nyffman wrote:Mr. White wrote:This is an interesting role-reversal for conservatives and liberals... lefties clamoring for states' rights and righties begging for an expanded federal reach. This is certainly the right result, it is just amazing what can happen when you add guns to the equation.
That's the part I'm having the biggest problem with this. Maybe by the end of the week, I'll have time to read the pdf that you linked. I'm glad they seem to afirm the RKBA, but I thought the constitution was written by the people/states to place limits on the Federal govt. which was their creation. OTOH, to extrapolate, if every state infringed the 2nd amendment, how do you exercise the right? Since it says "shall not be infringed" rather than "congress shall make no law", does that tell you anything?
The issue certainly
has become confused, indeed reversed over time, but in 1789, the Constitution applied
only to the federal government. For example, the 1st Amendment states that "
Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion...". Well, through the first few years of the 1800s, Massachusetts actually required every man to belong to a church, and pay taxes to it (though it didn't require anyone to belong to any
particular denomination...). Connecticut had an official state religion as well (Baptists, I believe - can't find a clear reference though) until 1818.
The point is that nothing in the US Constitution was
designed to, or understood
at the time of ratification to affect how the states were run. They were sovereign entities who were banding together for mutual defense, and to establish formal relations amongst each other, nothing more.