In a new article for America's 1st Freedom (a NRA member magazine), I examine some of President Obama's potential Supreme Court picks. (Based on a list of potential nominees in an article by Stuart Taylor in the National Journal.) Justices Cass Sunstein, Merrick Garland, Sonia Sotomayor, and Eric Holder would be terrible for Second Amendment rights, I suggest. Attorney General Deval Patrick and Secretary of the Interior Tom Daschle would be pretty bad in that regard, too, I argue. The article also summarizes Obama's record on Second Amendment issues.
FactCheck.org is an
excellent project of the
Annenberg Public Policy
Center of the
University of
Pennsylvania. It a
non-partisan
organization which
provides factual
evaluations of the
claims of and about
political figures. I
have cited it in my own
writing, and will
continue to do so.
However, that FactCheck
has a well-deserved
reputation for accuracy
and good judgment does
not mean that its work
is infallible, as the VC
has
pointed out
previously. The
Encyclopedia Britannica
also has a well-deserved
reputation for accuracy
and impartiality, but
the Britannica
sometimes contains
errors or
overstatements.
FactCheck’s September
22, 2008,
report on the
National Rifle
Association’s
advertising critical
claims that the NRA
“distorts Obama's
position on gun control
beyond recognition.”
FactCheck itself,
though, has overstated
its claims, and made
several errors.
Much of FactCheck’s critique of the NRA is the mere recitation of vague platitudes by Obama claiming that he supports of the Second Amendment.
FactCheck fails to recognize that Obama's platitudes and the NRA's charges could be simultaneously true. For example, John McCain might sincerely say, “I strongly support First Amendment rights.” A group critical of McCain might take out advertising which says “McCain sponsoroed the most comprehensive restriction of political speech in American history, and he is an opponent of your First Amendment rights.” All the statement are true: McCain sponsored the McCain-Feingold act, which outlaws a great deal of speech related to federal elections; people who are strong First Amendment advocates can therefore conclude that McCain is a very serious threat to First Amendment rights. McCain, however, is doubtless sincere in his belief that the political speech restrictions are consistent with his support for First Amendment rights. His First Amendment is simply much smaller than the First Amendment which free speech groups like the ACLU support. FactCheck would be incorrect if it declared that the free speech group was making "false" charges which "distorted" McCain's views.
Likewise, the NRA is not distorting Obama’s record when they accurately point out his advocacy for draconian gun controls, even if Obama offers generic platitudes about Second Amendment rights. Obama may sincerely believe that the various measures he has promoted are consistent with the Second Amendment; the NRA disagrees, and it is not factually inaccurate for the NRA to say so.
On some of the charges, FactCheck appears not to have studied Obama’s words carefully. For example, one NRA claim is that Obama wants to “Ban the Manufacture, Sale and Possession of Handguns.” FactCheck accurately reports that Obama did endorse such a position in his 1996 Illinois State Senate race. (FactCheck also supplies the details of Obama’s 2008 claim that the questionnaire was filled out by an aide without Obama’s knowledge, even though Obama’s handwriting is on the cover of the questionnaire.) But FactCheck asserts that the NRA is lying because of Obama’s response to the same question in 2003: “While a complete ban on handguns is not politically practicable, I believe reasonable restrictions on the sale and possession of handguns are necessary to protect the public safety.”
The 2003 response hardly means that Obama does not favor a handgun ban. He simply said he recognized it as politically impracticable. A candidate can simultaneously support something, and consider it “politically impracticable.” For example, in a 1997 Connecticut Law Review article, Glenn Reynolds and I wrote in favor the historic and textual interpretation of the Congressional power over interstate commerce: that it applies to commercial activities conducted across state lines, and to the regulation of activities which are “necessary and proper” for regulating interstate commerce. Thus, I think that laws about who can possess guns (e.g., persons convicted of particular crimes, children, alcoholics, etc.) should be matters of state law, not federal law. (With the caveats that state laws cannot violate the Second Amendment, and that other federal powers might be legitimately used in certain situations; for example, congressional power over immigration might be an appropriate basis for a federal restriction on gun possession by illegal aliens.)
If I were running for Congress in 2008, and somebody asked “Do you favor repealing federal laws about the mere intrastate possession of guns?” I would probably explain that a complete repeal is “not politically practicable,” and would say that I would work instead for marginal improvements in the laws.
Now suppose my opponent puts out a brochure which says “Kopel favors repeal of federal laws on gun possession.” Is the opponent distorting my position beyond recognition? Well, probably not.
A good FactCheck article would point out the difference between my 1997 position and my current statement on what is “politically practicable.” But my very choice of the words “politically practicable” indicates that if political circumstances changed, so that a broad repeal were politically practicable, then I would support it.
Conversely, if I (or, Obama or McCain) were asked "Do you think that the federal government should require journalists to get a government license?" the response would not be "Licensing journalists is not politically practicable, but there are other steps the government could take to improve media quality."
So Obama’s 2003 acknowledgement that handgun prohibition was not “politically practicable” (at least for a U.S. Senate term that would begin in 2005) is consistent with support for handgun prohibition.
FactCheck concludes the section by citing Obama’s claim at an April 2008 debate “I have never favored an all-out ban on handguns." The claim is, to say the least, highly dubious in light of the evidence about his 1996 questionnaire, and FactCheck should not have treated this dubious claim as the final word on the subject. FactCheck failed to report that during the Potomac Primaries a few weeks earlier, Obama had said that he supported the D.C. handgun ban, and considered it consistent with the Second Amendment
FactCheck also overlooked the Obama campaign’s statement when the Supreme Court granted cert. in the D.C. handgun case: “Obama believes the D.C. handgun law is constitutional” and that “local communities” should have the ability “to enact common sense laws.” (Chicago Tribune, Nov. 20, 2007.)
On the day the U.S. Supreme Court announced its decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, Obama campaign announced that he agreed with the Court’s decision because it affirmed an individual right. (The full quote is reproduced in another section of the FactCheck report.) Notably, Obama did not say that he agreed with the Court’s interpretation that the handgun ban was a violation of the individual right. Asked about the November 2007 statement supporting the D.C. ban, the campaign called the statement “inartful.” Not an inaccurate expression of Obama’s views—just “inartful.”
In sum, FactCheck's label of “False” for the NRA’s statement that Obama supports laws to “Ban the Manufacture, Sale and Possession of Handguns" was based on sloppy reading of some of Obama's statements, and failure to report other statements explicitly in favor of handgun prohibition.
A similar error is repeated for "Mandate a Government-Issued License to Purchase a Firearm", which FactCheck calls "Misleading." FactCheck quotes a Jan. 15, 2008, interview with the late Tim Russert:
NBC's Tim Russert, Jan. 15: Senator Obama, when you were in the state senate, you talked about licensing and registering gun owners. Would you do that as president?Obama then went on to list some things which thought could be done. The phrase "I don't think we can get that done" has the same import as "not politically practicable." It does not convey opposition to the idea.
Obama: I don’t think that we can get that done.
The NRA claims that Obama’s position includes: "Ban use of Firearms for Home Self-Defense." FactCheck says this is “False.” FactCheck discusses Obama’s opposition to an Illinois bill to prevent localities with handgun bans from punishing a person who used a handgun in lawful self-defense on his or her own property. Obama’s statements in opposition to the bill (which are not quoted by FactCheck) explained that he was worried that the bill would erode local handgun bans. (At the time, Chicago and five of its suburbs banned handguns.)
FactCheck writes: “Letting the owner of an unregistered firearm escape the penalty for failing to register is one thing, but it's another thing entirely to make it a crime to use any firearm – registered or not – in self-defense.” Well, if you ban a person from having a handgun at all, you are certainly banning them from using it for self-defense in the home.
Moreover, the Washington, D.C., gun law--which Obama supported--forbade the use of any firearm in the home for self-defense. (Including a registered rifle, a registered shotgun, or a pre-1976 registered handgun legally possessed under the grandfather clause). The Supreme Court later declared the self-defense ban to be unconstitutional.
Another NRA claim which FactCheck says is "False" is: "Ban Rifle Ammunition Commonly Used for Hunting and Sport Shooting.” As FactCheck reports, the issue involves Obama’s support for legislation to expand the federal definition of armor-piercing ammunition. Almost all rifle ammunition used for hunting deer or larger animals will penetrate a bullet-resistant vest; such vests are designed to stop handgun ammunition, not rifle ammunition. (In part because rifles have longer barrels, their bullets generally have greater velocity, and hence greater kinetic energy, than handgun bullets.)
Obama supported a bill to give the Attorney General the administrative authority to ban any rifle ammunition which can penetrate the type of vests commonly used by police.
FactCheck accurately quoted a limitation in the bill: it would apply only to ammunition which is “designed or marketed as having armor piercing capability." The “marketed” prong is easy, since rifle ammunition makers do not tout such capability in their advertising.
However, the “designed” language is broad enough to allow bans on anything. Almost every automobile in the United States is “designed” to drive over 100 miles per hour. The speedometers show this capability, and even if they did not, every automobile manufacturer is fully aware that its autos can be driven at very fast, unsafe speeds. The auto engines are “designed” to have a certain amount of power, and this “design” is based on the full knowledge that that auto can be driven over 100 mph. Among the definitions of "design" in Black's Law Dictionary is "The pattern or configuration of elements in something, such as a work of art."
Just as the deliberate configuration of the elements of every automobile can be accurately said to be “designed” to drive over 100 mph, so every deer-hunting round can be said to be “designed” to penetrate body armor. Notably, the ammunition ban language did not say "designed and intended."
FactCheck does quote Senator Kennedy, the sponsor of the bill, saying that he did not want to ban hunting ammunition. Nevertheless, the plain language of the bill, and not Senator Kennedy’s floor statements, were what would be enacted into law. If there were ever a judicial challenge to ban on particular rifle ammunition ban, a court might well find that the language of the statute, along with judicial deference to agency interpretation of the statute, meant that there was no need to look to legislative history.
FactCheck give NRA a "Partly True" for: "Expand the Clinton Semi-Auto Weapons Ban to Include Millions More Firearms." FactCheck agrees that Obama has declared his support for "assault weapon" bans, because he think that "assault weapons" are guns which belong only on "foreign battlefields." But FactCheck adds: "We're not sure where the NRA gets its claim that 'millions' of additional weapons would be covered." The answer is straightforward, in the Illinois legislature, Obama for SB 1195, which defines "assault weapons" much more broadly than the 1994 federal law. It included double-barrel and break-open shotguns in 28 gauge caliber and larger; and also banned .50 caliber rifles.
The FactCheck gives the NRA a rating of "Uncertain" to "Increase Federal Taxes on Guns and Ammunition by 500 Percent" and "Close Down 90 Percent of Gun Shops in America." Both these statements, FactCheck correctly reports, come from a newspaper report of Obama's 1999 description his gun control plan. (Chicago Defender, Dec. 13, 1999.) (At the time, he was running for the U.S. House of Representativs.) FactCheck notes that Obama has not pushed for these proposals since his election to the Senate, and adds, "We asked the Obama campaign about his position on an ammunition tax but have received no response."
“Uncertain” is an awfully generous label, Obama-wise. Obama clearly announced he supported the particular policies. He has never said that he has changed his mind on those policies. His campaign was specifically offered a chance by FactCheck to say whether Obama had changed his mind, and the campaign refused.
Just because Obama is not pushing for something in Congress does not make the NRA's claim uncertain. FactCheck gives NRA a "True" for "Pass Federal Laws Eliminating Your Right-to-Carry." Illinois and Wisconsin are the only two states which do not have procedures for issuing concealed handgun carry permits. (40 states issue under mostly objective standards, while 8 states give nearly limitless discretion to the issuing authority.) In the 2004 U.S. Senate campaign, Obama said he favored a national ban on concealed carry permits. Like the carry ban, the bans on gun stores and the 500% firearm and ammunition tax proposals do not become less true simply because Obama is not pushing them at present.
The NRA gets a "Mostly True" for "Restore Voting Rights for Five Million Criminals Including Those Who Have been Convicted of Using a Gun to Commit a Violent Crime." FactCheck points to the relevant bill co-sponsored by Obama, and cites the Sentencing Project for the fact that 5.3 million felons who have served their sentences cannot vote. The Sentencing Project pointed out that most felony convictions are not for violent or gun crimes. So the NRA claim is “Entirely True.” The NRA never asserted that most felony convictions are for violent gun crimes.
"Unsupported" is how FactCheck describes: "Appoint Judges to the U.S. Supreme Court and Federal Judiciary Who Share His Views on the Second Amendment." FactCheck's reasoning is that "the NRA can point to no statement by Obama calling for a Second-Amendment test for his judicial appointees, and we could find none."
That Obama has not announced a litmus test does not mean that it is unrealistic to expect him to appoint Justices who share his views on Second Amendment and on other matters of constitutional law. It would be reasonably expected that Obama appointees would take a similar approach of nominal support for the individual right, but finding that hardly any gun controls short of complete prohibition violate that right.
One final NRA claim does not get a FactCheck rating, but it does get a response that might as well as come from the Obama press office. That is: "Obama would be the most anti-gun president in American history."
FactCheck supplies Obama's quote from Heller decision day, beginning with "I have always believed that the Second Amendment protects the right of individuals to bear arms..", and promising, "As President, I will uphold the constitutional rights of law-abiding gun-owners, hunters, and sportsmen. I know that what works in Chicago may not work in Cheyenne."
Well, that Obama has "always believed" in the individual Second Amendment right did not prevent him from proposing a national ban on concealed carry, a ban on 90% of gun stores, a 500% tax increase on firearms and ammunition--as the FactCheck article itself reports. If a candidate proposed banning 90% of bookstores and a huge tax increase on books, it might be justifiable to predict that he would be "the most anti-book president in American history"--notwithstanding his proclaimed belief in the individual First Amendment right.
FactCheck calls the NRA prediction, "a pretty tall statement. We don't know how George Washington, John Adams or Thomas Jefferson might have felt about armor-piercing ammunition or assault weapons."
Fortunately, there haven't been many anti-gun Presidents, in U.S. history; and only the Clinton administration invested a large portion of its politcal capital in gun control. So President Obama would not have much competition in the "most anti-gun" contest.
We know that Washington and Jefferson were avid gun collectors, and that Jefferson recommended daily hunting as the best form of exercise. We also know that Jefferson instituted a government program to supply guns, at federal expense, to people who couldn’t own one. We know that neither Washington, nor Adams, nor Jefferson ever proposed banning a type of gun simply because it was useful on “battlefields.”
As far as we know, Obama has never fired a gun, or even held a gun in his hands. We do know that no President in American history has, in his pre-presidential career, endorsed so many sweeping prohibitions and other severe controls on American gun ownership.
The September 22, 2008, FactCheck on the NRA criticism of Obama is marred by the omission of crucial facts, one-sided and misleading presentations of issues, and thinly-concealed political advocacy. According to FactCheck, the NRA refused to answer FactCheck's request for explanations of its claims. If so, the refusal provides a partial explanation of why so many crucial facts were missing. Whatever the reasons behind the problems in the September 22 report, FactCheck should publish a substantially revised edition.
- Doing My Patriotic Duty:
- Obama Campaign Challenges NRA Ad:
- FactCheck flubs Obama gun fact check:
That's the topic of a
new
article I've written
for
Liberty magazine.
First year law students
may be interested in
observing the importance
of contract law in the
right of revolution
against tyranny.
Also, the latest version
of my draft article,
Pacifist-Aggressives vs.
the Second Amendment: An
Analysis of Modern
Philosophies of
Compulsory Non-violence
is now on-line. (3
Charleston Law Review,
no. 1, forthcoming). VC
readers first saw this
article, as a working
paper, last fall. It's
been significantly
revised, in part thanks
to helpful comments
from VC readers.
[David Kopel, September 6, 2008 at 2:45pm] Trackbacks
The "media's
treatment of Palin and her family
this week has been the quintessence
of hypocrisy, the vilest form of the
politics of personal destruction."
So I argue in my Rocky Mountain
News media
column today.
Based on e-mail I've gotten from
some readers, it's clear that some
people have so much emotional
investment in their hatred of Palin
that they can't read very well. So
to be clear, and to amplify a point
I explicitly made in the last
paragraph of the column, it's
legitimate and necessary for the
media to ask questions about her
public policy positions (including
those on sex education), her record
in public office, her political
philosophy, whether her experience
makes her well-qualified to be VP or
President, and so on.
And BTW, astute readers will spot a
typo: "Ronald Reagan's daughter
Nancy Davis" should be "Ronald
Reagan's daughter with Nancy Davis."
UPDATE. An excerpt from a reader
e-mail:
I do not always agree with your stance on the issues of the day, but I am with you 150% on this issue. I wonder if you saw the op-ed page political cartoon in the Denver Post on Thurs. Sept. 9th? As the father of an adult special needs individual, slightly older than Bristol Palin, but just as pregnant and just as unwed at this time, I was incensed at the sleaze demonstrated by this portrayal of a McCain/Palin "shotgun wedding" along with the caption underneath the cartoon. What sent me completely over the edge however was the hand at the left of the frame holding a sign announcing that Bristol Palin is five months pregnant along with two elephant heads whispering and giggling. How low will the media go and is there anything that ordinary people like myself can do to put a stop to such behavior? I know firsthand the emotional toll that an unexpected pregnancy is exerting on our family, (she and her boyfriend have our unyielding support) but more importantly on our daughter. Here in the Palin family's case, the entire world is hearing all the details. How sad to put a confused and frightened seventeen year old through this additional stress. My disappointment with the Denver paper is such that I plan to cancel my subscription next week. After I saw this lowdown smear at this innocent minor, I drove down to McCain headquarters and offered my services to the campaign and made a donation to the McCain 2008 campaign. As you can see, I have been touched both emotionally and personally by what is passing for journalism in this election year.
Yesterday's Investors
Business Daily
reports on the Chicago
chapter of Public Allies, a
group with trains and pays
stipends to community organizers
and other youthful volunteers.
According to IBD, "Barack Obama
was a founding member of the
board of Public Allies in 1992,
resigning before his wife became
executive director of the
Chicago chapter of Public Allies
in 1993." IBD also describes the
diversity training in Chicago;
it is not clear from the article
whether this particular training
took place while either Obama
was involved in the group. IBD
states that in the Chicago
training, "heterosexism" is
explained as "a negative
byproduct of 'capitalism, white
supremacy, patriarchy and
male-dominated privilege.'"
Here is my bleg: do VC readers
know of any serious research
about a link between
heterosexism and capitalism,
white supremacy, patriarchy and
male-dominated privilege? My
initial impression is the cause
and effect theory of
heterosexism is quite wrong.
Communist dictatorships, for
example, are often quite hostile
to homosexuals; yet Communist
states are not capitalist,
generally have legal equality of
men and women, and (outside
Europe) are run by non-whites.
Conversely, ancient Greece was
relatively tolerant of some
forms of homosexuality, and yet
was patriarchal, dominated by
whites, and had a primitive free
market.
So, is there a serious
intellectual argument for the
Public Allies theory of the
causes of heterosexism?
"O, what has caused this great commotion, -motion, -motion, Our country through? It is the ball that’s rolling on for Tippecanoe and Tyler too." Like the William Henry Harrison campaign of 1840, the Barack Obama campaign has been at the cutting edge of using social networking media. My column for today's Rocky Mountain News, "Twitter and Text Your Way to Victory," looks at innovative use of media in 2008, and in the past. It's mostly based on an interview with Chris Hughes, the 24-year-old wunderkind who is Obama's Director of Online Organizing. I suggest that Obama's brilliant use of social networking was a sine qua non of his victory.
Lots of
Obama biographical pieces in the
media this week, including the
Washington Post,
Newsweek, Time,
The New Republic, and
National Review. My
column in today's Rocky
Mountain News examines them
all, pointing out the most
thorough (WaPo) and the most
sanitized (Newsweek). I
point out that the coverage
neglects the radical socialist
and racialist views of Barack
Hussein Obama, Sr.
The column also examines the
faulty reasoning in Jacob
Weisberg's claim in a
Newsweek column that older
Jews who are hesitant about
voting for Obama because of
Israel are really closet
racists. And the column points
to some of the best
Colorado-related articles from
the Washington political insider
publications.
Recent
articles in the Rocky Mountain
News:
Al Jazeera makes a blatantly
false claim against Joe
Biden, and gets other facts
wrong, too. Plus: Rum, Romanism,
and Rebellion--the story from
the 19th century shows that some
things haven't changed. (Both
stories in same link).
Just posted: Democratic
prayer celebration with Sister
Helen Prejean and the head of
the Islamic Society of North
America should have spurred
media queries.
Coming soon: The Obama
biographies recently published
in the Washington Post,
Newsweek, and Time.
Personal note: I was in the
convention hall for Senator
Kennedy's speech, almost
certainly his last to a
Democratic National Convention.
Back at the 1956 Democratic
Convention, Adlai Stevenson
threw open the Vice-Presidential
nomination, and let the
delegates pick. Young Senator
John F. Kennedy tried, but was
defeated by Estes Kefauver. For
over half a century since then,
the Kennedys have been a major
part of every Democratic
National Convention. All three
of the brothers had successes
and failures, good ideas and
not-so-good ones. The mass of
delegates at the Denver
Convention waving their
white-on-blue "Kennedy" signs
were remembering the many
positive parts of the Kennedy
record. Senator Edward Kennedy's
final speech to a Convention was
dignified, gracious, beautiful,
and exemplified the Kennedy
family at its best.
This week I will be part of a team of 150 journalists covering the Democratic National Convention for the Rocky Mountain News. The News' coverage will be 24/7, with very frequent web updates. You can find a link to my material from the Opinion page for DNC commentary. Topics already in the pipeline are: Al Jazeera's terrible coverage of Joe Biden; the connections between late 19th century politics (including "rum, Romanism, and rebellion") and the present; Joe Biden and the RAVE Act; and the press missing the story about some of the controversial speakers at Sunday's interfaith prayer meeting.
I am
starting work on a paper on
Taiwan/China trade issues. Do
readers have suggestions for
good books or articles on ways
in which trade does/doesn't
affect political sovereignty?
I'm not looking for stuff
about globalization in general
(e.g., the issue raised by much
of the French Left that global
trade shifts power away from the
national government, and towards
various multinationals). Rather,
I'm looking for material
(historical, or present) about
bi-lateral trade--especially in
the context of bi-lateral
situations where one trade
partner is much larger, or
otherwise more powerful, than
the other.
For example, Danish trade with
rising, powerful Germany in
1880-1939 does not appear to
have harmed Denmark's
sovereignty; then when the Nazis
did invade in 1940, Denmark's
numerous business contacts with
Germany helped convince the
Germans to allow a limited
degree of Danish autonomy during
the first years after the
conquest. On the other hand,
threats to U.S. business
interests in Haiti led to a U.S.
invasion in 1915 that, arguably,
might not have taken place if
Haiti had fewer business ties to
the U.S. in the first place.
Extra credit for Volokh Law
School students who suggest
factors, backed by examples,
which make extensive bi-lateral
trade more/less likely to impair
the sovereignty of the smaller
partner.
I am
thinking of
buying a new
desktop
computer for
my office,
or a new
portable
computer.
Both of my
current
models are
Dells, and
I've been
happy with
them, except
that they
are five
years old,
and getting
slow. The
portable (a
subnotebook
with an 11
inch screen)
is slow on
booting, and
on opening
programs.
The desktop
gets slow
whenever
it's
required to
do something
CPU-intensive
in the
background--e.g.,
an antivirus
scan,
playing an
episode of
bloggingheads.tv,
etc.
I've been
happy with
Dell, but
the customer
comments I
see on
CNET.com and
on
Amazon.com
about Dell's
current
quality
control and
customer
service are
horrific.
My plan is
to buy a
fairly
powerful
machine, so
that I don't
need to
upgrade in a
couple
years. My
home
computer is
a one-year
old Gateway,
which has
worked
great.
Unfortunately,
Gateway no
longer sells
directly,
and only
offers
pre-configured
machines
from
selected
vendors. Its
most
powerful
desktops
appear to be
available
only from
TigerDirect,
with which
some of my
friends have
had customer
service
problems.
I certainly
don't want
to buy from
HP. I bought
a
multifunction
printer from
them a few
years ago.
When it
broke (bad
circuit
board), they
refused to
sell me a
replacement
circuit
board;
instead they
offered me a
"discount"
on a new
printer; the
"discounted"
price was
actually
higher than
the regular
price
available
from several
retail
vendors.
I don't want
to buy from
Apple. Too
many
compatibility
issues with
the
Windows-based
systems in
my office
and home.
So...should
I go back to
Dell? Or buy
from
somebody
else? Who
makes
high-quality,
reliable
computers
these days?
I don't need
a system
with
superfast
video for
gaming, nor
do I expect
that I need
something
with strong
video
editing
powers. (But
who knows
what will be
important in
3-4 years?)
I do want
something
with a fast
CPU, and
lots of RAM.
So what
should I do?
From today's
JohnMcCain.com
blog:
"It may be
typical of
the
pro-Obama
Dungeons &
Dragons
crowd to
disparage a
fellow
countryman's
memory of
war from the
comfort of
mom's
basement..."
The McCain
campaign is
correct in
wanting to
rebut an
ugly smear
from the
Daily Kos.
But why drag
"the
Dungeons and
Dragons
crowd" into
it?
Will present
and former
D&D
players--of
whom there
are probably
millions--consider
voting
Libertarian?
A LP
Convention
probably has
the highest
percentage
of
past/present
D&D players
of any
gathering in
the world,
other than a
science
fiction
convention.
And within
the LP, the
word "dungeonmaster"
is never
used as an
epithet.
[David Kopel, July 23, 2008 at 5:18pm] Trackbacks
The Syracuse Law Review
is putting together a symposium issue on the Heller
decision. My
article
for the symposium examines the implications of
Heller's constitutionalization of the natural law
right of self-defense.
The article has benefitted from the VC discussion of
self-defense in Heller by Orin Kerr, Eugene Volokh,
and Jim Lindgren. Due to the symposium's desire for
short articles, I was not able to explore all the
interesting issues raised by the discussion.
Jim had suggested that the topic would make a good
subject for student Notes, and I certainly agree. My
Article doesn't come close to exhausting the topic.
For example, in the course of research, I found the
1874 treatise "Select American Cases on the Law of
Self-Defence." (Available on Google Books.) There is a
vast amount of material therein that is worth
exploring. Moreover, my string cite (note 15) on
American cases describing self-defense as a "natural
right" does not even include cases using the term
"inherent right" instead.
BTW, I did not steal the title from Jim's suggestion.
I already had it in my draft, as a sequel to my BYU J.
Pub. L. article "The Human Right of Self-Defense."
In footnote 15, you will find a 1832 Kentucky case
which I did find thanks to Jim. As you'll see, I still
haven't solved the mystery of how the Kentucky court
attributed to Matthew Hale a quote which actually
appears to come from Michael Foster. I'll send a free
copy of the forthcoming book Supreme Court Gun
Cases, vol. 2, to the first person who can provide
a definitive solution.
- The Natural Right of Self-Defense: Heller's Lesson to the World
- Three Difficulties With Using State Constitutional Rights to Infer Federal Constitutional Rights:
- The Natural Right of Self Defense.--...
- State Constitutional Rights of Self-Defense and Defense of Property:
- A Constitutional Right to Self-Defense?
- Heller and Self-Defense:
D.C. City Councilman Harry Thomas has introduced a resolution titled "Sense of the Council of Future Handgun Resolution of 2008." The resolution makes the following findings:
(1) Accidental deaths by firearms rank in the top 10 of accidental deaths in our country.These finding are clearly false. According to the 2005 data (National Vital Statistics Reports, Volume 56, Number 10, April 24, 2008, Table 18), the total number of accidental firearms deaths, for all ages combined, was 789--about half the figure that Thomas claims. Firearms are not in the top 10 causes of accidental death, but are outranked by the following specified categories: Drowning, Fall, Fire/flame, Motor vehicle traffic, Pedestrian (not including from motor vehicles), Other land transport, Other transport, Natural/environmental, Poisoning, Struck by or against, Suffocation.
(2) Approximately 1,500 deaths per year result from the accidental use of a fire-arm. Of the 1500, 75% are young males between the age of 14 and 25, who unintentionally shoot themselves or someone else.
According to the "findings," there are about 1,125 accidental firearms deaths annually, involving males aged 14 to 25. Using the excellent on-line query tool from the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, you can find the 2005 total number of fatal gun accidents for males aged 14-25 was 219.
The Thomas "finding" claimed that males aged 14-25 were the victims OR the perpetrators of 3/4 of total fatal gun accidents. I have no idea where Thomas gets this figure from. For the figure to be correct, that males 14-25, who are the victims of about one-quarter of all fatal gun accidents, would also have to be the non-victim perpetrators of about nearly 2/3 of accidents involving all other groups. (2/3 x 3/4 [fraction of accident victims who are not males 14-25] = 1/2. We add the 1/2 to the 1/4 of accidents in which males 14-25 are the victim, to get males aged 14-25 as perpetrators or victims in 3/4 of total accidents.) This seems implausible, although not formally impossible.
The incorrect "findings" about accidents are then followed by two more findings, which are really policy statements apparently based on the findings:
The finds are then followed the statement:(3)There must be strict standards to regulate the sale of handguns in the District of Columbia, including stringent waiting periods for the purchase of hand guns, as well as the implementation of comprehensive training and education programs on the dangers of handguns through the DC Department of Parks and Recreation partnering with other agencies.
(4) There must be rigorous restrictions where gun stores can be located, a possible ban on private sales of handguns, and require gun shop operators to enter into voluntary agreements with community residents through their Advisory Neighborhood Commissions before such establishments can be issued a Certificate of Occupancy.
Sec. 3. It is the sense of the Council that strict and rigorous handgun regulations must be in place to ensure the health, safety, and welfare of District of Columbia residents.Back in 1976, when the District's City Council enacted the handgun ban, it made the finding that "Most murders are committed by previously law-abiding citizens." This too is indisputably false, as detailed in the Heller amicus brief I wrote with Chuck Michel. (Pages 24-29.) The current City Council would have a better chance of passing gun laws which do not violate the Constitution if the Council were rigorous in its own factual investigations of the purported needs for extremely restrictive laws.
Bob Levy (mastermind of Heller), Dennis Henigan (Brady Campaign), and I are blog-debating Heller and its ramifications over at Cato Unbound. Erwin Chemerinsky should join us later in the week.
Over at Opinio Juris, Kenneth
Anderson has an interesting
post about last week's gun control conference at
the United Nations, and a New York Times
puff piece thereon, written by C.J. Chivers.
After noting U.S. concerns about the U.N. becoming a
venue attacks on American gun ownership, the Times
explains:
The United Nations and advocates of gun control have said that such fears are unfounded, and that there is no effort to impose standards on nations with traditions of civilian ownership, or to restrict hunting. The programs, they said, apply largely to areas suffering from insurgencies or war.But Anderson was present at the beginning of the U.N.'s campaign against gun ownership:“States remain free to have their own national legislation,” said Daniel Prins, chief of the Conventional Arms Branch of the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs. “This document does not try to regulate gun ownership in the whole world. This is an instrument that allows states to focus on regions in conflict and the weapons that illicitly get there.”
I recall sitting in meetings of landmines advocates talking about where things should go next; I was director of the Human Rights Watch Arms Division, with a mandate to address the transfer of weapons into conflicts where they would be used in the violation of the laws of war, and small arms were the main concern. I was astonished at how quickly the entire question morphed from concern about the flood of weapons into African civil wars into how to use international law to do an end run around supposedly permissive gun ownership regimes in the US.Despite protestations to the contrary, the U.N. remains quite interested in constricting lawful gun ownership. Consider, for example, the United Nations Disarmament Programme's publication, How to Guide: Small Arms and Light Weapons Legislation. The publication touts the importance of international "harmonisation" of gun laws. According to the United Nations:
I dropped any personal support for the movement when it became clear, a long time ago, that it is about controlling domestic weapons equally in the US (or, today, even more so) as in Somalia or Congo.
Citizens should only be allowed to own guns if they are given a government permit, and the permit should only be issued if there is a "good reason" for possession or or "genuine need." In particular, permits to own guns for self defense should not be issued unless the applicant proves that he is in immediate danger.
The law require "safe storage", which means that firearms should be disassembled and the ammunition ammo stored separately.

