The Second Amendment in the Bill of Rights was melded together from several proposals and simplified into twenty-seven words. This brevity is often blamed for the enigmatic meaning that has fueled the recent debate on guns, government, and individual rights. Lawyers, judges, historians, and political scientists delve repeatedly into the 18th century world of the Framers in attempts to ascertain the intended meaning of the Second Amendment.
Second Amendment ratified in 1791:
“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.” [1]
There are several opposing interpretations of the Second Amendment. For some, the amendment is strictly martial and should be seen as ensuring the continued funding and arming of state militias. Others see the militia clause as a utopian ideal that only amplifies a direct right of the individual to keep and bear arms. Other variations range from reading a right to revolution in the amendment to dismissing the amendment entirely as obsolete and outdated for the twenty-first century.
The recent Supreme Court decisions of District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008 – Opinion PDF) and McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 3025 (2010 – Opinion PDF) specifically addressed two of the most contentious interpretations of the Second Amendment. In District of Columbia v. Heller the individual ownership of guns for self-defense was recognized as a Second Amendment right by the Supreme Court for the first time. In 2010, McDonald v. Chicago then added that the Fourteenth Amendment incorporated the Second Amendment extending the amendment’s reach to state governments. Both of these decisions were split five to four and dissenting opinions highlighted the difference in interpretations of the Second Amendment that persist. While it is expected that these rulings will remain as precedent for some time, the history and debate about the Second Amendment continues. Indeed, if history has taught us anything it is that this amendment has not been easily or clearly defined since its ratification under the Bill of Rights.
Originalism and History
One of the difficulties in interpreting the Second Amendment is deciding which sources to use for analysis. In part, the choice in sources depends on a scholars training and background. Lawyers and judges often focus on the amendment in one of two ways: original intent or original meaning. Both methods are focused on finding the correct legal interpretation. Original intent concentrates on the word choice, word placement, and, sometimes, drafts of the amendment as it made its way through legislation. The focus on original meaning includes a broader spectrum of primary sources to elucidate the context and understanding of those writing the amendment. Popular sources include records from ratification at the state level, popular opinions from Framers such as The Federalist Papers, and private correspondence from key figures like James Madison. At times, the longer legal and legislative tradition from England may also be discussed to further clarify meaning. Historians often add even more sources using a wider range of documents from both before and after ratification in attempts to gain a picture of the overall context of the late 18th century. This broader stroke can help inform how the amendment was understood but can include interpretation beyond the intended meaning of the Framers.[2] Nonetheless, historians find viewing the amendment in this full context more informative than restricting sources to a single moment that cannot be pinpointed with certainty. The very idea that there is a singular "truth" is both limiting and unrealistic and runs the risk of fabricating a monolithic meaning instead of embracing the disparate opinions that existed even when the Bill of Rights was drafted. Everyday people often countered the ideal (and some may argue elite) expectations of the Framers. For example, our forthcoming article on popular rebellions will show that many "rebels" thought they were following the mandate of the Second Amendment. While falling outside the direct legal interpretation, these populist views are still informative and highlight the multiple interpretations of the amendment even as it was being ratified. Both approaches have created a large library of material for understanding the Second Amendment.
In addition to sources used, the approaches taken by lawyers and historians often differ. Lawyers examine the Second Amendment looking for an exact interpretation while historians are content discussing the "grey areas" with the prospect that not all explorations lead to a definitive resolution. These expectations often influence how these scholars use their sources. While both aim to argue a particular point of view, attorneys are trained to prove a case. This has led to accusations of cherry-picking quotes or highlighting minority opinions until they appear to speak for a majority.[3] Alternatively, historians have been accused of the same. Proving one's thesis has even led to accusations of evidence fabrication and misuse as exemplified in the controversy around Arming America: The Origins of a National Gun Culture by Michael A. Bellesiles.[4] Additionally, primary sources are interpreted in their historical context by both lawyers and historians. However, law and legislation become active/living documents for lawyers and court decisions are used outside their direct historical context. The opinion of a court can easily stand as good law for half a century or longer. Historians are more likely to push for the reexamination of court decisions in their immediate context highlighting popular reactions to a ruling rather than focusing solely on the judicial interpretation. Neither of these approaches are incorrect and both create a rich debate. But an awareness of these differences is useful for navigating the sources and conclusions as one delves into this controversy.
Indeed, whether lawyer, historian, or political scientist, accusations of bias and agendas abound. A scholar's training does influence the way they use sources or present a thesis. However, despite these differences in scholarship, there are real problems with bias when interpreting the Second Amendment. All scholars struggle with understanding the 18th century context and must be vigilant against imposing current ideals and perceptions on the past. Contemporary debates can also seep into past interpretations or influence the selection of sources towards a predetermined conclusion. Especially with the Bill of Rights, there is the danger of "rights-talk" with its "exaggerated absoluteness" that not only limits modern discourse but influences the study of the amendment to exclude any consideration of alternate or even concurrent interpretations.[6] Inflammatory and narrow labels are often used to further accentuate difference over compromise. For example, an author may set up the debate between gun-rights activists against "gun prohibitionists" which suggests an all or nothing dichotomy.[7] Finally, both gun-rights and gun-control political groups have funded research which perpetuates the idea that there are only two viewpoints available and also suggests an automatic bias in the scholar.[8] The political motivation and economic self-interest of some of these financial backers suggests both scholars and their audience should fine tune their critical thinking and analysis when researching the Second Amendment.
Despite the challenges of bias, the rich selection of sources and variety in scholarship have created several angles for interpreting the Second Amendment. In order to better evaluate the meaning of the Second Amendment it is necessary to understand perceptions of citizenship, power, and liberty in the 18th century. A review of the historical context for the Bill of Rights which follows will provide the background behind some of more common interpretations of the Second Amendment. This introduction attempts to summarize some popular ideas and should not be considered all-inclusive or absolute. The rich scholarship on the Second Amendment shows consistently that even the Founders did not agree on one interpretation.
The Second Amendment in Context
Second Amendment scholarship has highlighted several political ideals and historical experiences behind the citizen militia and the armed citizen. The works of Niccolo Machiavelli are credited for invoking a republican ideal that was expanded by later authors such as James Harrington, John Trenchard, Thomas Gordon, and Walter Moyle (to name a few).[9] These ideas were fueled by the historical experiences in England that transferred questions of sovereignty and safeguarding rights to the new colonies in America.
Early modern republican ideals centered on virtuous citizens who preserved a just government. Machiavelli promoted the citizen-soldier as superior to standing armies because they were loyal to their communities and thus more fierce in protecting their homes. Soldiers who sold their services to the highest bidder, were susceptible to corruption, and could be used by tyrants to oppress others. The virtuous citizen-soldier was willing to take up arms to protect the state and would return to civil occupations after a threat was defeated. Their prowess would make standing armies and their corruptible soldiers obsolete. This ideal mirrored the highly romanticized view of Republican Rome where mythical men like Cincinnatus put down the plow to engage the enemy but then humbly returned to the farm when their civic role was done.[10] Later political theorists like Harrington associated these heroes with the 17th century yeoman farmer who likewise courageously left the field when called to service. These yeomen were property owners which Harrington thought would make them independent from the coercion of landlords and employers. This independence meant they could provide the self-governing voice required of citizens in a strong state.[11]
The idealized English yeoman farmer offered a tangible example of the citizen-soldier for political theorists. Since 1181, the Assize of Arms under King Henry II required knights and freemen to arm themselves in service to their king and country.[12] These freemen not only served in the King's wars but also protected their communities and were drafted into the sheriff's posse comitatus as needed.[13] Over the centuries the types of arms required of militiamen changed with the technology but they were expected to only supply weapons and armor that matched their social status. This structured militia, that included a wider breadth of Englishmen, was praised by theorists like Machiavelli and Francis Bacon for keeping England secure and enabling the Crown's victories on the continent.[14] However, by the 17th century some complained the yeomen militia shirked their duties and left their defence in the hands of tradesmen and laborers in select militias. Even after the Restoration in 1660, Charles II's volunteer militias were better organized than the general militia.[15] James II later argued that he needed to retain the army since the general militia was not up to task.[16] However, James II's promotion of Catholics contrary to the Test Acts, including promoting Catholic officers in the military, helped inspire the Glorious Revolution which ousted the Catholic monarch in favor of the Protestant William of Orange and Mary in 1689. Both were required to sign a Declaration of Rights by Parliament which acknowledged that James II had wrongfully kept a standing army "in time of peace" and caused "several good subjects being Protestants to be disarmed at the same time when papists were both armed and employed contrary to law." It also declared that, "subjects which are Protestants may have arms for their defence suitable to their conditions and as allowed by law."[17]
The meaning of the arms clauses in the English Declaration of Rights of 1689 is also contested when used to interpret the English legal influence on the Second Amendment. For some, the declaration did not grant any new privileges but ensured the return of control to the Protestant majority. Although the "ancient rights and liberties" included some access to arms, these were still determined by law and social status which included civic expectations and limitations.[18] Others argue the use of "their defence" instead of "their common defence" means the right to arms included self-defense separate from a specific civic duty.[19] The armed citizen could act for the greater good but also independently respond to protect his person, property, and liberty.
The armed citizen, although not necessarily exclusive from the citizen-soldier, was a free man because he recognized he was responsible for protecting his freedom. Machiavelli noted that just as states exist by arms or fortune, so it is with the citizens who are trained in arms.[20] Trenchard and Gordon, like Locke, note self-defense as a natural right that justifies the armed citizen who uses force to defend his liberty against unjust tyrants and governments.[21] Both roles work together to protect society and the state: the armed citizen protects his own which instills a love for liberty and expands his knowledge of arms and his rights which in turn ensures his response as the citizen-soldier for a just government. However, for some political theorists, both libertarian and republican, the English yeomen were too complacent to match this ideal and they instead looked to the American colonies where "an agrarian society of armed, self-sufficient husbandmen" flourished.[22]
The circumstances of colonial living impacted the expectations for armed citizens. Several 17th century statutes required adult males to keep arms for militia service similar to the laws in England.[23] But changes in England prompted laws like the Game Act of 1671 which banned guns (at least on paper) for those with less than £100 in property value. Conversely, the colonists were required to arm and efforts were made to ensure they were supplied. Even after Bacon's Rebellion in 1676, Virginian colonists were still allowed to keep arms.[24] By 1684, the militia statute in Virginia specifically protected militiamen from the confiscation of their weapons such as arms taken in "disstresse" (payment for money owed) or impressed for service.[25] Circumstance did create different expectations of armed citizens than in England, however, access to arms was still not universal. Some colonies barred indentured servants and non-Protestants from owning firearms while race also outlawed guns to Native Americans, free African Americans, those of mixed decent, and slaves. Over the next century these statutes continued to change as colonies expanded and urban centers developed. By the time of the Seven Years' War/French and Indian War (1754-1763) the militia were still viable but considered inadequate for the scale of the war and Britain increased the presence of the standing army.[26]
The standing army in the colonies became a focal point of tension at the same time taxes to pay for the war incited protest. The use of army soldiers to police the population escalated tensions and the Quartering Act of 1765 forced colonists to house and feed these military police in their communities. During the Liberty Riot (1768) Boston residents rallied against the British sailors acting for the port authority which lead to a munitions ban and the confiscation of some arms.[27] For many colonists, the threat of military oppression was dramatically realized in the Boston Massacre of 1770.[28] In addition to the confiscation of arms in hotbeds like Boston, efforts were also made to disarm militias or render them obsolete.[29] Colonists mustered militia companies in spite of these efforts which famously came to a breaking point with the "shot heard 'round the world" at Lexington and Concord in 1775.
During the American Revolution the rhetoric praising the militia as the answer to standing armies continued but was again tempered by the realities in the field. At the start of the war several states edited their charters and constitutions to include a Declaration of Rights that promoted the militia as the natural protector of liberty. However, the experience on the battlefield was mixed and General George Washington often found militiamen inefficient compared to the Continental soldiers.[30] Washington defended the necessity of developing an army in a letter to the Continental Congress in 1776 where he noted that, "To place any dependence upon Militia is, assuredly, resting upon a broken staff."[31]
There was a mixed response to the realities of relying on militias and the citizen-soldier after the Revolution as well. Washington experienced firsthand the struggles of working with militiamen but agreed they could be valuable if given enough structure:
"It may be laid down as a primary position, and the basis of our system, that every Citizen who enjoys the protection of a free Government, owes not only a proportion of his property, but even of his personal services to the defence of it, and consequently that the Citizens of America (with a few legal and official exceptions) from 18 to 50 Years of Age should be borne on the Militia Rolls, provided with uniform Arms, and so far accustomed to the use of them, that the Total strength of the Country might be called forth at a Short Notice on any very interesting Emergency, for these purposes they ought to be duly organized into Commands of the same formation; (it is not of very great importance, whether the Regiments are large or small, provided a sameness prevails in the strength and composition of them and I do not know that a better establishment, than that under which the Continental Troops now are, can be adopted."
-- George Washington, Sentiments on a Peace Establishment, May 2, 1783[32]
Washington was not alone in the belief that citizens "owed" service to their country which, as outlined above, was a central characteristic of the republican citizen who served the community good over personal gain. But defining what was good for the community often differed and conflicts of interest impacted the efficiency of the militia. Shay's Rebellion (1786-1787) pitted urban interests against rural economies and some of the militia sent to suppress the rebellion sided with the rebels' cause instead. Both the rebels and their militia sympathizers believed their actions a just response to oppression while city and state officials bemoaned the lack of respect for the legal process and government.[33] Shay's Rebellion was not the only event to highlight the disorganization and insubordination of local militias but it did galvanize the efforts to form a central government under a new constitution that could maintain stability for the new country.[34]
The contentious ratification of the U.S. Constitution highlighted the continued concern for establishing and arming strong militias. Central control over the state militias in Article I Section 8 of the Constitution aroused suspicion and Anti-Federalists argued that the government could dismantle or weaken the militias in favor of a standing army.[35] At the same time, the exclusion of a declaration of rights became a rallying point for Anti-Federalists who maintained that an enumeration of rights was principle to safeguard liberty under imperfect governments. The rights to arms was among the liberties listed and the Pennsylvania minority published their dissent which included:
"7. That the people have a right to bear arms for the defence of themselves and their own state, or the United States, or for the purpose of killing game; and no law shall be passed for disarming the people or any of them, unless for crimes committed, or real danger of public injury from individuals; and as standing armies in the time of peace are dangerous to liberty, they ought not to be kept up: and that the military shall be kept under strict subordination to and be governed by the civil powers."
-- Address and Reasons of Dissent of the Minority of the Convention of Pennsylvania to their Constituents, December 12, 1787 [36]
Federalists argued that a declaration of rights was not necessary for the national government since these rights were already protected by state constitutions. Although not against a bill of rights, James Madison thought these "parchment barriers" could be limiting and unnecessarily threaten fundamental rights omitted from the document.[37] Additionally, the Constitution was considered unique since the people were granting power to the government and therefore did not require declarations of their rights from a government obligated to them.[38] But the insistence by Anti-Federalists on the inclusion of rights was popular and, in the end, ratification of the constitution in several states hinged on the assurances that a bill of rights would be considered by the first Congress. States forwarded their proposals for amendments which included several versions concerning the right to bear arms.
The experiences of Americans combined with the ideals expressed in political thought and the English legal heritage promoted the republican ideal of the citizen-soldier who not only protected the government when mustered but also protected freedom. The balancing and melding of all these ideas and experiences fell to the first Congress when they created the Bill of Rights.
Composing the Second Amendment
The Bill of Rights was composed and then edited down from over a hundred proposed amendments submitted to the first Congress after the contentious ratification of the U.S. Constitution.
Rights in State Constitutions
As noted above, several variations of a Declaration of Rights were created by state governments before the U.S. Constitution was written. Eight states would add a Bill of Rights or Declaration of Rights to their state constitutions after the start of the Revolutionary War.[39] These declarations were well known and influential in phrasing the Second Amendment. Some, like Virginia, included an amendment which focused on the role of militia in retaining civic authority and preventing standing armies. Massachusetts stated the people had a right keep and bear arms for the "common defence" which was interpreted by some contemporaries as too vague for not explicitly protecting the personal right to bear arms for self-defense.[40] Most states followed the language stressing the militia similar to Virginia and Massachusetts. The Declaration of Rights for Pennsylvania and Vermont were two that explicitly protected the right of individuals to keep arms for their individual protection in addition to the defense of the state. Thus, even before the Bill of Rights was drafted, several versions and expectations for rights to arms were already enacted by the states.
Amendments Submitted to Congress
Five states submitted right to arms provisions to be considered by the first Congress. These states included New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island*, and Virginia.[44] These state recommendations often mirrored their own state Bill of Rights except for New Hampshire which added the provision that Congress could not disarm citizens unless they were guilty of "Actual Rebellion."[45] It is possible that Madison reviewed these suggestions but, of those listed above, only the submissions from New Hampshire, New York, and Virginia were noted in the official congressional record. Most agree that Madison closely followed the recommendations from his home state of Virginia when composing the Bill of Rights. Virginia's recommendations included a Bill of Rights that protected:
"Seventeenth, That the people have a right to keep and bear arms; that a well regulated Militia composed of the body of the people trained to arms is the proper, natural and safe defence of a free State. That standing armies in time of peace are dangerous to liberty, and therefore ought to be avoided, as far as the circumstances and protection of the Community will admit; and that in all cases the military should be under strict subordination to and governed by the Civil power....Nineteenth, That any person religiously scrupulous of bearing arms ought to be exempted upon payment of an equivalent to employ another to bear arms in his stead."
Virginians also included changes to the body of the Constitution including:
"Eleventh, That each State respectively shall have the power to provide for organizing, arming and disciplining it's own Militia, whensoever Congress shall omit or neglect to provide for the same. That the Militia shall not be subject to Martial law, except when in actual service in time of war, invasion, or rebellion; and when not in the actual service of the United States, shall be subject only to such fines, penalties and punishments as shall be directed or inflicted by the laws of its own State."[46]
The concepts outlined in these state declarations of rights and amendments to the Constitution all stressed the importance of the militia in a free state. A robust militia organized from "the people" prevented the permanent development of a standing army and was the surest way to protect freedom. By the time Madison submitted the proposal to Congress he had shortened several ideas into one:
Proposed by James Madison June 8, 1789 to the House of Representatives:
“The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed; a well armed, and well regulated militia being the best security of a free country: but no person religiously scrupulous of bearing arms, shall be compelled to render military service in person.”
House of Representatives and Senate August 24 - September 9, 1789:
“ARTICLE THE FIFTH. A well regulated militia, composed of the body of the People, being the best security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed, but no one religiously scrupulous of bearing arms, shall be compelled to render military service in person.
On September 4, the Senate
agreed to amend Article 5 to read as follows: A well regulated militia, being the best security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
On September 9, the Senate replaced "the best" with "necessary to the." On the same day, the Senate disagreed to a motion to insert "for the common defence" after "bear arms." The article was renumbered as Article 4.”
Second Amendment ratified in 1791:
“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.” [47]
The mistrust of the central government was raised in the Congressional debate about this amendment on August 17, 1789. Representative Elbridge Gerry from Massachusetts objected to the inclusion of the clause protecting religious objectors because he was concerned the government would then "declare who are those religiously scrupulous," and effectively disarm political opponents.[48] His objection was narrowly defeated by two votes in the House but this clause was later removed after the Senate debate.[49] Some suggest the effort to protect religious objectors highlights the focus of this amendment on the duty expected of every citizen. However, others retain that the concern was to ensure a more general right to arms beyond any civic duty.[50] Contemporary debates highlight the difficulty in discerning the exact meaning of these carefully phrased amendments. Indeed, the debates from 1789 show there were concerns the amendments would be misunderstood or even deliberately misconstrued. They also illustrate that agreement over the intended meaning and ideology was never absolute even as the Bill of Rights was written.
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Published September 2013
Endnotes:
1 "Bill of Rights," The Charters of Freedom, National Archives.
2 Jack N Rakove, "The Perils of Originalism," in What Did the Constitution Mean To Early Americans?, ed. Edward Countryman (Bedford/St. Martin’s, 1999) 148.
3 Although his analysis is considered abusive by some scholars, Wills does highlight some of the quote splicing and other inconsistencies in scholarship. Garry Wills, "To Keep and Bear Arms," in Whose Right to Bear Arms did the Second Amendment Protect?, ed. Saul Cornell (Boston: Bedford, 2000) 66-67 and 73. After reading several books and articles I would note that this is done by both lawyers and historians but I have noted it more often with attorneys who I think are responding to their training.
4 Patricia Cohen, "Scholar Emerges From Doghouse," The New York Times, August 3, 2010.
5 Robert J. Spitzer, The Right to Bear Arms: Rights and Liberties Under the Law (ABC-CLIO, 2001) 52.
6 Jack N Rakove, Declaring Rights: A Brief Documentary History, The Bedford Series in History and Culture (Palgrave Macmillan, 1998) 18.
7 Stephen P Halbrook, That Every Man Be Armed: The Evolution of a Constitutional Right (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1984) ix.
8 Peter Finn, "NRA Money Helped Reshape Gun Law," Washington Post, March 13, 2013.
9 Several scholars note J.G.A. Pocock's thesis in The Machiavellian Moment as influential for understanding the significant texts and events of the 16th to 18th centuries that solidified republican thought.
10 Carl J. Richard, Greeks and Romans Bearing Gifts: How the Ancients Inspired the Founding Fathers (Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2008) 125-126.
11 Unlanded tradesmen and laborers could not be trusted since their votes could be paid for or coerced by their employers and landlords. Of course this ideal does not take into account the social expectations that also influenced yeomen farmers. Edmund S. Morgan, "The People in Arms: The Invincible Yeoman,” in Whose Right to Bear Arms did the Second Amendment Protect?, ed. Saul Cornell (Boston: Bedford, 2000) 127.
12
Roy G. Weatherup, "Standing Armies and Armed Citizens: An Historical Analysis of the Second Amendment," in Gun Control and the Constitution, ed. Robert J. Cottrol (New York: Garland Pub., 1994) 189.
13 Those who failed to raise the "hue and cry" or did not respond when called to participate in law enforcement could be fined or imprisoned. Joyce Lee Malcolm, "The Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms: The Common Law Tradition," in Gun Control and the Constitution, ed. Robert J. Cottrol (New York: Garland Pub., 1994) 233.
14 Morgan, "The People in Arms,” 125-126.
15 Robert Ward in Animadversions of Warre (1639) stated, "our yeomandrie would not be so proud and base to refuse to be taught, and to thinke it a shame to serve in their own armes, and to understand the use of them; were they but sensible, that there is not the worth of the peny in a kingdome well secured without the due use of Armes." Malcolm, "The Common Law Tradition," 233, 236 and 240-241.
16
Weatherup, "Standing Armies and Armed Citizens," 195.
17 "An Act Declaring the Rights and Liberties of the Subject and Settling the Succession of the Crown," 1689, The Avalon Project of the Lillian Goldman Law Library, Yale Law School.
18 Weatherup, "Standing Armies and Armed Citizens," 198.
19 Malcolm, "The Common Law Tradition," 230-231.
20 Niccolò Machiavelli, The Prince, Ch.1 and Discourses, III Ch. 31, Project Gutenberg.
21
John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, An Argument, shewing that a Standing Army is inconsistent with a Free Government, and absolutely destructive to the Constitution of the English Monarchy, 1697, The Online Library of Liberty and Chapter 3 in John Locke, Second Treatise of Government, 1690, Project Gutenberg.
22 Robert E. Shalhope, "The Armed Citizen in the Early Republic," in Whose Right to Bear Arms did the Second Amendment Protect?, ed. Saul Cornell (Boston: Bedford, 2000) 34.
23 Find a summary of these statutes in Clayton Cramer's "Colonial Firearm Regulation," Journal on Firearms and Public Policy, Second Amendment Foundation, 16 (2004) 2-6.
24
But colonists were not allowed to assemble armed in groups of five or more unless officially mustered. Halbrook, That Every Man Be Armed, 57.
25 "An act for the better supply of the country with armes and ammunition," III, The Statutes at Large (VA), ed. William Waller Hening (Philadelphia, 1823) 13-14.
26 Weatherup, "Standing Armies and Armed Citizens," 199.
27 Sailors were attempting to act on the port officials' order to seize John Hancock's ship Liberty that was the center for a smuggling/taxation dispute. Saul Cornell, A Well-regulated Militia: The Founding Fathers and the Origins of Gun Control in America (Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2006) 10-14.
28 Lawrence Delbert Cress, "A Well-Regulated Militia: The Origins and Meaning of the Second Amendment," in Whose Right to Bear Arms did the Second Amendment Protect?, ed. Saul Cornell (Boston: Bedford, 2000) 53.
29 Halbrook, That Every Man Be Armed, 74.
30 Morgan, "The People in Arms," 132-133.
31 Quoted in Weatherup, "Standing Armies and Armed Citizens," 203.
32 George Washington, "Sentiments on a Peace Establishment," May 2, 1783, The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745--1799, ed. John C. Fitzpatrick (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1931), The Founders' Constitution, The University of Chicago Press.
33 Cornell, A Well-regulated Militia, 31-34.
34 Our future article on Right to Insurrection will discuss these rebellions more closely.
35 For example see the comments by George Mason during the ratification debates in Virginia on June 14, 1788. Constitution Society.
36 The Address and Reasons of Dissent of the Minority of the Convention of Pennsylvania to their Constituents, December 12, 1787, Constitution Society.
37 James Madison, "James Madison to Thomas Jefferson, October 17, 1788," Letter, The Writings of James Madison, ed. Gaillard Hunt, The Library of Congress, American Memory.
38 Gordon S. Wood, "The American Science of Politics," in What Did the Constitution Mean To Early Americans?, ed. Edward Countryman (Bedford/St. Martin’s, 1999) 97.
39 Rakove, Declaring Rights, 36.
40 Saul Cornell found that during the ratification of the state constitution communities like Williamsburg raised objections that the declaration did not explicitly protect the "privilege to keep Arms in our houses for Our Own Defense." Cornell, A Well-regulated Militia, 25.
41 "Virginia Declaration of Rights," Wikisource.
42 "Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts," Wikisource.
43 "A Declaration of the Rights of the Inhabitants of the Commonwealth or State of Pennsylvania," Wikisource.
44
Rhode Island did not ratify the Constitution until 1790 so their recommendation was not specifically part of Madison's Bill of Rights in 1789. Kates notes several other popular amendments, such as the freedom of speech were proposed less often. Don B. Kates, Jr., "Handgun Prohibition and the Original Meaning of the Second Amendment,” in Gun Control and the Constitution: Sources and Explorations on the Second Amendment, ed. Robert J. Cottrol (New York: Garland Pub., 1994) 84.
45 "Ratification of the Constitution by the State of New Hampshire," June 21, 1788, The Avalon Project of the Lillian Goldman Law Library, Yale Law School.
46 "Ratification of the Constitution by the State of Virginia," June 26, 1788, The Avalon Project of the Lillian Goldman Law Library, Yale Law School.
47 Robert J. Spitzer, Gun Control: A Documentary and Reference Guide (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2009) 36-37.
48 "The Congressional Register (August 17, 1789)," ConSource.org.
49 Unfortunately the Senate's debates were not recorded so we cannot be certain if the clause was removed for Gerry's reasons but the narrow margin of defeat suggests he was not alone in his concerns.
50 For examples, see the discussion on Gerry's statements in Cornell, A Well-regulated Militia, 61-62 and Halbrook, That Every Man Be Armed, 77-79.
51 Seen in Madison's remarks during the Virginian ratification convention. Weatherup, "Standing Armies and Armed Citizens," 215-216.
52 "The minuteman ideal was far less individualistic than most gun rights people assume, and far more martial in spirit than most gun control advocates realize." Cornell, A Well-regulated Militia, 2.
53 Secretary of War Henry Knox proposed that citizenship should be withheld until one served in the militia, but this was unpopular. Don Higginbotham, "The Federalized Militia Debate: A Neglected Aspect of Second Amendment Scholarship," in Whose Right to Bear Arms did the Second Amendment Protect?, ed. Saul Cornell (Boston: Bedford, 2000) 109.
54 George Washington would have welcomed a select militia that was kept separate from the standing army but more efficient than the general militia. Ibid. 101-102 and 109-110. Most Anti-Federalists, like the authors of the Letters from a Federalist Farmer, did not like the idea.
55 The republican rhetoric tying armed citizens with free citizens has already been noted. The longevity of this ideal can also be seen in the rhetoric of abolitionists who embraced the idea of arming slaves so they could obtain the natural state of freedom. Additionally, during Reconstruction several Republican legislators believed keeping black Americans armed was the only way to ensure their continued freedom. Cornell, A Well-regulated Militia,154 and Halbrook, That Every Man Be Armed, 100 and 153.
56 Excerpts from Beccaria's work was translated by Thomas Jefferson and sometimes falsely attributed to him because it supports several other comments by Jefferson for gun ownership. Cesare Beccaria, "On False Ideas of Utility," Of Crimes and Punishments, 1764, Constitution Society.
57 Early exclusions of citizenship could be based on economic class, religion, and race. The debate over the Fourteenth Amendment shows how racism largely influenced the limitation of citizenship. Spitzer, The Right to Bear Arms, 17-19 and Halbrook, That Every Man Be Armed, 108-115.
58 Local rebellions were often viewed by others as too individual and not for the common good. Thomas Jefferson's letter to William Stephen Smith November 13, 1787 quoted in Weatherup, "Standing Armies and Armed Citizens," 205.
59 Washington mustered the militia against the Whiskey Rebellion (1791-1794) and John Adams did the same for Fries's Rebellion (1799-1800).
Sources and Further Reading
"An Act Declaring the Rights and Liberties of the Subject and Settling the Succession of the Crown," 1689, The Avalon Project of the Lillian Goldman Law Library, Yale Law School. http://avalon.law.yale.edu/
17th_century/
england.asp.
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Table of Contents
Second Amendment Interpretations
As is illustrated in the lamentably brief summary above, the context surrounding the Second Amendment is not simple. There are several events, ideas, and expectations that influence actions taken in the past. Unraveling all the puzzle pieces can be engaging, frustrating and galling. The expectations and ideology of the Founders varied greatly, which is exemplified in the debates surrounding the ratification of the Constitution and the disparate opinions expressed about how to respond to challenges that arose in the early years of the new nation. The same could be said for the modern interpretations of the Second Amendment. Scholarship is rich with sources that offer several interpretations around several aspects of the amendment. At the very heart of these competing interpretations are three main arguments - that the Second Amendment protects an individual right, a collective right, or a civic right.
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
The Second Amendment protects a personal right to bear arms for self-defense so an individual can protect their life, liberty, and property. These arms also help individuals protect the country in times of need but likewise serve as a reminder to the government to respect the liberties of its free citizens. | The Second Amendment was designed to protect the states and the state militias against encroachment by the federal government. An individual only has the right to keep arms in service of the militia and bear them to protect the sovereignty of the state and maintain order for the state. | The Second Amendment protects the people and their government (both federal and state) through the militias. Citizens have a duty to keep and bear arms that can be regulated (e.g. assigned and inventoried) to maintain a strong militia and negate the need for a standing army. |
These summaries are based on an evaluation of several interpretations of the Second Amendment. Although these charts are not exhaustive, they do provide a guide to some of the more common arguments made for interpreting this amendment. In some instances, the questions posed have more than one answer within a given category. The three categories are meant to simplify the subject but does not deny the variation that exists even among these interpretations.
Language and Placement:
“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.”
What do the individual words and word placement in the Second Amendment mean?
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
- The "right of the people to keep and bear Arms" is the focus of the amendment and protects a natural right that does not disappear under government. - The use of "the people" instead of "the body of the people" guarantees the right to all individuals and is not collective in meaning. - "The people" is recognized to protect individual rights in other amendments (e.g. the Fourth Amendment) and does not change in meaning here. - The clause for "a well regulated Militia" is amplifying in the purpose but not qualifying the right. - The Senate voted against using "for the common defense" to ensure the amendment was not restricted to the militia. - The right "shall not be infringed" prevents gun control laws. |
- The militia clause states the purpose of the amendment and qualifies the "right of the people to keep and bear Arms." - To "bear" arms is martial in meaning. - The use of "the people" is collective as seen in quotes where James Madison uses "the people" and "the militia" interchangeably.[51] - The "security of a free State" is only assured when the people use their arms collectively and not as individuals. - It is the states' right to arm and maintain their regulated militias that "shall not be infringed" by the federal government. - The "well regulated" militia allows the government to regulate guns and other weapons. |
- Neither state nor federal governments can infringe the right of the people to keep arms which would prevent them from executing their civic duty to maintain the free state. - The people can "keep" arms (collectively or in their own homes) to make certain the militia is armed. - The "well regulated Militia" requires government maintenance (both state and federal) which can include training and organizing the people, supplying arms, and maintaining a record of arms available for service. - The government can regulate guns and gun owners (through inventory and training) but must allow access to martial weapons appropriate for a state militia.[52] |
Citizen Militia:
What is a well regulated militia? Does the Second Amendment limit the right to bear arms to the militia?
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
- Citizens who train together in arms to police communities and protect the free State. - Regulation by states or the federal government is limited since militias also check the government when liberties are threatened. - Citizens do not have to serve in the militia. - No, the militia is one focus of the Second Amendment but it does not limit the natural right to self-protection and preservation with arms if necessary. |
- Citizens who train together in arms to police communities and protect the free State. - The states can use the militias to resist the overreach of the federal government upon their local interests. - Citizens do not have to serve in the militia and the state may deny the right to bear arms to select groups (e.g. criminals) and non-citizens. - Yes, ensuring the maintenance of the state militias was a direct response to the federal control of the militias in the Constitution. The protection of the state militias was the only reason for the amendment. |
- Citizens who train together in arms to police communities and protect the free State. - Both state and federal governments regulate and organize the militia to ensure the people are both armed and trained. - Citizens do not have to serve in the militia but the best citizens would be compelled to by their virtue.[53] - Maybe, but likely no. The amendment's objective is to get arms into the hands of the people and organize them in their civic duty. Citizens were often expected to supply their own arms for militia duty which supports the inclusion of individual ownership. However, the amendment does not specifically promote or deny individual use of arms. |
The National Guard:
Did the National Guard replace the militia in the Second Amendment? Does this make the right to arms obsolete?
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
- The National Guard did not replace the state militias. - Citizens do not need to be enlisted in the National Guard to have guns. - The National Guard is another military and/or police force that is removed from the people. The people should be wary of relying on forces removed from their power. |
- The National Guard effectively replaced the defunct state militias. - States can rely on the National Guard and do not therefore need to guarantee the right to arms for other citizens. OR - The National Guard did not replace the state militias but has helped to ensure their discontinuance. - The presence of the National Guard does not impact arms regulation under the Second Amendment. |
- The National Guard did not replace the state militias. - The states' reliance on the National Guard would terrify some of the Founders who specifically warned against specialized militias that would effectively become part of the standing army.[54] - The dependency on the National Guard makes the need to arm and train citizens that much more important. |
Self-Defense and Keeping Arms:
If the people have the right to keep and bear arms do they have the right to use them in self-defense?
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
- Yes, absolutely. - The right to self-defense is a natural right that is inherently protected from government infringement. - One is not ensured freedom unless willing to protect themselves with arms.[55] |
- Yes, but this is governed by common law and not the Second Amendment. - Citizens should look to their state constitutions which have their own Bill of Rights and "right to arms" declarations. Some of these do specify an individual's right to self-defense but the federal Second Amendment does not. |
- Yes, but this is specifically covered under common law. - The Second Amendment does not permit or deny the right to self-defence but the armed citizen's duty includes policing the community and citizens who can protect themselves create a safer society. |
"Rational Laws" and Regulation:
What types of laws and regulation are allowed under the Second Amendment?
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
- Rational laws should focus on punishment of actions taken not restrictions on a fundamental rights. - Limiting the access to arms creates a less secure society since it disarms "those only who are not disposed to commit the crime which the laws mean to prevent."[56] |
- The right is preserved through the existence of the militia and arms can therefore be regulated by the state. - States and cities may enact laws to regulate and police their communities as deemed necessary. |
- Federal and state government can regulate arms inasmuch as they support and maintain citizen militias. - Protecting the security of the whole community outweighs the rights of the individual. |
The Fourteenth Amendment:
"Section 1: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
Did the Fourteenth Amendment incorporate the Second Amendment? How does this impact state laws and the regulation of guns?
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
- The legislators who proposed the Fourteenth Amendment expected it to incorporate the first eight amendments in the Bill of Rights and even stressed the importance of the Second Amendment to maintain freedom. - Even if one interprets the Second Amendment as protecting the states from federal infringement, then the Fourteenth Amendment extends that protection and shields citizens from both federal and state infringement. |
- The Second Amendment protects the states and not individuals which means the Fourteenth Amendment does not apply. - Note: Most for the collective right had argued that the Supreme Court had failed to incorporate the Second Amendment as it had with other amendments but this changed in 2010 in McDonald v. Chicago. The dissenting opinion highlights the strong differences in interpretation that persist. |
- If the states are preventing citizens from performing their civic duty then the Fourteenth Amendment applies. - The extension of citizenship is most significant as many states, both north and south, restricted access to arms based on one's citizenship status which inevitably influenced the expectations of their civic rights and duties.[57] |
Right of Insurrection:
Does the Second Amendment include a right to revolution?
Individual Right | Collective Right | Civic Right |
- Yes. - The armed citizen defends freedom which includes fighting against a tyrannical government. This action does not need to be ordered by the state. |
- Yes for states but not for individuals. - The Second Amendment protects the states' right to check the federal government militarily. However, this requires a "well regulated militia" acting together. Individuals fighting the government is anarchy. |
- Yes. - Armed citizens defend freedom collectively which includes fighting against a tyrannical government. - In response to Shay's Rebellion, Thomas Jefferson said, "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants."[58] OR - No. - The Constitution specifically addresses the use of the militia to suppress insurrections (Art. I Sec. 8).[59] - Citizens return to their natural rights during a just revolution because the laws, procedures, and protections embodied in the Constitution and Bill of Rights no longer apply. A new social contract must be created after the revolution. |
These interpretations of the Second Amendment persist in the public debate over firearm regulation and control. The summary above only glances at some of the sources and history behind the framing of the Second Amendment and attempts to highlight the complexity in demystifying its meaning. Quotes, passages, and whole essays can be found in the historical record that support aspects of each of the positions listed above. This does not ease the challenge for legislators and judges in interpreting the legal guarantees and/or limitations controlled by the Second Amendment. Despite the challenge, courts repeatedly incorporate the history surrounding the amendment in their decisions. Next month we continue our introduction with an examination of the judicial decisions influencing the legal interpretation of the Second Amendment which often includes references to the history outlined above.
Read the next article: Judicial Interpretation of the Second Amendment
© enlighten technologies™ and Heather Pundt 2016
Heather
received her MA in History from Portland State University and has written online articles for enlighten technologies™ since 1996. This introduction is the first in a series of research articles on the Second Amendment and gun culture in the United States. To contact Heather, please use hpundt (at) lawchek.net or visit her Google+ Profile.