The Rise and Fall of the Second Amendment
The Rise and Fall of the Second Amendment
The People vs. the Occupying Force
Everyone has undoubtedly heard about the shooting during the Super Bowl victory parade in Kansas City. These victory celebrations always bring the potential for trouble, what with all those young males consuming prodigious amounts of alcohol. And they draw the worst elements; the seemingly perpetually armed gang-bangers.
The shooting has triggered the yawningly predictable response from the āWokeā crowd. Which at this point means nearly our entire government and corporate leadership. One marvels at how many times clueless celebrities can breathlessly tweet out, āWe have to do something about this!ā or āWe are failing the children!ā Itās odd how the inanimate object- the gun- is always the Oswald-style patsy in these incidents. Often the names of those wielding the inanimate objects for no good are barely mentioned. Quick; name the Parkland school shooter. The Pulse gay night club shooter. Itās the guns, racist! The tweets in response to this most recent shooting, especially those emanating from the dying embers of Hollywood, are examples of insipid mindlessness. Digital postcards from the Idiocracy.
The text of the Second Amendment itself reads, āA 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.ā In my book Crimes and Cover-Ups in American Politics: 1776-1963, I devoted a section to the very clear comments by all the Founders, regarding what the Second Amendment actually meant. It would have been nice if theyād worded it better, so there wouldnāt be an opening for the usual suspects to interpret it to suit their agendas. But each and every one of those who ratified it, even the odious, bankersā stooge Alexander Hamilton, left no doubt in their public comments, that the Bill of Rights protected the individualās right to keep and bear arms.
Itās ironic that the word āmilitiaā is in there, seeing as how that term has come to be demonized, especially since the aftermath of the Oklahoma City bombing, when Bill Clinton exploited it like a poster child for muscular dystrophy. All the state controlled media has to do at this point is claim some poor sap was associated with some āmilitia,ā and its de facto evidence of guilt. Of something. Anything. James Madison, considered the father of the Constitution, noted in The Federalist Papers that "a standing army....would be opposed [by] militia." He wanted State governments to have the ability to ārepel the danger" of a federal army. You know, like the Military Industrial Complex, which he could not have foreseen in his wildest dreams.
Thomas Jefferson in particular was vehemently opposed to a standing federal army. Like the rest of the Founders, he believed it was the responsibility of a citizens militia of ordinary Americans to defend their state, or in the rarest of circumstances, the entire country from an outside threat. He also made it clear that an armed citizenry was the best defense against government tyranny. As president, Jefferson slashed military spending. He noted, āStanding armies [are] inconsistent with [a peopleās] freedom and subversive of their quiet.ā In 1789, the author of the Declaration of Independence wrote, āThere are instruments so dangerous to the rights of the nation and which place them so totally at the mercy of their governorsā¦.Such an instrument is a standing army." No wonder heās now a hopeless dead White āracist.ā
By the time of Lincoln, our first imperial president, a national military was an unquestioned reality. No more fears about a standing army. Honest Abe instituted the first unconstitutional military draft, resulting in the bloody riots in New York. The immigrants du jour of the day, the Irish, quite naturally objected to being forced to participate in a senseless slaughter they had no historical or cultural association with. Lincolnās federal army cut a deadly swath through the south, raping, destroying crops, burning homes, and engaging in the boldest larceny in the history of warfare, as they stole every valuable that wasnāt nailed down. For this, all Americans pay homage today. They were great American heroes.
The power of the national military grew, and we eviscerated George Washingtonās warnings about āno entangling alliances,ā and John Quincy Adamsā admonitions that we not āgo abroad in search of monsters to destroy.ā World Wars I and II were something Jefferson and the other Founders would have mortified by. They would have led chapters of the America First Committee. Another modern hero, Franklin Roosevelt, would have had them ācancelledā and perhaps imprisoned. That precedent had been set when Lincoln imprisoned his dissenters without any due process. Once the Pentagon was built, and the unconstitutional intelligence agencies established, we had something more than a standing army. We had an Occupying Force.
So this clash between individual firearm owners and a national military was inevitable. Individuals were not necessarily going to agree with the policies and actions of this national army, especially when it was given authority to run roughshod over American citizens. Look at what happened to the World War I āBonus Army,ā veterans of that senseless conflict, who naturally objected when their promised ābonusā was denied them. They set up tents on the Capitol, and U.S. forces, led by future superstars Douglas MacArthur and George Patton, defeated them as easily as William Sherman defeated the women and children of the Confederacy. So if youāre in our glorious federal military, donāt complain if they break a promise.
The distinction between Jeffersonās vision of a well armed citizensā militia, and the modern Military Industrial Complex couldnāt be more obvious. Conservatives, however, generally adore this federal army, and the intelligence agencies that accompany it. They also worship our militarized police forces, and were ecstatic over the implementation of no-knock SWAT team raids on private homes. Until they raided Mar-a-Lago, that is. But all thatās been forgotten. The FBI was not abolished, and the Right seems cool with the Occupying Force again. Exactly how different is a gun aficionado saying āThank you for your serviceā from a masochist saying āThank you, may I have another?ā
The individual right to bear arms conflicts with armed (and militarized) police officers, and certainly with the armed forces of the United States, the largest military the world has ever seen. When a citizen has an encounter with a law enforcement officer, regardless of the nature of the ālawā theyāre enforcing, the Second Amendment disappears. Youāre not going to find a case where an armed citizen shot a cop in self-defense, without being prosecuted. It doesnāt matter how unjustified the officer was, the officer is by default considered to be in the right. If you donāt like it, take it to court. Where you will unquestionably lose. The courts are always going to be the final arbiter in any battle between armed citizens and the Occupying Force. And you know what side theyāll be on. Every single time.
It wasnāt until 2008 that the Supreme Court first ruled that the Second Amendment protected an individualās right to self-defense in his own home. This hasnāt stopped some unfortunate homeowners, like Byron Smith of Minnesota, from being convicted of murder; he shot two home invaders who proved to be unarmed. Others in similar situations have been charged as well, while in some cases reason still prevails and the homeowner is considered to have acted understandably. From what Iāve heard, you are always considered justified in shooting someone if they are setting fire to your home. How this differs from robbery is something only our esteemed judges can fathom. So if you have a home invader, throw him some matches, and urge him to commit arson. Maybe he wonāt understand the nuances of the law.
So here we are today, in America 2.0. The battle lines have been drawn. In this corner, you have the challenger, the Second Amendment. An antiquated notion dreamed up by long dead White āracists.ā And in the other corner, you have the Occupying Force, hailing from Washington, D.C., undefeated and untied. Second Amendment activists today concentrate on simply keeping their own weapons. Being able to hunt legally. To go target shooting. There is no emphasis on protection from government tyranny, which was the motivation behind the amendment in the first place. The Occupying Force knows it has nothing to fear from āgun nuts.ā They remember the victories at Ruby Ridge. And Waco. And the Bundy ranch, to mention just a few examples.
If all the gun enthusiasts that Hollywood frets over really had government tyranny in mind, like the Founders did, they would have reacted differently during the unconstitutional COVID lockdown. I must have missed all of the standoffs between armed small business owners and the Occupying Force, which was denying them the right to earn a living. Or between concealed carry owners and authoritarian officers demanding they wear a mask, or stop letting their children play in a park. Presumably, the vast majority of those who came to the January 6 Stop the Steal rally in Washington, D.C. were gun owners. And yet, the authorities couldnāt find a single gun anywhere. Thatās not only an odd way to conduct an āinsurrection,ā itās indicative of the mindset of most gun activists. Just let me hang my weapons on the wall.
Now, please donāt think Iām suggesting that gun owners take up arms against the government. The military industrial complex would make such a thing impossible, regardless. But if your primary issue is the Second Amendment, you ought to at least acknowledge that its purpose was not to protect your right to hunt, or to target practice. It was as a safeguard against an encroaching, corrupt government. I think that, if enough small business owners had let the authorities know they were armed and ready to defend their livelihood from an out of control Occupying Force, that perhaps the lockdown wouldnāt have been quite as successful. How about armed pastors, defending their right to conduct religious services? You had one half-assed protest in Michigan, which was demonized over a Confederate flag or something.
While the Left wants citizens to be subjected to the mercy of kind-hearted, well-armed police and soldiers, some on the Right want to arm teachers, for instance. Now, having looked at enough TikTok videos to see just how many teachers today are fortunate that the mental institutions have mostly closed, these are the last people on earth I want to be possessing firearms. In school. While my kids are compelled to be there. Can you imagine an unstable, purple haired āeducatorā becoming irate at a MAGA hat or something? Do you really want that person to have a gun handy? Somehow, I donāt see more guns in schools making things safer.
As always, we didnāt reach this stage overnight. Thatās why I focus so much on hidden history. The āloyalā unionists should have realized that by permitting a despot like Lincoln to suspend the writ of habeas corpus, and shut down over two hundred newspapers, they were paving the way for future government tyranny. The people who sat idly by while Eugene Debs and the other WWI protesters were ludicrously portrayed as āyelling fire in a crowded theater,ā made possible the Orwellian concept of āHate Speechā which we know and love today. That same generation accepted the ridiculous, anti-liberty figure of āUncle Sam,ā and allowed it to symbolize the growing unconstitutional federal government. The Occupying Force. Really, how different is our Uncle Sam from Oceanaās Big Brother?
World War II- the āgoodā war. The āgreatest generation.ā Read what I wrote about their true conduct in Crimes and Cover-Ups. The Korean āconflict,ā like every nonsensical American interventionist escapade since then conducted without a declaration of war by Congress, as theyāre constitutionally required to do. Now, weāre permitting billions to flow into a Zionist dictator in Ukraine, while American citizens are living in tents and shitting in the street. But all this was possible because the government- through its military industrial complex and its localized police forces- has āthe meat,ā to quote the Arbyās commercial. There is no limitation on their firearms. No one will accuse them of āstockpilingā weapons, or possessing āillegalā weapons. And our brave police officers must be able to protect themselves. Itās an āofficer safetyā thing, you wouldnāt understand.
Any discussion of āgun controlā from todays Left begins and ends with individual ownership. They donāt talk about āresponsibleā gun ownership on the part of police forces. Like shooting deaf people in the back when they donāt respond to your orders. Or our increasingly āWokeā military forces. Like killing that wedding party in Yemen was pretty irresponsible, I think. If some lone, deranged individual plowed down a wedding party, do you think heād ever see the light of day again? But military atrocities are rarely acknowledged, let alone prosecuted. Look what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nothing to the brave soldiers who played soccer with decapitated heads, or killed a family of civilians. Instead, it was then Bradley Manning, who exposed the atrocities through Wikileaks, that was punished. Along with Julian Assange, who will still probably feel the wrath of a justice-free legal system.
Hollywood doesnāt really have anything against guns. After all, every blockbuster action movie throughout history has featured guns of all varieties front and center. The hero- often played by a hypocritical āliberalā that pontificates about gun control while being protected by armed personal security- canāt beat the armed bad guys without arms of his own. I think thatās kind of what Thomas Jefferson was talking about. If the police and the military are going to have guns, the citizens should be allowed to have them, too. Must be allowed to have them, as all the Founders carefully noted for posterity. Thatās one of many reasons the Founders are ignored today, other than to be castigated as worthless, āracistā relics from the stone age.
I would love for there to be a way to destroy every gun in the world, starting with all those controlled by governments. But that isnāt possible. We can even create them on our own now, with those incomprehensible 3-D printers. And how many gun control laws are already on the books? The big cities, where the most gun violence occurs, have the strictest gun laws. As the conservatives accurately point out, the criminals arenāt buying guns legally, and will always find a way to get them illegally. So any restrictions on firearms impacts law abiding citizens exclusively. You know, the ones who are no threat to ever commit a violent crime. And yet, the āWokeā mantra, from Democratic Party politicians to their sycophants in the entertainment world, is that something must be done. For the children! Who they are in favor of aborting or ātransitioning.ā Thatās the only kind of āchoiceā they support.
That something, of course, is to ban individual ownership of firearms. These āWokeā activists want only the police and the military to have them. Not you. If that doesnāt reflect the most naive trust in authority imaginable, I donāt know what would. And it contradicts the whole spirit of our own fight for independence. The Minutemen. Give me liberty or give me death. Obviously, we could never have seceded from British rule (and yes, that is the proper term), without the possession of firearms. The Shot Heard Around the World couldnāt have happened without a weapon to fire it. King George could have decided to enslave all the colonists, not just the Black ones. And without guns, what exactly could the colonists- our ancestors- have done about it?
Iāve never been a violent person. I donāt understand violence, so I certainly canāt comprehend gun violence. I love peace. Give me the Summer of Love again, without the drugs and the government infiltrators. But the gun ādebateā isnāt going to go away until either the Second Amendment is officially abolished, or a majority of the citizens make it known that they will accept no more restrictions on their constitutional right to bear arms. If nothing else, having a well-armed citizenry makes the criminal government think twice before launching yet another unconstitutional act. Itās bad enough living under an Occupying Force when millions of Americans do own firearms. Consider what it would be like without them. Again, I am not advocating violence of any kind. But we must speak out while we still can.
Source: "I Protest" by Donald Jeffries