ACLU Opinion on Guns - Scary!

Waterengineer

New member
This has probably been discussed here a thousand times but I just ran across the ACLU's official postion on individual gun ownership.

They are stating their opinon is a "neutral" position. It is anything but neutral!!

Scary, very, very scary.

AS soon as I'm done posting this - I'm whipping out the plastic and bacoming a lifetime NRA member!!

The Official ACLU opinion lifted from their website 2-13-06:

Gun Control (3/4/2002)


Gun Control

"Why doesn't the ACLU support an individual's
unlimited right to keep and bear arms?"

BACKGROUND
The ACLU has often been criticized for "ignoring the Second Amendment" and refusing to fight for the individual's right to own a gun or other weapons. This issue, however, has not been ignored by the ACLU. The national board has in fact debated and discussed the civil liberties aspects of the Second Amendment many times.

We believe that the constitutional right to bear arms is primarily a collective one, intended mainly to protect the right of the states to maintain militias to assure their own freedom and security against the central government. In today's world, that idea is somewhat anachronistic and in any case would require weapons much more powerful than handguns or hunting rifles. The ACLU therefore believes that the Second Amendment does not confer an unlimited right upon individuals to own guns or other weapons nor does it prohibit reasonable regulation of gun ownership, such as licensing and registration.

IN BRIEF
The national ACLU is neutral on the issue of gun control. We believe that the Constitution contains no barriers to reasonable regulations of gun ownership. If we can license and register cars, we can license and register guns.

Most opponents of gun control concede that the Second Amendment certainly does not guarantee an individual's right to own bazookas, missiles or nuclear warheads. Yet these, like rifles, pistols and even submachine guns, are arms.

The question therefore is not whether to restrict arms ownership, but how much to restrict it. If that is a question left open by the Constitution, then it is a question for Congress to decide.

ACLU POLICY
"The ACLU agrees with the Supreme Court's long-standing interpretation of the Second Amendment [as set forth in the 1939 case, U.S. v. Miller] that the individual's right to bear arms applies only to the preservation or efficiency of a well-regulated militia. Except for lawful police and military purposes, the possession of weapons by individuals is not constitutionally protected. Therefore, there is no constitutional impediment to the regulation of firearms." --Policy #47

ARGUMENTS, FACTS, QUOTES

"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 Second Amendment to the Constitution

"Since the Second Amendment. . . applies only to the right of the State to
maintain a militia and not to the individual's right to bear arms, there
can be no serious claim to any express constitutional right to possess a firearm."


U.S. v. Warin (6th Circuit, 1976)

Unless the Constitution protects the individual's right to own all kinds of arms, there is no principled way to oppose reasonable restrictions on handguns, Uzis or semi-automatic rifles.

If indeed the Second Amendment provides an absolute, constitutional protection for the right to bear arms in order to preserve the power of the people to resist government tyranny, then it must allow individuals to possess bazookas, torpedoes, SCUD missiles and even nuclear warheads, for they, like handguns, rifles and M-16s, are arms. Moreover, it is hard to imagine any serious resistance to the military without such arms. Yet few, if any, would argue that the Second Amendment gives individuals the unlimited right to own any weapons they please. But as soon as we allow governmental regulation of any weapons, we have broken the dam of Constitutional protection. Once that dam is broken, we are not talking about whether the government can constitutionally restrict arms, but rather what constitutes a reasonable restriction.

The 1939 case U.S. v. Miller is the only modern case in which the Supreme Court has addressed this issue. A unanimous Court ruled that the Second Amendment must be interpreted as intending to guarantee the states' rights to maintain and train a militia. "In the absence of any evidence tending to show that possession or use of a shotgun having a barrel of less than 18 inches in length at this time has some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well-regulated militia, we cannot say that the Second Amendment guarantees the right to keep and bear such an instrument," the Court said.

In subsequent years, the Court has refused to address the issue. It routinely denies cert. to almost all Second Amendment cases. In 1983, for example, it let stand a 7th Circuit decision upholding an ordinance in Morton Grove, Illinois, which banned possession of handguns within its borders. The case, Quilici v. Morton Grove 695 F.2d 261 (7th Cir. 1982), cert. denied 464 U.S. 863 (1983), is considered by many to be the most important modern gun control case.
 
"AS soon as I'm done posting this - I'm whipping out the plastic and bacoming a lifetime NRA member!!"

THANK YOU!!!

Tim
 
Yep those jackasses at the ACLU believe 'the people' mentioned in the 2nd Amendment means the standing military while at the same time believing 'the people' in the 1st and 4th Amendments means everyone.

Face it the National Guard = standing military. They wear US Military uniforms, report for duty on US Federal property, are equipped with federal property, hold US military ranks, get paid by the government, have US Army written right on their nametags, and answer to the commander-in-chief. Anyone that believes the NG is the 'state militia' has their head shoved up their behind.

Screw those liberal marxist mouthpieces. The ACLU stands for Anti-american Communist Lawyer's Union. Heck in the early days the ACLU shared an office with the US Communist Party. All that is common knowledge and well documented.
 
I'm in the National Guard. I was previously in the regular active duty US Army. The National Guard is most certainly not a militia.
 
The national ACLU is neutral on the issue of gun control. We believe that the Constitution contains no barriers to reasonable regulations of gun ownership. If we can license and register cars, we can license and register guns.

Since there is not an article to the Constitution stating:

"A well regulated motor pool, being necessary to the security of a free
State, the right of the people to keep and bear cars, shall not be infringed."

I don't see how the above quote applies.:barf:
 
Disingenuous history

"The 1939 case U.S. v. Miller is the only modern case in which the Supreme Court has addressed this issue. A unanimous Court ruled that the Second Amendment must be interpreted as intending to guarantee the states' rights to maintain and train a militia."

The ACLU misrepresents the Miller court's analysis. What the court actually said was that:

1. The "militia" consists of all able-bodied males between 17 and 45 years of age, as set forth in the Militia Act of 1792, now 10 USC 311 (IIRC); and

2. "[w]hen called for service these men were expected to appear bearing arms supplied by themselves and of the kind in common use at the time."

What that means, ACLU mendacity notwithstanding, is that the Second Amendment, like the First, Fourth, Ninth and Tenth, refers directly to the PEOPLE; not the states. Forget that Confederate drivel; states do NOT have rights - only people do. It also means that the "collective right" theory is a fraud.

As this militia is to come bearing arms "in common use at the time," that means "assault rifles" - today's M4 is the direct descendant of the Brown Bess and Springfield rifles.

The ACLU does excellent work in certain very limited areas; however, its a la carte constitutionalism is why I don't belong.
 
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I hate to bring this up, but they are absolutely right about this:
Unless the Constitution protects the individual's right to own all kinds of arms, there is no principled way to oppose reasonable restrictions on handguns, Uzis or semi-automatic rifles.

If indeed the Second Amendment provides an absolute, constitutional protection for the right to bear arms in order to preserve the power of the people to resist government tyranny, then it must allow individuals to possess bazookas, torpedoes, SCUD missiles and even nuclear warheads, for they, like handguns, rifles and M-16s, are arms. Moreover, it is hard to imagine any serious resistance to the military without such arms. Yet few, if any, would argue that the Second Amendment gives individuals the unlimited right to own any weapons they please. But as soon as we allow governmental regulation of any weapons, we have broken the dam of Constitutional protection. Once that dam is broken, we are not talking about whether the government can constitutionally restrict arms, but rather what constitutes a reasonable restriction.
 
Irrational analysis

"...it must allow individuals to possess bazookas, torpedoes, SCUD missiles and even nuclear warheads, for they, like handguns, rifles and M-16s, are arms."


What part of "BEAR arms" do you not understand?

Unless you expect us to believe one can carry torpedoes and SCUDS........:rolleyes:
 
What part of "BEAR arms" do you not understand?
w00t.jpg


:confused: :)
 
Reality check

"The Revolutionary War began with a British attempt to confiscate cannons."

Where? Williamsburg, where the British troops were allowed by the royal governor to seize the militia's powder and stand of arms?

Concord, where the British were attempting to seize the militia's powder and stand of arms?

Just where did artillery figure in all of this?
 
Concord.

So started the first battle in the American Revolutionary War.

The British column then advanced to Concord, and in spreading out to destroy some cannons believed to be at Provincial Colonel Barrett's farm encountered a group of armed militia at Concord North Bridge.
 
If the ACLU is cavalier in its attitude toward the second amendment, why other provisions of the constitution do they treat differently. It has been my experience that if an organization mistreats the second amendment I can pretty well bet other provisions are mistreated also.
 
So basically it says the ACLU doesn't believe we should have the right to bear nuclear weapons, machine guns and bazookas and people find that unreasonable? Generally they will stand for anyone who can't find support to give an equal footing. Different chapters of it has different views but they aren't full rules for every chapter, though on a number of occassions the ACLU have gone forth to protect the rights of gunowners. The constitution problem is it didn't take account in the future that firearms would advance so quickly.
 
So basically it says the ACLU doesn't believe we should have the right to bear nuclear weapons, machine guns and bazookas and people find that unreasonable?

Yes, at least a few of us do find it unreasonable and unconstitutional.

Read the Miller Supreme Court decision. Clearly, the militia are meant to show up with their own arms, and those arms should be of the kind in common, current military use. So, what do our soldiers carry? Machine guns, bazookas, mortars, rocket propelled grenades, shoulder-fired SAMs, and lots of other such weapons. OK, so that's what the militia should have.
 
Couple of points re ACLU.

1. Their reading of Miller continues to strike one as strained, to use a polite term.

2. Seems as if, re Second Amendment, they feet remain stuck in the same old concrete. Unfortunately, they seem to personify that old Lost Cause.
 
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