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.
Disclaimer: I created yet another gun debate thread for this hoping to stick to a legal discussion of the 2nd amendment without the rest of the gun debate baggage on either side. Value judgements, emotional appeals, theoretical arguments etc, are found in great abundance in enough threads already. I'm optimistic
One thing that I still don't quite understand about the gun debate is the way the pro-gun folks read the 2nd amendment...a reading that recently was explicitly backed up by the Supreme Court in Heller. That interpretation, as I understand it, says that individuals have the right to keep and bear arms and that government at any level may not infringe on that right (with some limitations). Or in other words, that the part of the amendment AFTER the comma is the only part that shapes our rights. The first part, when it's mentioned at all, is said to be a statement of purpose or general comment on the idea of gun ownership with no legal impact on the rights defined in the amendment.
Now regardless of how you feel about gun rights, it seems like this interpretation is a bit strange. After all, the interpretation would be EXACTLY the same if the amendment simply read "The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." I'm not a lawyer, but it's a little hard to believe that laws can be correctly interpreted by only reading half the words. The rest of the Bill of Rights doesn't seem to offer any examples of this construction, for example.
The "statement of purpose" argument, as made by the majority of the Supreme Court, is that the militia clause says people are allowed to keep and bear arms so that a citizens militia could be formed...regardless of whether it is or not. Even if you agree with this interpretation, it seems like the "necessary to the security of a free state" purpose would need to apply to the theoretical militia. Given the changes in our country since the 1700s, I'm not entirely sure that is necessarily true. And if the statement of purpose no longer applies, what is the legal implication for the rest of the amendment? Would the framers have left out the second amendment if they didn't believe the first clause was true, or would they simply have reworded it? For that matter, can the legal argument be made that it IS true, that individuals owning weapons is a key part of our state/national security?
I'm hardly the most stalwart supporter of gun-rights, but I'm honestly curious about the arguments for the current interpretation of the 2nd amendment. Even if the interpretation is right, that still leaves room for limited, reasonable gun control (as suggested in Heller), but understanding the 2nd amendment itself is still a good first step. And I'm curious what you all think about it