Showing posts with label unorganized militia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unorganized militia. Show all posts

Thursday, May 8, 2014

The Selective Service (Draft)

The following was written in November 2013 as a response to the questionnaire for federal candidates seeking an endorsement from the Liberty Caucus of the Republican Conference (i.e., the Republican Party).

Here is the link to the original questionnaire:

http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CC4QFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwi.rlc.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2010%2F05%2FFederal-Candidate-Questionnaire.doc&ei=u3B8UqXbBqPiiwL2ioCoDg&usg=AFQjCNHAzM58Dr-APGVchRKzOkVV0TKRyw&sig2=qStOgZ0RAgXVAbnHi2kFtw

This is my answer to Question #9.



9. A
   (I favor national service which is strictly voluntary; not national service which is compulsory for military needs, nor required for community benefit, nor discriminatory towards non-heterosexuals)
   To have military service which is (B) compulsory for military needs and/or (C) required for community benefit is to undermine the original intent of the 2nd Amendment, which was to protect the right of conscientious objection (as the right to bear arms whether serving in an organized or unorganized militia).
   A war or military intervention which our leaders in the national government have to sell to the American people through manufacturing false threats and unsubstantiated rumors asking foreign leaders to prove a negative, and which cannot get enough popular support in Congress or enough military volunteers, is not a war which we should commit to fighting without re-evaluating our objectives, and it is not a war which we should spend a great amount of our resources fighting due to the risk of war profiteering through mercenary and infrastructure contracting.
   I do not favor (D) limiting national service to male heterosexuals because I support the right of all Americans – homosexuals included – to be free from discrimination in the public sector, which includes the military and all government agencies.





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Saturday, May 3, 2014

Altering the 2nd Amendment to Protect Conscientious Objection




            In his recent book Six Amendments: How and Why We Should Change the Constitution, retired associate Supreme Court justice John Paul Stevens wrote that the Second Amendment should be altered so as to protect from infringement the right of the people to keep and bear arms only when they are serving in the militia.
According to Stevens, the Second Amendment should read: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms when serving in the Militia should not be infringed.”
While “when serving in the Militia” are the five words Stevens states he thinks should be added, the language he chose reveals that he actually desires to change much more. Of course, it will be necessary to go to the original text on this one.

As ratified by the states, and authenticated by Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, the Second 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.”
But in an earlier draft – passed by Congress and preserved in the National Archives – 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 differences lie in the usage of the comma, and in the capitalization of the words “Militia”, “State”, and “Arms”. I will not dwell on the usage of commas, but I will say that the fact that the states would not ratify the legislation without removing this capitalization seems to indicate that the states were worried that the Second Amendment could be eroded through defining Militia, State, and Arms in overly technical manners in the U.S. Code.
The states wanted to ensure that the new federal government did not interfere with their existing rights, and they wanted a national constitution that could be understood by all property owners, including common farmers. A federal Congress that can set the definition of the words Militia, State, and Arms – and the definitions of all the legal words within those definitions – was the last thing the people of the states wanted.
At best, retired justice Stevens is ignorant of this fact, and at worst he is hostile to it. Amendments entrenched in the Bill of Rights should be able to be understood without reference to the U.S. Code; its meaning should be plain, and easy to understand for all people who possess basic reading comprehension skills.

In an episode of Penn and Teller: Bullshit!, Penn Jillette examined the language of the Second Amendment, of which he said “gun control advocates say the phrasing is clumsy”. Jillette began his argument by admitting that states have the right to a well-regulated militia, because a people needs an organized military force to defend a country, and that the Second Amendment recognizes and protects that right.
            However, he went on to say that the Second Amendment “doesn't say 'the right of the militia to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed', it says 'the right of the people'. Now, why the word 'people'? Because the people who wrote this had just fought a war for two years against a tyrannical state militia.” Jillette continued, “They knew the time might come when they have to do that again, so they made the possession of weapons a right that the militia could never take away.”
            The idea that only the police and the military should carry weapons is so popular today, many people neglect to ask what “Militia” really means. As I explained earlier, the answer lies in the U.S. Code.

According to 10 U.S. Code, Section 311 – “Militia: composition and classes” – “Militia” means all able-bodied males aged 17 to 45 who are, or have planned to become, Citizens (except as provided in Title 32 of the U.S. Code, Section 313, which puts age limitations on National Guard enlistment), as well as females serving in the National Guard.
There are two classes of militia: the organized militia and the unorganized militia. The organized militia is the National Guard and the Naval Militia. This does not just mean the Army, Navy, and National Guard; but should instead be construed so as to encompass all state-run military forces. The term “organized militia” should be construed so as to include the Air Force, which did not exist at the time of the founding; and the Marines, which did (as a side note, the National Guard was made up exclusively of state militias until 1933).
The unorganized militia, on the other hand, consists of all members of the Militia who are not members of the organized militia. This means that the unorganized militia consists of all able-bodied males aged 17 to 45 who are, or have planned to become, Citizens (except as provided in 32 U.S. Code, Section 313), and are not serving in either the National Guard or the Naval Militia. The unorganized militia appears not to include any women; this is likely because women are, and were not then, customarily expected to fight, nor required to fight (in the case of selective service).
Founder George Mason said, “I ask, sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people, except for a few public officials.”

The fact that the U.S. Code recognizes in its very definition of “Militia” that a person can be in a militia without serving a state-run military organization formally and in person, puts a dent in the argument of the gun control advocate.
Another chink appears in the gun control advocate's armor when it is shown that to “bear arms” and to “keep arms” are not the same thing. Essentially, to “keep arms” means to own and possess weapons, while to “bear arms” means to display, brandish, and use them. The Supreme Court of Rhode Island once found that to “bear arms” has a militant connotation, while to “keep arms” does not.
In a piece entitled, “What Did [']Bear Arms['] Mean in the Second Amendment?”, Clayton E. Cramer and Joseph Olson defended the idea that “the Founding Generation, and at least two generations after them, did not understand [']bear arms['] as limited to military or collective militia duty”, “but saw it as merely one way of expressing the concept of possession”.
There exists plenty of evidence that the original plain meaning of “to bear arms” had militant connotations, although, to be clear, the militant connotation of “bear arms” does not imply that bearing arms only takes place within an organized Militia as defined in the U.S. Code. Commonly accepted definitions of “to bear arms” range from “to serve as a soldier”, “to perform military or militia service”, “to display armorial bearings (such as armor, insignia, and weapons)”, and “to take up arms”.
Given these meanings of “bear arms” and “unorganized militia”, we see that the Second Amendment provides that a person retain the uninfringed right to take up, display, and use weapons outside of the National Guard or Naval Militia, provided that he is male, is aged 17 to 45, is a Citizen or will become one, and, being able-bodied, wields the potential to physically exercise that right. To be clear, organized militias are the parties which would seek to infringe upon that right.

The gun control advocate may argue that the Second Amendment's language clearly reveals that the states must regulate all militias in the interest of security for the state. However, this is false for two reasons.
First, the regulation of militias for reasons of state security is a reason for every individual to be free to own and use weapons, not a reason against it, as Penn Jillette explained. Because militias are necessary to preserve security, the right of the people shall not be infringed.
Second, the states having removed the capitalization from the word “state” before ratifying the Second Amendment should serve to remind us that the capitalized word “State” has a specific legal definition clarified in the U.S. Code, while the all-lower-case word “state” could be interpreted to mean something more general, like the “state of nature” or “state of being”.
Claims about the Second Amendment being passed to protect the security of the States are valid. However, the Amendment was not passed in order to protect the security of solely the states, but the people that comprise and live on them as well.
To drive this point home, I note that in the last draft of the Second Amendment before it was significantly shortened to the length with which we're familiar today, the phrase “well regulated militia” was followed by the phrase “composed of the body of the people”.

To reiterate, it is not that the States don't have the right to regulate their own militias in a way that protects the security of the people and their State. They do; it's just that this invokes very few obligations on the part of unorganized militias and ordinary gun-owners as conditions of keeping and beaming arms.
This set of obligations does not include registering weapons, getting formally trained and licensed, or joining a militia. What it does include is being adequately well-trained, whether by oneself or by one's associates.
If the original meanings of “regulate” and “well-regulated” – as understood with regard to the Interstate Commerce Clause – are any indication, a “well regulated militia” is not some particular militia, nor variety of militia, which is legislated upon in some way or another. “Regulated” means neither “ruled”, nor “governed”, and especially not “controlled”.
            To be “well-regulated” means to be “kept regular”; i.e., kept free from undue interruptions, inhibitions and controls.
            Such inhibitions and controls include anything and everything that stands between an individual and a gun; licensing, registration, training requirements, et cetera. Therefore, each time a gun control advocate argues in favor of a law on the premise that it is a “regulation” is actually undermining his own point.
Building on this, it would seem reasonable to suggest that unorganized militias can be sufficiently “well-regulated” when they are uninhibited, uninterrupted, and uncontrolled by organized militias, and especially so when they are adequately trained and physically fit enough to exercise the duties of militia service. As Michael Badnarik said, “gun control means being able to aim your weapon”.

James Madison initially proposed a bill of rights during the first session of Congress; his proposal was brought to the floor of the House of Representatives on June 8th, 1789.
That day, the text of what became the Second Amendment read, “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.”
More than two months later, in the midst of continuing modification by Congress, there were debates about whether the appearance of the phrase “religiously scrupulous” could be used by the British to attempt to destroy the militia, which some believed would occur through the “mal-administration of government”.
But what does the phrase “religiously scrupulous of bearing arms” mean, and does that meaning excuse private ownership and use of weapons? The answer may surprise you.

The phrase “religiously scrupulous of bearing arms” actually has a clever double meaning, which, if interpreted as such and applied properly, protects both the right to own and use a weapon and the right to claim conscientious objection to the selective service (i.e., the draft).
In regards to conscientious objection to organized military service in person, the phrase means “having religious scruples (i.e., morals) against bearing arms”. This protects people whose religious morality or ethics precludes them from using weapons, or fighting as part of an organized army, from having to do so.
            But in regards to owning and using a weapon, the phrase means “being so scrupulous (i.e., careful and attentive) about bearing arms that it resembles a religious devotion.”
Although that language did not make it into the Second Amendment as it appears today (and although, for that reason, the Amendment's plain meaning does not support that argument), it would be perfectly reasonable to argue that the original intent of the Second Amendment was to entrench the right to be a gun-toting religious zealot firmly in the Constitution where it cannot be tampered with by tyrannical majorities, sweeping societal fads, and other “light and transient causes”.
Furthermore, in a more generalized sense, the original intent of the Second Amendment is to protect the right of conscientious objection to military service based on religious morals – and the right of people to organize their own militias if and when the existing organized Militia become tyrannical – through bearing (that is, displaying, brandishing, and using) arms against said Militia if necessary.

All of this, of course, rests upon the condition that people using weapons be sufficiently trained. But the people should never pretend that this means that a State, protected by a Militia which it organizes and regulates, can rightfully compel anyone to submit to formal training requirements, nor to licensing or registration requirements, as conditions of being otherwise “free” to keep and bear arms.
Nothing stands in the way of individuals voluntarily adopting a training requirement as a condition of joining a militia, which they “organize” together through private contract, and disputes concerning which they agree to settle always through private arbitration by a neutral, uninterested agent, rather than through litigation in public or common-law courts.

In 2010, in the case of McDonald v. Chicago, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the federal government, deciding 5-to-4 that the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment limits the power of the city of Chicago to outlaw the possession of handguns by private citizens.
One dissenting justice argued that “Public policies concerning gun control should be decided by the voters' elected representatives, not by federal judges”, later writing that “the court's decision was unique in the extent to which the court had exacted a heavy toll” ... “in terms of state sovereignty”.
That Supreme Court justice was John Paul Stevens.

The right to defend oneself and one's family and home against violent street criminals and tyrannical government agents and militias alike, whether foreign or domestic, must win-out over all. Gun-owners and non-gun-owners alike must work together to prevent the federal government from attempting to reinstate the draft, which has been considered and recommended (to varying degrees of seriousness) by Democratic Congressman Charlie Rangel and journalist Carl Bernstein (of Watergate fame).
Conscientious objectors and gun rights advocates must work together to free the public discourse from the oppressive idea that “only the police and military should have guns”, by demonstrating that gun rights can be used to promote peace. We must show that people fight for themselves, their families, and their homes, before they fight for any organized militia, or State Militia, or federal armed forces, or joint foreign command, or United Nations command.

Only the militia which does not deign to pretend that a sufficiently armed man – facing a loaded weapon brandished by an officer attempting to execute an unlawful, unconstitutional, or obviously immoral order – cannot be trusted to use his weapon for good in such a situation unless he is formally licensed and trained, should be allowed to succeed.
Likewise, only a militia which constantly reminds you that you are not fighting for it – but for yourself, your family, and your household – should be allowed to succeed. For these, indeed, are the only things that ultimately matter, and are worth fighting for.
Some obscure sentence on a dusty old piece of paper, whose apparent meaning doesn't even reflect its original intent, however? Hardly.

If only more people understood what exactly it is that Second Amendment advocates are fighting for, they would see not only our devotion to the rule of law, but our humanity, our humility, and our willingness to protect others, even if their views differ from our own; except, of course, to the point where doing so risks our own violent death.
If only more peaceful people who support gun control would see how gun licensing laws and the draft have been used to oppress minorities, and expose young people to danger in distant lands, the anti-war movement and the pro-gun movement would be one and the same.





Originally Written in May 2014


Edited on January 9th, February 18th, and May 28th, 2016


Saturday, April 13, 2013

Letter to Tammy Baldwin on Gun Control

Dear Senator Baldwin,

The Second Amendment says that the security of a free state depends upon the right of "the people" and "well-organized militia" - two overlapping concepts - to bear arms; and "bear arms" means "take up arms against the government".

Jefferson said there is liberty when the government fears the people. And for good reason; governments killed 290 million people in the 20th century. We cannot allow governments to even keep track of who owns which weapons; certainly not at the federal level, and although state gun legislation has been put forth as an alternative, the 2nd Amendment should be construed to mean that the federal government must intervene when the states infringe on the inalienable right to keep and bear arms.

While some leaders say "just give the people a[n up-or-down] vote", I believe that the 2nd Amendment requires the federal government (and the states, as a condition of remaining part of the union) to refrain from infringing on these rights. I myself am pro-choice, but I regard the right of human adults to efficient and effective self-defense as something with which governments have no authority to interact.

The people are free to organize into militias, so that (1) standing government armies which would interfere with the execution of just law cannot do so nor oppress the people, (2) foreign militias - including foreign and international armies, and including possible host-country conspiracy to allow such armies to invade - can be repelled and defeated, and (3) foreign armies can be repelled and defeated, without requiring the maintenance of standing armies, whose very existence risks popular oppression.

People need AR-15s to defend themselves against conquering armies.

Ask yourself: How active could the U.N. become inside the U.S.? How much approval from international agencies do we need to conduct warfare? On top of training foreign militants abroad, is America becoming a training base for foreign militants and armies?

Ask yourself, Why on Earth would something called "Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership" exist?

I do not own any potential weapon more deadly than a common steak knife (incidentally, "assault weapons" only become "assault" - and also, indeed, "weapons" - when they cease to be tools in defending against violence, and instead become "tools" that perpetuate violence), so I will not be directly affected by any of these potential new laws.

However, I believe that the notion that information-hoarding, admittedly "monopoly-on-legitimate-violence"-supporting governments, should track our capacities to defend ourselves and one another against it, is diametrically opposed to what this country was founded upon.

Additionally, the Interstate Commerce Clause should be construed to require federal intervention to prevent state bans on interstate sales of weapons. Connecticut and other states can ban the manufacture of weaponry if they please, but states may not interfere with purchases and sales.

I do not want you to vote against any new proposed gun control legislation; I would like you to help other senators block votes regarding such legislation. These inalienable rights should not suffer the risks associated with votes nor debates.

"Gun control" for the "safety" of Americans means less freedom from tyranny and violence for women, gays, blacks, Hispanics, Muslims, political radicals, and non-violent drug offenders.

The federal government has been characterized in legal code as "foreign" to the states. Please help Senator Johnson defend the people of Wisconsin against the attacks and pillaging of the foreign federal army, and from potential joint popular attacks by it and its allies abroad, Statist and terrorist alike.





Here is "Senator Baldwin"'s automated response:



Thank you for contacting me about federal gun policy.  I respect and value your thoughts as Congress debates ways to protect our families and communities while upholding our Second Amendment rights. 
Recent mass shootings, from Newtown, Connecticut to Tucson, Arizona and Oak Creek, Wisconsin have heightened our focus on strategies to reduce gun violence and save lives.  Clearly, we must do more to keep our children and communities safe. 
I heard from thousands of Wisconsinites, including sportsmen and women, law enforcement officers, veterans, gun violence victims, and school and community leaders on this issue, and I appreciate you adding your voice to the debate.  I am a gun owner and firmly believe in the Second Amendment and the right of law-abiding Americans to keep and bear arms.  I also believe that, as the Supreme Court has ruled, this right can be reconciled with reasonable, common sense safety measures.
The Senate recently debated gun safety legislation, the Safe Communities, Safe Schools Act (S. 649).  I believe the bill represents a commonsense approach to reducing gun violence and addressing holes in our mental health system. 
Federal law has required background checks for certain gun purchases for 20 years.  But such checks are not required for purchases over the internet or at gun shows.  I voted to close loopholes in our current background check system, while explicitly prohibiting the federal government from creating a national gun registry and making misuse of records a felony crime.  I also voted in favor of an amendment which would give law enforcement additional tools to crack down on gun trafficking.
In addition, I voted in support of a ban on future sales of military assault weapons and high capacity magazine clips.  The provision I supported explicitly excluded from the ban hunting and sporting rifles and shotguns by make and model.  Weapons made for war and intended for mass killings do not belong on the streets of our neighborhoods. 
On April 17, efforts to advance this legislation were blocked in the Senate.  Should there be an agreement that would allow the bill to pass, it will be brought back to the Senate floor for a vote.  I was extremely disappointed with this setback, and do not believe this is an end to efforts to reduce gun violence in our nation.  Please be assured I will continue to listen to your feedback as we work to find consensus on legislation that protects our families and respects our Second Amendment rights.
Once again, thank you for contacting my office.  It is important for me to hear from the people of Wisconsin on the issues, thoughts and concerns that matter most to you.  If I can be of further assistance, please visit my website at www.baldwin.senate.gov for information on how to contact my office.

Sincerely,
Tammy Baldwin
United States Senator




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