A familiar quote, often attributed to Winston Churchill and later
appropriated by the leftist, radical, Saul Alinsky goes, “Never let a
good crisis go to waste.” Whoever originally coined the concept, the
anti-Second Amendment crowd is certainly taking it to heart. In the last
48 hours, we have seen two horrific mass shootings. The blame game has
ensued. Yet, lost in the impending storm of side taking is the
recognition of the actual world we live in, and any ultimately fruitless
assault on Americans' Second Amendment freedoms plainly ignores
reality.
The Second Amendment guarantees the right to keep and bear arms. Like
it or not, it is engraved in our national freedoms and thus, the only
such way to remove it is through a Constitutional Amendment. The U.S.
Constitution was drafted 232 years ago. In that time there have been
exactly 27 successful attempts to amend it, of which, 10 were the Bill
of Rights, three required a Civil War, and one repealed another. There
will never be a successful attempt to repeal the Second Amendment, and
nor should there be. Pandora’s Box has been opened and guns exist,
therefore each and every American should have the right to choose how to
defend themselves. History is filled with failed attempts to dictate
such a morality.
For all of recorded history humans have had the
requisite knowledge to produce alcohol. Churches and religious groups
have often frowned upon its use, yet those who chose to consume alcohol
did. Then Americans chose to ratify the 18th Amendment (prohibition).
Did Americans no longer drink through the roaring '20s? Of course, they
did. Canadian whiskey was illegally imported. Bath-tub gin killed
thousands. And Americans continued to illegally consume alcohol because
they had the knowledge to create it and the means to procure it.
Pandora’s Box had been opened. Who benefitted from prohibition? Al
Capone, bootleggers, and the rise of the American mafia. Americans had
the will, they had the knowledge, so they found the way.
A government cannot dictate morality. To say or imply otherwise would
ignore the realties of back ally abortions, drug trafficking and the
current opioid crisis. When humans have a desire coupled with the
knowledge and ability to achieve such an end, inevitably, they will
achieve such an end. Now, the gun debate and the Second Amendment debate
rages on in defiance of this well-established principle.
Humans
have the knowledge and ability to make and obtain firearms. A simple
internet search can teach someone to make their own. China, Russia,
Italy, and countless other countries produce guns. Are we to assume, in
defiance of the lessons of prohibition, abortion, and the drug trade,
that the simple criminalizing of self defense will somehow prevent the
natural human desire for such? All that would ensue would be an
international arms circuit, run by cartels, serving only to arm the very
criminals that defy our laws to begin with.
And how would any such prohibition be enforced? By the politicians that
run, say, sanctuary cities and states? By local law enforcement that
passionately refuse to work with federal officers and agencies to
enforce existing laws with which they disagree? Such a proposition is
ludicrous on its face. One could fairly submit that, in such an
environment, the government would choose to enforce firearm prohibitions
on some while tacitly ignoring it on others. Prohibition taught us
that.
It is impossible to ignore the tragedies of this past weekend, and
many before it. Mental health issues, criminals, both organized and
otherwise, and civil discourse must be addressed. Yet the solution
cannot be to repeat the mistakes of the past.
As long as Pandora’s
Box has been opened and the knowledge and ability to create firearms
exist, the Second Amendment is the law of the land and it is not
negotiable, nor is the right of every American to defend themselves how
and when they need.
Pandora’s Box Has Been Opened And The 2nd Amendment Is Not Negotiable
Paul M. Curry, Esq. graduated from Temple University in Philadelphia
with a B.A. in Political Science and Thomas Jefferson School of Law in
San Diego, CA with a Juris Doctorate.
He served in the United States Army as an enlisted Cavalry Soldier
assigned to the 2nd Infantry Division and as a Captain in the JAG Corps
with both the 25th Infantry Division and the 1st Cavalry Division.
Captain Curry deployed to Kuwait and Iraq during Operation Iraqi
Freedom.
He lives in Arlington, VA where he practices government contract law and
FOIA law.
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