jshuberg wrote:jgalt wrote:2nd Amendment =/ right to carry. No one in the founding generation (the writers & ratifiers of the 2A...) thought it did, and there is no legal precedent anywhere that says it is now.
I wouldn't go that far: viewtopic.php?f=20&t=30250&p=344215#p344215
There is in fact plenty of evidence that the right to carry a firearm outside ones home for protection/hunting/defense was the the reason for the inclusion of the 2nd Amendment. There are always reasonable restrictions that can be applied to rights, but an outright prohibition was never the intent. Given the recent successes of Heller and McDonald, it's reasonable to believe that the court may eventually correctly find that the right to bear arms extends outside the home. That would be a very good day
Re: your linked list of quotes - they don't mean what you think they do... The only one that matters is the last one, the one that was actually presented to & ratified by the people.
There are plenty of other written, historical sources that conflict with those you presented. There were a lot of restrictions on who could or could not carry firearms outside their home in the late 18th century (leaving out any discussion of blacks - slave or free...). One of the most common were restrictions on carrying concealed weapons of any type, especially in the larger cities.
Even if the SCOTUS does find a "right to carry" (as currently defined / understood), there are enough founding-era sources to allow for a whole lot more restrictions than we have here in MN. Hence my statement that the 2A =/ right to carry. I could have added "right to carry, as you and I think about it" for some more clarity, but the statement stands regardless.
Again, I'm in favor of removing nearly all "gun control" regulations. The point is that the 2A - even when interpreted by an "Originalist" - won't get you what you're looking for...