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Supreme Court Raises the Status of Second Amendment Rights to New Heights

The primary rationale of the ruling is that gun rights should be regarded similarly to other cherished First Amendment rights, such as the freedom of speech and religion.

Throughout the majority of the court’s existence, Second Amendment rights have been viewed as separate, more dangerous, and hence more susceptible to regulation.

Now, a majority of justices have enacted a significant shift that will affect numerous rights and rules in American society.
Instance

To obtain a license to carry a concealed firearm in the state of New York, a citizen was required to provide “justification.”

In practice, this meant that a local licensing officer had to agree that the applicant had a “special necessity,” such as a continuous or recurring threat.

California, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, and New Jersey also apply similar regulations, known as “may issue” statutes.

Many other states instead have a “must issue” regime in which local officials must issue a license to carry a concealed firearm if the applicant does not have a disqualifying trait, such as a criminal conviction, mental illness, or restraining order against them.

Two applicants from upstate New York, Robert Nash and Brandon Koch, were refused unrestricted concealed carry licenses in a recent Supreme Court decision because they had no necessity other than personal defense. They argue the law denies their constitutional rights.

A man holding a sign advocating for gun rights, standing in front of a large structure with two yellow ‘Don’t walk on me’ flags.

Outside the New York State Capitol in 2018 were gun rights advocates.

The Legal History of the Second Amendment

The court overlooked the Second Amendment for the majority of American history. The first significant judgement on the amendment’s meaning did not occur until the 1930s, and the Supreme Court did not examine whether the amendment recognized a basic person right until 2008, in the landmark case D.C. v. Heller.

This decision, issued by the renowned conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, upheld the right to have a firearm in the house. Uncertainty surrounded the scope of the right in public settings.

Scalia noted that, “like with most liberties, the right guaranteed by the Second Amendment is not infinite.”

This implied that “longstanding limitations on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill” or “prohibitions on carrying hidden weapons” were “presumptively legal.”
“An inherent privilege”

The latest verdict affirms that the Second Amendment right to bear arms is a fundamental right on par with any other, requiring the greatest level of protection. Its intrinsic perilousness has no bearing on how the right is construed or restricted.

The majority judgment was written by Justice Clarence Thomas, arguably the court’s most conservative member.

According to Thomas, approval from a government official is not required to exercise a fundamental right: “We are not aware of any other constitutional right that a person may exercise only after establishing a specific need to government officials.”

Thomas finds that the Bill of Rights, which includes the Second Amendment, “requires our unqualified deference.”

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This means that a municipal authority may control but not abolish the fundamental right, including the freedom to conceal carry a firearm.

Every permissible rule requires a compelling state interest and convincing evidence of the regulation’s necessity and efficacy.

The Justification for Stricter Regulation Under the Constitution

The dissenters were led by Justice Stephen Breyer, who began his dissent with the number of Americans who will be killed by firearms in 2020: 45,222.

His long-held opinion is that the Second Amendment protects a more hazardous right, and is therefore more susceptible to regulation.

Breyer is of the opinion that the majority decision “refuses to evaluate the government interests that underlie a challenged firearms regulation.”

Breyer says, “The primary difference between the Court’s position and mine is that I believe the Second Amendment permits states to take into account the grave issues caused by gun violence… I fear that the Court’s approach ignores these grave dangers and leaves the states without the authority to remedy them.”

An elderly black guy and white man stand side-by-side as spectators applaud.

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, pictured here with Republican Party leader Mitch McConnell at the conservative Heritage Foundation, authored the majority judgment expanding gun rights.

The majority’s reading of the Second Amendment is part of a profound shift in the court’s understanding of the Constitution.

This change is due to the recent appointment of conservative justice Amy Coney Barrett, which increased the prior majority of five justices to a supermajority of six.

The new supermajority, all of whose members were selected by Republican presidents, believes that the Constitution is not a living text that adapts as society’s opinions and values change.

Since the rights revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, only a minority of justices currently hold this view.

The majority of conservatives believe that the Constitution should be interpreted as its authors and ratifiers would have. This is frequently known as “originality.”

This shift’s repercussions are only now becoming apparent. Beyond this gun decision, its ramifications will be seen in choices about abortion, religion, criminal justice, environmental control, and a host of other matters.

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The new supermajority, all of whose members were selected by Republican presidents, believes that the Constitution is not a living text that adapts as society’s opinions and values change.

Since the rights revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, only a minority of justices currently hold this view.

The majority of conservatives believe that the Constitution should be interpreted as its authors and ratifiers would have. This is frequently known as “originality.”

This shift’s repercussions are only now becoming apparent. Beyond this gun decision, its ramifications will be seen in choices about abortion, religion, criminal justice, environmental control, and a host of other matters.

As a close observer of the Supreme Court, I believe the simplest way to describe the change in the court’s understanding of rights is that the explicit protections in the Bill of Rights – such as free exercise of religion, freedom of speech, and freedom of the press – will be accorded greater weight and deference, while the additional protections outside the Bill of Rights, which have been recognized by the court over time – abortion, privacy, and same-sex marriage – will not be accorded the same

The originalist interpretation implies that the enumerated rights of the Amendments, such as the Second Amendment, are not subject to majority rule. They are fundamental, recognized rights.

But other public disputes on issues outside the scope of the Bill of Rights, such as abortion, are left to state legislators to decide. The interpretation and implementation of the U.S. Constitution have undergone a radical change.

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