The Second Amendment of the Unite States’ Constitution
contains two clauses that are by their nature and their presence in the same amendment,
connected.
The Second Amendment is as follows:
“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.”
The first clause
states that a well regulated militia is important to the security of a free
state.
Militia, in context
of the early years of the forming of the nation, is a quasi-military
organization of able bodied people that can be expected to either supplement a
standing army in time of need or act as a defensive army against the power of the
national government in an attempt to control a state.
Under the Articles
of Confederation, a passage instructed individual states to identify and retain
able bodied men to be part of the individual state militia and that they were
to be minimally equipped with tents, field pieces and arms.
The Articles of Confederation
included this line because the authors found that the length of the Revolutionary
War had a damping effect on individual state militias.
The militias lacked
in able leadership, became undisciplined, individuals tended to go awal and
state and local communities preferred their militia to stay either close to
home or at the very least stay within the state.
During the writing
of the Constitution the near catastrophic experience from the Revolutionary War
and the attempted solution to the problem in the Articles of Confederation was
not overlooked or ignored.
James Madison and
many legislators in the 13 colonies noted that the original Constitution that was
being considered before them did not support a well regulated and properly equipped
militia.
In their own attempt
to shore up the state militias, James Madison and the legislators of the colonies
demanded and indeed did place in the Constitution the first clause of the
second amendment, “A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of
a free state.”
Which, of course,
brings to light the definition of a “state.”
First, the term state did not refer to individual
states in general.
States, being a geographically defined area of
land, were the primary organization of the country at the time and still is
today.
The individual states were expected to be a balancing
fulcrum for the power of the national government.
But, in this context, the term state in the time
period of the country was meant to mean a political organization, that is, a
country as we define it today.
At the time “states,” meaning government, were
either of two kinds; a state where the power rested in the people or were the power
rested in a monarch.
A “free state”, in this context, was a country
where the power rested with the people.
So, for the first clause of the Second Amendment,
its meaning is that a militia that is able to muster men that are properly
armed and trained is important to a free country, therefore, it must be
maintained.
As for the second, it is less complicated but
still connected to the first clause.
Again, back to the meanings during the Revolutionary
times.
Money was tight and the burgeoning government at
the time could not always be relied on to provide the funding necessary to equip
the troops properly that were fighting the English.
It was accepted, unlike our military now, that if
you had your own guns, you were encouraged to bring them for your use. This alleviated some of the pressure on the
short supplies and enable someone who doesn’t have access to their own weapons
to have one.
All the guns used by the individual at the time
were not military style in the way we know of them now.
Most guns were used for hunting, or on the
frontier of the country to defend against Native American’s whose land was
being stolen from them by the European invaders.
All military style weapons, cannons, mortars and
howitzers, were retained by the Army and the state and local militia.
Even the guns that were owned by the military were taken back
by the army or the state and local militia for storage to keep them maintained
and available.
Here is the important point on this part of the second
clause.
The Constitution at the time, forbid keeping a national standing
army.
There was an understanding that the country in time of need
would rely on the state and local militia to fill the void of having no army at
ready till a regular army could be mustered. (going back of course to the first
clause in the amendment)
So, those that were part of the militia and under its direct
control were encouraged to own and maintain their weapons for use in any
conflict that might arise.
So, the meaning behind the second clause of the second amendment. That individuals that are part of the regulated
militia are not only encouraged to own their own weapons, but states and local governments
must not restrict their ownership for those that are part of the militia.
In my opinion, the two clauses of the second amendment are
wedded.
Weapon ownership can be restricted for those that do not
belong to a well-regulated militia organized by the state or local government
and the right of the federal government to set standards for the organization
and regulation of the militias are not only Constitutional, but necessary.