Let’s Open SCOTUS For Second Amendment Business – Part 2 by Miguel A. Faria, MD

Journal/Website: 
GOPUSA.com and The Truth About Guns (TTAF)
Article Type: 
Commentary
Published Date: 
Sunday, September 27, 2020

Some readers were surprised to learn from my previous article on this subject that the Supreme Court of the United States has not made it clear that the right to keep and bear arms is protected outside the home. “How can that be?” they asked. Further perplexed they wondered, “But what about the SCOTUS decisions in the previous decade that supported the Second Amendment as an individual right to keep and bear arms?”

Second Amendment and GavelWell, yes, in a 5-4 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), the Supreme Court struck down Washington, D.C.’s handgun ban, and in McDonald v. Chicago (2010) in a very similar 5-4 decision, it struck down Chicago’s draconian handgun ban.

But these 5-4 decisions have been hanging by threads. Chief Justice John Roberts has become an unpredictable liberal and unreliable as a constitutionalist. Moreover, the liberal justices’ dissent at the time provided a clear warning: “The Supreme Court is just one vote away from totally reversing District of Columbia v. Heller (the federal ban) and McDonald v. Chicago (the state ban)."

Even with these decisions standing, the courts and Congress seem to have acquiesced in vigorously interpreting the Second Amendment’s right “to keep and bear arms” in light of these two affirming decisions. Incredible as it may seem, some courts have interpreted them as protecting the right to firearm ownership in the home, but not in the street, or during transportation from one’s home to a shooting club or anywhere else depending on the state!

And yet, when we look at the other Natural or God-given rights supposedly guaranteed by the Constitution, we see that all of them apply to individuals both in and outside the home, including the prohibition against the quartering of soldiers in people’s home, a right enumerated in the Third Amendment. And when it comes to the First Amendment — “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances” — we have to admit that we have also moved in an authoritarian direction.

We can go to churches, although this right has been curtailed by the farce of the COVID-19 lockdowns. We have also been guaranteed freedom of speech, although this right has been curtailed by insidious political correctness and the mere accusation of hate speech, as determined by the Thought Police of the Democrats, Marxist academicians, and the liberal media. As for peaceful assemblies and the redress of grievances, anarchists and communists infiltrating Black Lives Matter (BLM) and Antifa have been given a go-ahead for not-so-peaceful assemblies — or rather riots with violent looting and burning! Thus, as in George Orwell’s Animal Farm, some animals are more equal than others.

Second Amendment and women's right to self-protectionBut ignoring these recent inconsistencies brought about by political correctness, and not by judicial precedents, the Supreme Court has held that when the phrase “the people” is used in the context of the Second Amendment, it means “individuals,” meaning “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed” (U.S. v. Verdugo-Urquidez, 1990). And these are the same “people” and individuals empowered in the other Amendments, including the 1st, 4th, 9th, and 10th Amendments of the Bill of Rights. The question should then be asked, “Why can’t the Second Amendment be a full right, like all the others in the Bill of Rights?”

We need to proceed with filling the vacancy left by the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and let SCOTUS get back to the business of the judiciary branch of government, particularly bringing the Second Amendment a la par with the rest of the Bill of Rights. And there is a lot of business that needs to be transacted.

For example, the Supreme Court has turned down several attempts to challenge the various Circuit Court decisions upholding restrictive concealed carry legislation in Maryland, New Jersey, and California. In California, the Ninth Circuit Court denied that the Second Amendment protects the right to carry concealed weapons in public. Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil M. Gorsuch expressed regret that the Supreme Court failed to take up the challenge of the California case and believed it was high time SCOTUS ruled on the issue of concealed carry legislation and affirm the Second Amendment right outside the home. In the words of Justice Thomas, “The Court’s decision to deny certiorari in this case reflects a distressing trend: the treatment of the Second Amendment as a disfavored right.” Thomas further wrote in his dissent, “For those of us who work in marbled halls, guarded constantly by a vigilant and dedicated police force, the guarantees of the Second Amendment might seem antiquated and superfluous. But the Framers made a clear choice: They reserved to all Americans the right to bear arms for self-defense.”

Open carry is another issue that hasn’t been settled to the satisfaction of gun owners, and the topic came to the forefront in Florida, the state that interestingly enough in 1987 passed the landmark concealed carry legislation. The case was that of Dale Norman, a Floridian with a concealed carry permit who in 2012 was arrested in Fort Pierce openly carrying a gun in a holster. He was fined and convicted of a misdemeanor. He appealed on constitutional grounds. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case and effectively let stand a Florida Supreme Court ruling in March 2017 stating that the open-carry ban of the state did not violate the constitutional right of citizens to bear arms. Attorneys for the state successfully argued that lawful citizens may already carry concealed weapons legally by obtaining permits without undue burden. They also cited the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court has yet to rule that the Second Amendment protects open carry in public.

Also the issue of the constitutionality of “assault weapons” has not been settled. These beneficial semi-automatic firearms with paramilitary-style looks have been under attack on both the federal and state levels. Despite their usefulness for sports shooting as well as life-saving tools during natural catastrophes, urban unrest, and self-defense against multiple criminal assailants, these firearms have been so maligned that some courts are yet to rule favorably on their constitutionality. On November 27, 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to take up Maryland’s assault weapons ban. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Maryland’s Firearm Safety Act of 2013, banning the AR-15 “and other military-style rifles and shotguns.” Apparently, semi-automatic “assault weapons” were confused with fully automatic “assault rifles” and characterized as military weapons, and thus excluded from Second Amendment protection. Interestingly, the judge who wrote the majority decision stated, “Put simply, we have no power to extend Second Amendment protection to the weapons of war that the Heller decision explicitly excluded from such coverage.” Curiously, it was precisely in Miller v. U.S. (1938), the last major federal ruling on the Second Amendment until the Heller decision in 2008, that ownership of military-style weapons were specifically protected as a pre-existent individual right by the Second Amendment.

With a new Trump-appointed conservative Justice, SCOTUS should finally be able to allow the Second Amendment to sit in the front of the bus with the rest of the Bill of Rights!

Written by Dr. Miguel Faria  

Miguel A. Faria, M.D., is Associate Editor in Chief in socioeconomics, politics, medicine, and world affairs of Surgical Neurology International (SNI). He was appointed and served at the behest of President George W. Bush as member of the Injury Research Grant Review Committee of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 2002-2005. His recently released book is America, Guns, and Freedom: A Journey Into Politics and the Public Health & Gun Control Movements (2019).

This article appeared on GOPUSA.com on September 25, 2020 and an edited version was posted on The Truth About Guns (TTAG) on September 25, 2020 under the title "Why We Need the Supreme Court Back in the Second Amendment Business."

This article may be cited as: Faria MA. Let’s Open SCOTUS For Second Amendment Business – Part 2. HaciendaPublishing.com, September 27, 2020. Available from: https://haciendapublishing.com/articles/let%E2%80%99s-open-scotus-second-amendment-business-%E2%80%93-part-2-miguel-faria-md

Copyright ©2020 Miguel A. Faria, Jr., M.D.

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Comments on this post

A son who reads about freedom and the Second Amendment...

A son who reads about freedom and the Second Amendment and trains with his mother in the use of firearms is a treasure. "In a study that was not given the attention it deserved, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention under the Clinton administration tracked 4,000 juveniles ages six to 15 years in Denver, Colorado; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and Rochester, New York, from 1993-1995, and contrary to what was expected by the conventional wisdom of the ruling elite, the investigators reached the following unexpected conclusions:
Children who get firearms from their parents are less likely to commit acts of violence and street crimes (14 percent) than children who have no guns in their homes (24 percent), whereas children who obtain guns illegally do so at the whopping rate of 74 percent. The study also found that “boys who own legal firearms have much lower rates of delinquency and drug use (than boys who own illegal guns) and are even slightly less delinquent than non-owners of guns.”(20)
This study also provided more evidence that in close nuclear families, where children learn from their parents, youngsters can be taught to use guns responsibly. These youngsters, in fact, become more responsible in their conduct and more civil in their behavior. Children should be taught moral absolutes and universal truths, so that as they journey through life they will exercise their free will, distinguishing right from wrong and fulfilling their destinies and imbued with the spirit of goodness.--- Dr. Miguel Faria, America, Guns, and Freedom (2019)

Amy Coney Barrett in SCOTUS!

Amy Coney Barrett Senate vote has just taken place. All Republicans voted for her confirmation, except Susan Collins of Maine. All Democrats voted against her. The vote is 52 for and 48 against. She is confirmed! Republicans have prevailed. This is a great victory for the GOP and for Trump who has now filled three spots, 1/3 of the SCOTUS in just his first term! Bravo! October 26, 2020 ---MAF

Cuban prosecutor "Blood Puddle" died in 2018

Muere en La Habana el exfiscal Juan "Charco de Sangre" Escalona Reguera, 29 de septiembre de 2018.

Here is the tetrad of bloody prosecutors, 3 communists; 1 French Revolutionary. And I have just learned one of them, the one we personally knew died in 2018! His family was friends with my family in Sancti Spiritus, Cuba.
Muere en La Habana el exfiscal Juan "Charco de Sangre" Escalona Reguera, 29 de septiembre de 2018. Died in Havana, ex prosecutor Juan "Blood Puddle" Escalona Reguera...2018

"Escalona pasará a la historia por su implacable intervención en el juicio contra Arnaldo Ochoa y otros oficiales, fusilados en 1989. También mantuvo una guerra feroz contra el movimiento de derechos humanos de Cuba."

Escalona will pass in history for his implacable intervention in the trial of General Arnaldo Ochoa [Cuban hero who rejected communism and was ordered and shot by firing squad] and other officials in 1989. He led a fierce war against human rights in Cuba.

This man's father was a good man, a Sancti Spiritus judge, who used to stop by my house when I was a child. Once he found that I was trying to tie my mother to a chair playing cowboys and indians... The son, "Blood puddle" (his nickname) was a war criminal and a butcher, discussed and pictured in this article. He was a prosecutor in the tradition of Nikolai Krylenko, Peoples Commissar for
Justice, and the author of socialist legality; Andrey Vyshinsky, who survived not only the Terror but also Stalin and died in New York City! And of course, Anton Quentin Fouquier de Tinville, Robespierre's prosecutor during Reign of Terror in the French Revolution. Like Krylenko, Fouquier de T
inville, got his just deserts. He lost his head to the guillotine with the fall of Robespierre and the Thermidorean reaction. Vyshinsky and "Blood puddle" escaped justice.

What is Court Packing?

Court Packing refers to the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937, the "court-packing plan," a legislative proposal pushed by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt to add additional justices to SCOTUS in addition to the traditional nine, a number which has been in place for 150 years! This was militated to force through his unconstitutional New Deal legislation. Yes, these provisions had been ruled unconstitutional by the SCOTUS previously, but under the threat of packing, the Justices reversed themselves! This was and remains plain judicial extortion. The Harris/Biden administration would try do the same. They would pack the court and force passage of the Green New Deal, Socialized Medicine, heavy taxation, open borders, etc., and turn the USA into a socialist "democracy!"

Even the 3rd Amendment is in jeopardy!

Doc, I don’t know about that third amendment thing. One of my best friend’s brother-in-law, his father and uncle recently sold their beach house. This was an old school Florida beach house. Huge. (Went for $21,000,000) Built in the ’20s if I recall. During WWII it was used to house Coast Guard or Navy on submarine watch in the Gulf of Mexico. Yeah, German U-boats were there too. I’ve fished and dove the Empire Mica. Coastal freighter sunk off Mexico Beach. I’ll call Gil and ask if it was occupied with permission or commandeered. Point is; no matter the right, constant vigilance is required to keep it.--- Gadsden Flag (TTAG)

Inherent, individual rights, not Constitution-granted!

Our (first) huge mistake was ever allowing liberty to be characterized as our “Constitutional” rights. They aren’t They are INHERENT, INDIVIDUAL, human rights – we were just the first country to explicitly state, in our founding documents, that “these rights we have from God, and the government SHALL NOT f*** with them!”

The Federalist (and the Anti-Federalist) Papers, the DoI, the notes of the debate of the DoI, the Constitution, and the notes of the debate on the Constitution (as well as the instructive study of the individual state constitutions adopted more-or-less contemporaneously) make this crystal clear.

Once we allowed the obviously false-to-fact notion that these rights were “granted” by the Constitution, we screwed ourselves. We allowed the opponents of individual rights and liberty to frame the debate. And ever since then, we’ve gotten regularly and royally rogered by “public good” morons. Don’t weep and wail over the outcome, since it was utterly predictable once we accepted the basic premise.

As a wise man once said, “If you feel like you’re getting f***ed up the @$$, ask yourself, ‘Did I bend over?’ If the answer is ‘yes’, then . . . stand up.” I’ll take all y’all seriously when you’re ready to stand up.--- Lamp of Diogenes (TTAG)

Libertarian blog opinions

Totally agree. There are some (IMNSHO) interesting “low key” blogs out there, populated mostly by “libertarian” commenters, a substantial minority (perhaps a majority?) of which are attorneys, many of whom are currently ‘in the belly of the beast.’ My own personal experience is that their collective analyses of current political/legal issues, and DEFINITELY their predictions, tend to be much more accurate than anything you get from the news.

I have read several thoughtful pieces to the effect that “Scalia wrote that horrible (read the footnotes) opinion, because he had to hold together a FRAGILE one-vote majority. He gave us as much as he could.” I have seen follow up pieces asserting that the REASON so many of the right of center justices have held off on cases that a rational reader of Heller would have expected them to take, was that they didn’t want to risk of that shaky 5-4 coalition going squish on them. I have NO reason to disagree with, and ample reason to believe, that idea. Can’t offer any more proof than that.

When (note, “when,” not “if”) ACB is confirmed? I would not be shocked to see SCOTUS become more willing to take up a LOT of topics that have been danced around for years – including, but not limited to, the 2A. Not a prediction, just a personal opinion. And we all know about opinions.--- Lamp of Diogenes (TTAG)