The Volokh Conspiracy
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The "Essential" Second Amendment - Now Published in Texas Review of Law & Politics
A study of the Second Amendment during the pandemic cases.
The Texas Review of Law & Politics has published my new article, The "Essential" Second Amendment. Here is the abstract:
Constitutional litigation over the Second Amendment has followed a familiar pattern. In the decade since Heller and McDonald, countless cases have turned on a foundational question: how much danger does the weapon pose? But in 2020, the courts were suddenly presented with a novel constitutional question: how much danger does obtaining the weapon pose? During the COVID-19 pandemic, state and local governments enacted complete prohibitions on the acquisition of firearms. Willing buyers were ready to comply with all extant gun-control regulations. But these governments shuttered firearm stores completely. These policies were adopted not to stop the sale of guns but to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus. In short order, these governments deemed the Second Amendment as "non-essential." The ability to purchase firearms was treated no differently than the ability to purchase other conveniences. Still, the practices in the overwhelming majority of the states reflected what should be a basic tenet of constitutional law: enumerated fundamental constitutional rights must be "essential" rights. And the state cannot impose an absolute and arbitrary prohibition on the exercise of the essential Second Amendment.
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part I considers what the word "essential" really means. Part II undertakes a fifty-state survey of restrictions imposed on the right to keep and bear arms during the pandemic. Part III analyzes another metric to decide whether the right to keep and bear arms is essential: the people. During the COVID-19 pandemic, gun sales surged. In times of civil unrest, millions of Americans viewed the acquisition of firearms as essential. Part IV revisits two district court decisions that upheld restrictions on the right to keep and bear arms during the pandemic. These cases followed the framework Chief Justice Roberts established in South Bay Pentecostal Church v. Newsom. These courts should have followed the framework Justice Kavanaugh established in Calvary Chapel v. Sisolak and that was formally adopted by the Court in Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo. If any businesses are treated as essential, firearm stores must presumptively be afforded that same status. The right to keep and bear arms ought to be afforded "most-favored status." And the state must justify its decision to deprive people of their right to keep and bear arms.
The COVID-19 pandemic has illustrated once again that in times of crisis, the government will forcibly separate the people and their arms. The people must be vigilant to protect this essential right.
I began writing this piece shortly after the pandemic began. More than two years later, some of these cases are still pending in the courts.
I also commend the other articles in this excellent volume of TROLP, including a very timely article by Alyson M. Cox and O. Carter Snead who reject an incrementalist approach to overturning Roe.
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The Second Amendment is an essential right to protect against rioting, burning and looting Democrats.
The killing of criminals should be totally immune, as a form of social self defense.
Okay. Kind of hard for the dead person to dispute having been a criminal, though, don't you think?
I think Daivd would say that your concern is just more lawyer BS.
Okay. Kind of hard for the dead person to dispute having been a criminal, though, don't you think?
If only we had state employees whose job it was to investigate those sorts of things and uncover the facts.
If only we had state, local, and municipal employees whose job it was to protect me from rioting, burning, and looting Democrats, so that I wouldn't need to shoot anyone (and then, after the fact, have JasonT20 question whether the persons I shot were really "criminals").
The reason government officials want to take away guns during an emergency is because they are going to take away a lot of your other rights as well and they do not want the people in a position where they can loudly, forcefully, and successfully object.
Disaffected, paranoid, antisocial, delusional, anti-government, right-wing extremists are among my favorite gun nuts.
And among the most certain casualties of the American culture war.
Published... on the eve of the Supreme Court issuing an opinion in NY Guns (Bruen).
KBA is an essential, enumerated, right. Being able to buy a gun from a physical gun store is not. I am surprised that Prof Blackman didn't spot the difference.
Next: why no-parking zones in front of gun stores are unconstitutional, etc. etc.
Since existing law already barred buying a gun other than from a physical store, the closure of the physical stores became a ban on buying guns at all. As other commentors (up to and including SCOTUS) have already said, the right to have something necessarily includes the right to get it in the first place. You cannot ban the buying and selling of printing presses without infringing on the First Amendment.
You could make guns, you could buy guns from your neighbour, etc.
But my point is that if you are going to argue on the basis that X is an enumerated right, the rights generally implied by the existence of X but not stated, even if accepted by SCOTUS on down are still not enumerated rights. They are, what, penumbra? 😉
My mistake - I didn't notice that you were the same troll who dragged out this ridiculous argument yesterday. Come back if you ever decide you'd like to talk about what the law actually is.
Wrong guy, dipshit. Also, this thread is not about what the law is, but about what Blackman's argument is based on.
"You could make guns, you could buy guns from your neighbour, etc."
You can't buy a gun from a neighbor without a trip to an FFL in universal background check states (e.g. California).
A dim voice in my head is saying that at least one state requires having an FFL engrave a serial number prior to making a firearm, but I might be wrong; things are changing pretty fast in that area.
That's a separate problem. That there are laws concerning gun transfers is of course evidence that the right to buy guns is NOT essential/enumerated.
Or that it's just being violated.
But as the laws still stand - and I am sure that they have been challenged - that is evidence that 2A was not being violated.
KBA is an essential, enumerated, right. Being able to buy a gun from a physical gun store is not. I am surprised that Prof Blackman didn't spot the difference.
That's like saying you're surprised he didn't spot the invisible dragon in your front yard.
Nope.
“The people must be vigilant to protect this essential right.”
The people’s attempts to enact gun controls through the representatives they voted for keep getting invalidated by our minoritarian Republican system.
Some people’s attempts to violate the U.S. Constitution keep getting invalidated by courts whose job it is to protect the rights enshrined therein.
FIFY
"The people's right to enact speech controls through the representatives they voted for..."
You have a point, but it will be lost on captcrisis -- I'm sure he supports censorship just as much as "gun control."
"The people's right to enact race residency controls through the representatives they voted for..."
There was a time when "liberals" opposed race-based laws. Not anymore. Today, there're officially "black" dorms at public universities. For some strange reason, you don't hear "liberals" objecting.
"The people's right to enact religious controls through the representatives they voted for..."
Again, you have a point, but, again, it will be lost on "liberals" -- they hate religion (except Islam, for some strange reason) just as much as they hate guns.
Not so strange. Liberals are deeply envious of the absolute control Islamic religious leaders have over their believers. Unquestioned, and unquestionable, authority. It is what liberals most fervently wish for.
In times of civil unrest, millions of Americans viewed the acquisition of firearms as essential.
Other millions thought that a frightening delusion, which might dangerously encourage civil unrest.
Not saying gun stores ought to have been closed selectively. But if the argument is from civil unrest, you have to look at all sides of that, not just presume your take on it decides the question.
"Other millions thought that a frightening delusion, which might dangerously encourage civil unrest."
Especially the rioters, who became concerned about their victims being able to defend themselves.
And the (politically-correct) state, local, and municipal authorities, who became concerned that the rioters might get hurt while victimizing people.
" . . . countless cases have turned on a foundational question: how much danger does the weapon pose?"
Well, since the amendment envisions using the arms to kill enemies of the nation as well as protect the owner, I would suggest the question is irrelevant. The "arms" need to be deadly, period.