To Keep and Bear Arms
posted at 1:14 am on March 3, 2010 by Doctor Zero
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Twenty-five years ago, a little after sunrise on a Monday morning, the front door of my house was kicked in by a man who had blown his mind with crack cocaine. He marched my family upstairs at gunpoint. When I reached the top of the stairs and turned around, he put the gun in my forehead and pulled the trigger.
I’ve always heard it was good to begin a composition with an arresting opening paragraph. That’s the catchiest one I can offer from an otherwise modest biography. I hope the rest of this essay lives up to the opening. I’ll do my best.
I don’t mind admitting this incident gave me a lifelong aversion to guns. I don’t have any objection to other law-abiding citizens bearing arms – in fact, I’m strongly in favor of it. It’s just not a right I have chosen to exercise, although I’m working on getting over it. I’m fascinated by the beauty and science of firearms. I rarely pass a gun magazine on the stands without flipping it open, and I love attending gun shows. My first close encounter with a gun was rather… intense, so I’m understandably nervous around them. I recently discovered I’m a remarkably good shot with a target rifle, after some friends invited me to shoot with them. I’ve decided twenty-five years is long enough to be uncomfortable around the reality of something I’ve always supported in theory.
The Second Amendment is once again in the news, as the Supreme Court considers a case that would invoke the Fourteenth Amendment to apply it to the states, striking down restrictive state and local gun-control laws… oh, wait. You’re probably wondering why I’m still here, having been shot in the head and all. Well, I got lucky. I was able to knock the gun out of the way just in time, and the bullet wound up in the wall, instead of my brain. I had managed to make a hasty call to the police as the door was being kicked in, and they arrived to find the perp and I wrestling for control of the weapon at the bottom of the stairs. No one died in my house that day.
I wish the Supreme Court would do more than rule the Second Amendment applies to the states. It’s long past time the last, ridiculous cobwebs of ambiguity were cleared away from the right to keep and bear arms. Gun control has been simmering on low heat for a while, after boiling over in the Nineties. We should clear it off the Constitutional stove altogether. We have better things to do than slip into another bitter, tedious argument about whether the government can interfere with our right, and duty, to defend ourselves.
The notion that citizens have no good reason to be armed, because the State can protect them from violent crime, is one of the most dangerous lies Big Government has fed its subjects. The government reduces crime through the police and court systems, but no matter how tirelessly the police work, there is very little chance they can actively defend you from assault. There aren’t enough of them, and there never could be. The very areas of privacy that allow us to relax with our friends and families will always be soft targets for criminals… unless we fortify them ourselves. The police arrived at my house several minutes too late to play a role in my attempted execution. They made excellent time – there happened to be a unit in the area. If things had gone a little different, they might have arrived just in time to avenge me.
Citizen access to firearms has reduced crime rates time and again, but this is more than a matter of practicality. It’s a question of principle. The people of an orderly nation surrender the business of vengeance to the government, replacing it with the rule of law. They cannot be expected to surrender the right of defense. The right to protect yourself, and your family, from injury and death is an essential part of your dignity as a free man or woman. Without the First Amendment, you are a slave. Without the Second, you are a child.
The Western nations which have abandoned this essential understanding of an individual’s right to self-defense have become rotting orphanages filled with dependent children. They’re not dealing very well with the invasion of a determined ideology that has complete confidence in its own righteousness, and few reservations about using violence to assert itself. Losing the dignity of self-defense is part of the degeneration from master of the State to its client. As this dignity fades, the people and their government speak less of responsibilities, and more of entitlements.
The Second Amendment is a concrete expression of the American birthright of independence. With the right of self-defense bargained away, our rights to speak and vote give us modest influence in a collective. The Founders wanted more, and better, for us.
Sometimes liberals sneer at the idea we might keep arms against government tyranny, because a bunch of pistol-packing Tea Party types have no chance of repeating the success of the Revolution against a modern military force. This completely misses the point. A disarmed populace has little choice but to obey orders. If the population is armed, a tyrant’s forces have to do more than just brandish their weapons… they’d have to start pulling triggers. Victory for a righteous populace would come in the military’s refusal to pull those triggers. Tyranny should never be easy. Of course, it should never come to that again, in the United States. As long as the population is armed, this is an understanding, and a duty… not an assumption.
The right to keep and bear arms is a crucial intersection of liberty and obligation. A gun owner is entrusted with the solemn duty to tend his weapons carefully and securely. In accepting this duty, we remove the destiny of our loved ones from the hands of madmen, and it is no longer measured by the distance of a friendly police car from our homes. It would be a mark of our maturity as a nation if we stopped telling ourselves that freedom can exist in the absence of responsibility… or danger. The shards of those illusions carry sharp edges, when they shatter.
The New York Times article about the case before the Supreme Court ends this way:
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority has made clear that it is very concerned about the right to bear arms. There is another right, however, that should not get lost: the right of people, through their elected representatives, to adopt carefully drawn laws that protect them against other people’s guns.
Carefully drawn laws will not protect you from other people’s guns. Believe me. None of the people carefully drawing those laws will rely upon them for their protection.
Cross-posted at www.doczero.org.










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Agreed, Dr. Z. Law already gives us all the protections it can against other people’s guns. The best law can do, no matter what its specific provisions, is punish the use of guns. It has done that for years without the effect routinely claimed by gun-restriction advocates for “outlawing guns.” Outlawing guns and restricting legal ownership doesn’t get rid of them or make them less accessible to criminals.
It’s important to note that the Founders didn’t intend only that citizens be able to protect ourselves against criminals. They saw the right to bear arms as a check on government’s power. An armed citizenry forces government to up the ante beyond the politically tolerable, if it proposes to intimidate and coerce us against our will.
But at the more abstract level, an important concept was that the charter of government was conferred by the people. Of course the people were to be armed. Our rights precede those of government, and limit government’s charter.
What a long way we have come from that understanding of the Founders’ philosophy and intent.
J.E. Dyer on March 3, 2010 at 2:17 AM
That NYT quote is a hoot.
It is beyond ridiculous to entertain the notion that a lawbreaker will not access and use a gun because it’s against the law.
Best post yet, Doctor Zero. The importance of the Second Amendment cannot be overstated. You don’t have to own a gun to benefit from the right to own guns, either — a point that is often overlooked.
hillbillyjim on March 3, 2010 at 5:37 AM
P.S. I forgot to mention that I am glad and we are all fortunate that your instincts/reflexes didn’t fail you on that day a quarter-century ago.
hillbillyjim on March 3, 2010 at 5:40 AM
Excellent piece again sir. I’d like to add a point which I frequently remind “anti-gun” folks of. Not only are the resources not available to realistically defend the citizenry against violent crime, police are NOT, by way of contract or charter, required to protect people from crime or criminals. There job is to investigate crimes and apprehend offenders for prosecution. The idea that “thats what cops are for” is so ridiculous as to be funny.
Much like the fact that firefighters primary job is fire prevention, not putting out fires, cops have no legal, contractual or moral obligation to protect anyone. I too was the victim of a home invasion robbery in Knoxville in the 90s, coming from a back bedroom at the sound of breaking glass, I entered the room with a shotgun at my shoulder, much to the chagrin of would-be robber. My story ended there. However, had a firearm been raised I would have not hesitated to fill a body bag. That is my nature and my right. Lets hope our overlords agree.
redneckjoe on March 3, 2010 at 5:41 AM
Yours is quite an amazing and chilling anecdote, Dr Z.
I’m 63, never owned a firearm in my life until just a
few months ago and am proud to have finally taken on that
responsibility to protect my own.
VBMax on March 3, 2010 at 7:23 AM
“Article the fourth … 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.”
I say we gang up on the State of California. It is not like they have a Militia or anything.
percysunshine on March 3, 2010 at 8:04 AM
Glad things worked out for ya, Doc! And nice piece.
I a supporter of the police and am ever thankful for the men and women who serve us in every way, but the reality is that when your life and your family’s lives are on the line, the police simply aren’t going to be your first line of defense.
A quote I heard once, don’t know who coined the phrase, but it stuck with me:
“When seconds count, the police are only minutes away.”
Midas on March 3, 2010 at 8:10 AM
Attending shooting ranges in recent months one is exposed to a very unique phenomena; in a sport, shooting, that for decades has been largely dominated by men, now shooting ranges are being crowded by women. Wonderful! New firearm owners, women young and old, learning how to shoot and expressing their Second Amendment rights. Why is none of this being covered by our liberal media? Women in America crowding into gun ranges and practicing self defense training, a phenomena once dominated by men. The Second Amendment applies to all Americans, young and old, men and women. And those new to the shooting ranges, learning their rights, are increasingly women! Wonderful!
IntheNet on March 3, 2010 at 8:52 AM
IntheNet on March 3, 2010 at 8:52 AM
—-
IntheNet,
This isn’t precisely a new phenomena, it’s more that the false sense of security that’s permeated since the 1940s is being removed and the “soccer moms” are starting to worry about how to care for themselves and their brood. A good thing, in my book.
Doctor Zero,
As others have said, very glad you survived your close encounter. Like you, I haven’t owned a firearm, but I’m thinking of changing that.
Regarding the NYT “money quote”, I’ve got another for you. “Laws don’t go around on wheels enforcing themselves”. That’s from science fiction writer Eric Flint.
Mew
acat on March 3, 2010 at 10:43 AM
Arresting opening paragraph indeed. Echo the thoughts here – grateful for your quick reflexes!
I joined the bandwagon last year, after nearly 40 years of being anti-gun. The husband and I both got our CCW permit in early 2009. Joined a wonderful club – where the membership of women is increasing rapidly. They do an annual Ladies Day – where the club and all ranges are for the exclusive use of women who pay for the privilege of trying out a wide array of firearms.
It sold out last year in less than 2 weeks. They turned away over 40 women. I know they got new membership out of it, just not sure how many.
It’s a sport I never thought I’d participate in, let alone enjoy as much as I do. Same with the husband.
And when he travels on business, I keep a loaded Beretta 9mm in my nightstand. I may live in a quiet, rural New England town but I’m no fool – it won’t stay quiet forever, not in this economy.
KrisinNE on March 3, 2010 at 12:10 PM
This post has been promoted to HotAir.com.
Comments have been closed on this post but the discussion continues here.
Ed Morrissey on March 3, 2010 at 12:16 PM
I think the head of any household has a solemn duty to protect his family as well as he knows how. If a weapon can assist in that goal, then you should have a weapon.
TheUnrepentantGeek on March 3, 2010 at 12:30 PM
Agreed with minor edits for emphasis. That is the whole argument right there. I came to the above conclusion spontaneously years ago during a heated discussion on the 2nd. Out of nowhere I blurted out something along the lines of “It is my duty as a father to protect my family. Whereas you would have me helpless and watch my family destroyed in order to feel safe from firearms.” Much later that person admitted he’d never looked at the issue that way & only from the perspective of how firearms might impact him.
roy_batty on March 4, 2010 at 9:12 AM