimination of the militia." He dismissed any exclusionary aspect of it by reasoning that the Constitution's framers were afraid the new federal government would disarm the populace, as the British had tried to do.

Click HERE for a graphic detailing Scalia's interpretation of the wording, contrasted with the ridiculous flights of fancy from the dissenting Stevens.

The narrow majority highlighted how the nation is split between rational Americans who believe the United States Constitution means exactly what it says, and a large element of liberal radicals who would twist its meaning to their socialist/communist purposes.

The natural right of a people to privately own and keep firearms — not only to defend themselves against criminals, but to take up arms against the government should it become tyrannical — is so basic to the continued existence of human freedom that even the slightest common sense would dictate that this decision should have been unanimous.

Yet it wasn't. It was politically split among liberal and conservative factions, with only the swing vote of Justice Kennedy assuring that common sense and freedom would prevail. That's a piss-poor outcome from what should be a nation's "court of last resort" for determining the quality and extent of a people's freedom.

The very concept that ownership and use of firearms in a free society should be limited to an arm of the government is a rank absurdity that can only be likened to putting a fox in charge of the henhouse.

What the hell were those four dissenting idiots thinking?

They were thinking politically rather than Constitutionally — that's what they were thinking. And in doing so, their petty politics endangered America's most basic safeguard of its citizens against victimization by criminals and oppression by a tyrannical government.

John Paul Stevens, Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and David Souter have forever marked themselves as traitors to freedom and the Supreme Court's Dirty Four.

Background

The law adopted by the District of Columbia's city council in 1976 barred residents from owning handguns unless they had one before the law took effect. Shotguns and rifles could be kept in homes if they were registered, kept unloaded and either disassembled or equipped with trigger locks.

Quite simply, the law rendered citizens effectively defenseless in their own homes against criminals — thugs who assuredly would be armed, since criminals don't obey laws. That's what makes them criminals.

Finally fed up with such idiocy, Dick Anthony Heller, 66, an armed security guard, sued the District after it rejected his application to keep a handgun at his home for protection in the same Capitol Hill neighborhood as the court.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District ruled in Heller's favor and struck down the handgun ban, saying the Constitution guarantees Americans the right to own guns and that a total prohibition on handguns is not compatible with that right.

The District appealed that decision to the U. S. Supreme Court, much to the consternation of many gun-control zealots, who feared the high court would concur with the lower court.

Their fears were obviously justified, and point to the logical conclusion that those zealots damned well knew all along that the amendment applied to private citizens. But when did a gun-control nut ever care about the truth? Never.

The issue caused a split within the Bush administration. Vice President Dick Cheney supported the appeals court ruling, but others in the administration feared it could lead to the undoing of other gun regulations, including a federal law restricting sales of machine guns. Other laws keep felons from buying guns and provide for an instant background check.

Opponents of the law made the obvious complaint that it prevented residents from defending themselves.

Astoundingly, however, they put up with such nonsense for 32 years, while spokesmen for the District ventured the absurd claim that no one would be prosecuted for a gun law violation in cases of self-defense — ignoring the fact that the law made the mere possession of a handgun a prosecutable crime.

Anyone who would believe such an illogically hogwash assertion is in serious need of a course in basic reality.

If a law's on the books, no matter how patently stupid it may be, you can damned well know some politically motivated, zealous prosecutor will file charges under it.

And even if he loses, you'll pay the price for defending yourself from a criminal — and a price for defending yourself in court.

Apropos to the current political season, conservative talk radio temptress Laura Ingraham neatly summed up in her daily Laura's E-Blast newsletter what is no doubt the nation's gun owners' pleasure with the decision:

"ARMS ARE NOT JUST FOR HUGGING! Justice Kennedy blew the Gitmo and child rapist cases but at least went the right way on the Second Amendment in the Heller case. I love how the anti-gun crazies are now contending that they, too, have always believed in the right to have a gun in the home for self-defense. Meanwhile, Barack Obama continues to be the candidate of presto-chango! One minute he thinks the D.C. gun ban is constitutional, the next he's giving moderate praise to the Supreme Court for striking it down. I am celebrating the Heller ruling by heading to the gun range today!"

You'll not likely be alone, Laura, as thousands of other gun owners joyously celebrate likewise.

DOWNLOAD THE FULL TEXT OF THE RULING (1.2 mb PDF file)

Obama's flip-flopping lies on gun control

The REAL Barack Obama on gun control


Posted on 27 Jun 2008, 11:52 - Category: Gun Control
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