Confused, Misinformed Citizen wrote:
I don't know that it's the craziest idea told by a self-described gun-nut,
but it's easily the scariest. Vin Suprynowicz insists that the second amendment
gives every law-abiding citizen the right to own firearms of 'military
usefulness' (up to and including nuclear weapons, according to his website).
What planet is this guy from, anyway? Do we really want people carrying
"belt-fed machine guns and heat-seeking missiles" in their cars? Mr.
Suprynowicz got one thing right: "...'militia'...had a very different
meaning two hundred years ago. But if we use the eighteenth century definition
of 'militia' today, wouldn't we also have to use the eighteenth century
definition of 'arms', and therefore limit the people to single shot muzzle
loaders? And what about the term 'well-regulated'? Sounds to me like the
founding fathers had the foresight to specifically call for sensible gun
regulations.
Charles Meyer
Charles --
I saw the letter your wrote concerning Vin Suprynowicz and his interpretation
of the Second Amendment. For what it's worth, he is entirely correct. The
Founders intended the people to be able to overthrow the government any time
they felt it necessary. Of course Jefferson pointed out that such a thing wasn't
to be undertaken lightly, but that didn't keep him from advising his nephew to
take a gun with him everywhere.
And of course overthrowing -- or merely intimidating -- the government
requires the proper tools.
But don't take my word for it. Read the words of the Founders themselves --
which I'm sure are quoted on Vin's website and are easily available anywhere you
care to look (I'll help you find them). None of them made any mystery of their
intentions, but wrote of them frequently, in articles and in letters to their
friends and relatives.
Tell you what, Charles: just for starters, read "The
Embarrassing Second Amendment" by liberal Constitutional scholar
Sanford Levinson. You'll be surprised. Again, you can find it almost anywhere on
the web, but I'll gladly send it to you if need be.
This is a test of your character and integrity, Charles. Read the material,
open your mind, learn something important that you've been lied to about, and
change your position. Or not. Your choice. But in the end, either way, we'll
know what you're made of, won't we?
L. Neil Smith