Saturday, October 3, 2015

Here we go again … Gun Control vs. Individual Right to Bear Arms

It is predictable that this debate flares up again and again: A mass shooting of one kind or another occurs in the US on average on an almost daily basis. And this does not even include all the senseless killings of drive-by shootings and accidental shootings in the home. And these repeated hand-wringing debates always seem to completely miss the main point:
 The cause of most of these senseless deaths is the uncontrolled proliferation of firearms in the US.

As the President pointed out in his impassioned plea to the nation, the US does not have a higher proportion of mentally ill than other first-world nations, yet our rate of gun violence and deaths from firearms is exponentially higher than in all other first-world countries. The difference is that all other first-world societies have strict laws controlling the ownership and use of firearms.

Again we see the raising of bogus straw-man arguments about the role of mental illness and the benefits of expanded background checks in order to deflect from the real issue: uncontrolled proliferation of firearms of all sorts in the US.

This endless cycle of senseless violence and death, followed by a burst of hand-wringing debate, will not be resolved until the core issue is resolved: Does the 2nd Amendment guarantee an individual’s unrestricted right to arm himself to the teeth, independent of his (or her) current membership in “a well regulated Militia”?

As described in a New Yorker piece by Jeffrey Toobin (http://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/so-you-think-you-know-the-second-amendment), written after the Sandy Hook massacre, the interpretation of the 2nd Amendment in the US until well into the 1970’s accepted the ability of the Federal Government to regulate the ownership and use of firearms. No one seriously objected, for example, when in the 1930’s federal laws were passed to prohibit ownership of machine guns and sawed off shotguns, favorite weapons of Mafia gangs. However, in 1977, according to Toobin, the NRA was taken over by a group of conservative extremists, who then initiated a concerted effort to change the interpretation of the 2nd Amendment.

This effort by the NRA culminated in the 2007 ruling in “District of Columbia vs. Heller” (http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/07pdf/07-290.pdf), where expert testimony, academic research, and “Friend of the Court” briefs funded by the NRA constituted important underpinnings for Justice Scalia’s contorted ruling in favor of individual, uncontrolled gun ownership.

Justice Scalia first addresses the rather odd formulation of the 2nd Amendment, consisting of a “prefatory clause”, or statement of purpose (A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,..), and the “operative clause” (… the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.) Although Scalia states that his interpretation was guided by the principle that “[t]he Constitution was written to be under­ stood by the voters; its words and phrases were used in their normal and ordinary as distinguished from technical meaning”, a generally accepted standard of constitutional interpretation, Scalia then proceeds to use convoluted arguments, in conjunction with esoteric, and doubtful “academic” and linguistic studies, to “prove” that the “prefatory clause” does not limit in any way the “operative clause”, and bingo, we have the unconstrained statement that “[T]he right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

This interpretation is completely contrary to Scalia’s supposed guiding principle that “[t]he Constitution was written to be under­ stood by the voters;…” No one with the reading and comprehension skills of the average fifth grader would discard the statement of purpose (A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,..) as irrelevant and meaningless.

Although at this point, having invalidated (in his mind, anyway) the constraining effect of the “prefatory clause”, Scalia is essentially home free. However, showing the full extent of his perverse intellectual arrogance, he still engages in unbelievably convoluted arguments, all contrary to the principal that “[t]he Constitution was written to be under­ stood by the voters;…”, to further eliminate any possibility that the “operative clause”, “…keep and bear Arms…” might implicitly imply limitations to a militia only.

Even Justice Scalia has retained a certain amount of “common sense”, and recognizes that allowing individuals to “keep and bear Arms” cannot be allowed to include all kinds of modern weaponry. So again he engages in perverse intellectual masturbation to come up with the quite arbitrary constraint that this “preexisting right” to keep and bear Arms applies only to those type of weapons “in common use at the time” - at what time? at the time of writing the Constitution, or, since these rights are supposedly pre-existing, at some previous historic period? So is the allowed weaponry restricted to primitive stone-age clubs, bows and arrows, swords, or primitive pistols and muskets in use in the Constitution writing period? Certainly weapons “in common use at the time” do not include automatic or semi-automatic handguns.

Even though the crazy fringe of the “gun lobby” consistently makes the argument that the unconstrained right to keep and bear Arms is necessary to protect us from “the government”, nothing in Justice Scalia’s opinion supports that view. On the contrary, in his concluding paragraph he refers only to “…handguns held and used for self-defense in the home.” Thus, we are to believe that the framers of the Constitution and Bill of Rights, whose overriding concerns were in protecting citizens from arbitrary powers of “the state” and of balancing States rights against federal powers, including the right of States to maintain their own Militias, that these framers were worrying about the ability of individuals to have handguns in their home to protect themselves, and that the thus wrote an Amendment specifically for that purpose.

On balance, as stated by Toobin, even with this “District of Columbia vs. Heller” ruling, which seems to restrict the meaning of the 2nd Amendment to an individual having a handgun in the home for self-defense, there is ample leeway for federal legislation to control the types and spread of firearms. But our political elite, and even most of the media, have been so cowed by the NRA that the current political and public dialog is restricted to extending background checks and diverted to the issue of mental health.


One final note: there exists a strong argument, originated by the German philosopher, sociologist and jurist, Max Weber, that a state can only exist if it holds a “monopoly of violence” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly_on_violence); anything else will inevitably result in anarchy. The situation in the US today is rapidly approaching anarchy: there are large areas, especially in our cities, where the “rule of law” is a fiction; young children are not safe in their homes (drive-by shootings) or in their schools (mass shootings), and the populace in general is not safe from gun violence in theaters, shopping malls or even in the central business districts during daylight hours. The “solution”, according to 2nd Amendment absolutists, is to arm everyone. With that, our society would devolve into one huge “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral”.

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Crazy Talk at the Republican Debate




Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Will the World Come To Europe?

by Ross Douthat

Sept. 8th, 2015

http://douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/09/08/will-the-world-come-to-europe/?comments#permid=16024402

And your point is?...

You seem to implicitly argue for the Fence/Wall solutions of Hungary and Trump - b.t.w., perhaps Mr. Trump should travel to Hungary to give them his invaluable advice on how to build a WALL - not just a puny fence - and have someone else, in their case probably the Greeks, pay for it.

There have been huge migrations of populations in the past, and what we consider the "homogeneous, national identities" of nation states today are the results of these past migrations and mixing and assimilation of one culture into another. The US is turning more and more Latino, which is happening more or less naturally - yes, there are tensions with people like Trump fanning the flames, but it will continue to happen. How well we deal with it is up to us, and our political elite (not a comforting thought when one looks at the bevy of GOP candidates).

The same goes for Europe - Germany, in spite of its archaic and counter-productive "immigration" laws, has assimilated large numbers of Italians, Greeks and Turks, more or less peacefully, originally to satisfy its needs for labor to fuel the "Economic Miracle". There are demographic trends in Germany (and much of Europe) which require immigration and assimilation of "foreign" cultures. Again, how peacefully that happens is up to the people and their political elite. 

Let's hope for the best, because this process cannot be stopped!

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One more comment on this topic: watching the Euro Soccer Qualifying games, it is interesting to see the names on the various national team players, and how many are "foreign" names: Yesterday the German national team, and today the Swiss.

Admittedly, this is not entirely representative, but interesting none-the-less..

Integration of "foreign" nationalities and cultures is certainly possible, and even desirable.

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I guess I'm having a discussion with myself :)
But anyway, one more point.

The current estimate is that 800,000 refugees will arrive in Germany this year (official estimate); unofficially this estimate has already been expanded to 1,000,000.
If one applied that to the US, it would be the equivalent of 4,000,000 "refugees" arriving in the US this year.

I hesitate to imagine how the US would react to that kind of an influx.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Jeb Bush, Family Ties and a Museum That Never Materialized

Thursday, September 3, 2015

The End of the Republican Party?

By Ross Douthat

SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 1:03 PM


http://douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/09/01/the-end-of-the-republican-party/?comments#permid=15977519

What we are witnessing, I believe, is that conservatives are being caught up in and strangled by their own web of long running ignorance, lies, deception and devicive propaganda. They have bombarded their followers with this nonsence for decades, to the point where the rank and file have come to actually believe this nonesense. Trump has become the "pied piper" who takes all these idiodic conservative slogans, prejudices and lies and is leading a significant portion of the conservative true believers over the cliff.

No, I don't believe that the GOP will cease to exist because of this. But this will be a lesson for the more sane elements within the GOP (they do exist, see all the people who have chosen to depart from Senate and House) to realize, that spreading lies and misinformation and dogmatic nonesense has consequences: people will actually come to expect that you will deliver on the idiotic promises you made (reduce taxes, shrink government), and that you actually have a solution to the non-existent cataclysms (ObamaCare, Planned Parenthood) you have shouted about.

The actual record of GOP administrations in terms of deficit, taxes, big government, and solving social problems is dismal.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Between Iraq and a Hawk Base

G.O.P. presidential candidates are struggling to craft a foreign policy that can please the gung-ho and win in 2016 — without overpromising military force.


http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/06/magazine/between-iraq-and-a-hawk-base.html?comments#permid=15969264

Conservative/neocon foreign policy is characterized by an appalling lack of knowledge about history and a frightening arrogance about what America should/can do in the world. Even without the lessons from the decades of British arrogance and stupidity in their foreign policy in the Middle East, the lessons of the US's recent blunders in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan should suffice to show that WE, the US, have singular responsibility for destabilizing the entire region and unleashing the fanaticizm of the itra-Islam religious and tribal conflict there. The lack of acknowledgement of these FACTS by conservatives is either wilfull ignorance our arrogant stupidity.

Combine this with the woefully inadequate and ingnorant recommendations by our "intelligence" organization (remember "slam-dunk") and the extremely bad advice from our military leadership, and you have a recepie for more disasters. We completely underestimated the level of effort required to permanently "pacify" Iraq and Afghanistan. 

The supposed "national interest" we have there is completely fictional. "Fight them there to keep them away from our shores" has proven to be completely backwards: Only by going "there" and wreaking havok have we inspired "them" to come here and retaliate.

We have a fatal weakness, that when it comes to supposed "national security", our civilian leaders always defer to military advisors.

Friday, August 7, 2015

The Republican Scrum Begins

by Ross Douthat
August 7, 2015

What this first set of GOP debates showed, including the "second-tier" one, was how utterly bankrupt the GOP is in terms of fielding anyone with even an inkling of understanding for what the problems are which this country faces - they are NOT Planned Parenthood or ObamaCare.

The only person that seemed to have in inkling of an idea what's going on was Kasick. The others were trying to outdo each other in spouting the usual GOP nonesense about (1) strong military to defeat ISIS - there is no evidence, after 15 years and >5000 soldiers dead in Afghanistan and Iraq, that we know how to bring peace and democracy to anyone; (2) how quickly they will undo ObamaCare - Cruz, of course, will do it on "day one"; unlike God, he will do everything in one day; (3) how it is of the utmost national importance to defund Planned Parenthood (4) how high they will build the fence along the Rio Grand - unless they are willing to add a "death strip" like on the old Iron Curtain, no amount of fence, or even "the Wall" which Donald is promising, will keep people out.

The one area where I agree with Mr. Douthat is that SOME of the FOX questions were pointed - even though MOST of them were invitations on a silver platter to spout the normal GOP/FOX nonsense.