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Ban Guns From Public Political Events

by: David Sirota  |  Creator's Syndicate

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(Photo: MSNBC)

    Those of us living in the Rocky Mountains are steeped in America's famous gun culture - and we therefore know well the binary debates surrounding the Second Amendment. Firearm enthusiasts - the vast majority of whom use weapons responsibly - believe the Constitution protects their right to bear arms. Gun control advocates counter that the Constitution doesn't give anyone the inalienable right to wield automatic weapons that can kill scores of people in seconds.

    This is the stultified freedom-versus-safety quarrel that seemed to forever define gun politics - that is, until anti-government activists started bringing firearms to public political meetings. In early August, a protester came to a raucous Tennessee congressional forum packing heat. Days later, President Obama's health care event in New Hampshire was marred by a protester posing for cameras with a pistol and sign reading, "It is time to water the tree of liberty" - a reference to a Thomas Jefferson quote promising violence. And this past week, 12 armed men - including one with an assault rifle - not only showed off their firearms at Obama's Arizona speech, but broadcast a YouTube video threatening to "forcefully resist people imposing their will on us through the strength of the majority."

    These and other similar examples are accurately summarized with the same language federal law employs to describe domestic terrorism. The weapons-brandishing displays are "intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population." Yes, the gun has been transformed from a sport and self-defense device into a tool of mass bullying. Like the noose in the Jim Crow South, its symbolic message is clear: If you dare engage in the democratic process, you risk bodily harm.

    With that implicit threat, the incessant arguments about gun ownership have been supplanted by a more significant debate over which should take precedence: The Constitution's First or Second Amendment?

    Based on America's history, the Founders' answer to that question lies in the Bill of Rights' deliberate sequencing.

    The First Amendment ethos guarantees people - whatever their politics - a fundamental right to participate in their democracy without concern for physical retribution. It is the primary amendment because America was first and foremost created as a place to shelter citizens from oppression.

    While the First Amendment doesn't ensure credibility or significance, it is supposed to guarantee freedom from fear - a freedom now under siege. Citing the Second Amendment and the increasingly maniacal rhetoric of conservative media firebrands, a small handful of violence-threatening protesters aims to make the rest of us afraid to speak out.

    And so we face a choice that has nothing to do with health care, gun ownership or any other . It is a choice about democracy itself - a choice that comes down to the two axioms best articulated by, of all people, Mao Zedong.

    One option is willful ignorance: We can pretend the ferment is unimportant, continue allowing the intimidation and ultimately usher in a dark future where "political power grows out of the barrel of a gun."

    Better, though, is simply making public political events firearm-free zones, just like schools and stadiums. That way forward honors our democratic ideals by declaring that politics may be war, but in America it is "war without bloodshed" - and without the threat of bloodshed.

  

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Comments

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Our lawmakers need to make

Our lawmakers need to make it so -- ban guns from political events. Although I generally believe in some sort of gun control, I believe in the second amendment right to bear arms, if only because we, the majority of Americans who support a "public option," may have to arm to protect ourselves against the nuts bearing arms who are trying to silence my voice and the voices of many others through intimidation.

The author above says the

The author above says the First Amendment is "supposed to guarantee freedom from fear." What about the fear coming from the no-knock raids by IRS and DEA agents? Government and it's military has the most powerful guns. I fear the government far more than a few peaceful citizens protesting at a political rally. These people are not bullies, they were protesting the fact that some people want to confiscate and ban firearms for the people, our last and final tool to oppose an oppressive state. I organized many anti-war demonstrations and Impeach Bush protests. Now it seems time to Impeach Obama for continuing Bush's policies. I see Cindy Sheehan is gearing to go after Obama.

Truth is the DC v. Heller

Truth is the DC v. Heller case was poorly decided. Was looking at the Wiki entry on that last night; noticed the question certified to the Court presumed that individuals already had a private right to possess and carry. Also, in his 60+ pages of "analysis" of the 2nd Amendment, including the "atomistic" dissection of the preamble, Scalia somehow manages to not even notice the phrase "being necessary" which, if it were included, would bring the meaning of the 2nd Amendment back to what the Miller court said it meant. So much for judicial activism being solely for "liberal" points of view.

Don't worry about these

Don't worry about these people. Just keep an eye on them and stay out of their way. They could just as easily accidentally shoot someone or pee on your shoe, no telling. Anyone other than a sworn law enforcement type packing exposed heat is just using the gun as a sign that says:"I'm with Stupid!". ttommyunger-twitter

More boilerplate,

More boilerplate, hypocritical leftist whining. The First Amendment is threatened far more by hate speech/crime statutes and de facto proscription of speech deemed offensive to "protected" groups than it is by armed citizens. Reading the weeping prose of this "progressive" – complete with the obligatory Old South reference -- is like hearing someone cry out in pain as he slaps you.

Mike @ 19:53, do you really

Mike @ 19:53, do you really think responding as you did will convert someone to your way of thinking?... to wanting to be like you?

...and people wearing tee

...and people wearing tee shirts with political slogans were arrested at political events during the Bush/Cheney years , because that's sooo much more heinous than carrying semi automatic assault weapons! GEEZ! The world turned upside down- YES! Ban weapons from public political gatherings! All public gatherings!

From the ACLU website

From the ACLU website (quote) Section 802 of the USA PATRIOT Act (Pub. L. No. 107-52) expanded the definition of terrorism to cover ""domestic,"" as opposed to international, terrorism. A person engages in domestic terrorism if they do an act ""dangerous to human life"" that is a violation of the criminal laws of a state or the United States, if the act appears to be intended to: (i) intimidate or coerce a civilian population; (ii) influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; or (iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination or kidnapping. Additionally, the acts have to occur primarily within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States and if they do not, may be regarded as international terrorism." (end quote) The first time one of these individuals uses his/her weapon at one of these events it will constitute "terrorism" as defined in the U.S. Government Interagency D0mestic Terrorism Concept of Operations Plan: "Terrorism includes the unlawful use of force or violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives."

We have paid a helluva price

We have paid a helluva price for that 1789 dangling participle that begins the Second Amendment. It's a non-sequitur for the ages. Our so-called founding fathers (the mothers as usual were tied up in the kitchen and nursery) had muskets on their minds then, and now we have AK47's or variants thereof being brandished in our public spaces. Instead of a militia in defense of our safety, we have a confluence of maniacs threatening anybody who doesn't subscribe to their mania. Or doesn't look like them.

Obama needs to clean house

Obama needs to clean house at the Secret Service, who are still Bush's Praetorian Guard. Letting a dozen people walk around with weapons near a Presidential rally, what happens when it's 100, and they really riled up from some rabble rouser? Take away your guns, you bet, pistol whip you and give you 3 years in jail for being stupid POS retard thugs. You're 90% water- lets water the tree of liberty with YOU!

The Second Amendment is

The Second Amendment is there so you can freely exercise your 1st Amendment

As soon as I saw the weapons

As soon as I saw the weapons with no attempt to arrest or remove the bearers, I thought that there would be no way I could ever attend any public forum. Doubtless, millions of other citizens would hold the same concern. There is no way to know if one or more of those armed have any intent to use the weapons. I would think the potential for a plan to do just that is growing as more gun-wielders, unimpeded, show up outside these events. This is a form of bullying. This is the nature of terrorism.

Isn't it odd that only a few

Isn't it odd that only a few years ago people were arrested for wearing anti-Bush/anti-war T-shirts to Bush's political, a clear infringement of 1st Ammendment rights. Now it is OK to make implicit violent threats at our president's political appearances.

I never thought I would

I never thought I would recommend anything in the ill-named PATRIOT Act, but if it stops people from carrying weapons into crowds and stadia, I am all for it. That part of it anyway.

The Bill of Rights

The Bill of Rights originally had 12 amendments, and that the first two were not adopted, thus making the third the first. The "deliberate sequencing" argument, if remotely accurate (which it isn't) denigrates each successive amendment, and certainly wasn't the founders intent, nor does it have any legal relevance. I agree with the respondent who mentioned "no knock" warrants and the like. Both first and second amendment advocates would do well to spend their freedom on strengthening 4-6 and 8. Neither your gun nor your words, favorite blog/newspaper/cable network, or Bible are going to do you much good without the presumption of innocence and the constitutional protection from "cruel and unusual" punishments and other such excesses (excessive fines). The threat of facing such injustices as the hands of authority is almost as coercive as their actual use, which is why the founders expressly prhibited them. The Bill of Rights is best understood as a package deal, or better yet as a design document in which every element is essential to the structural integrity of every other element, with all together forming the strongest, safest refuge from tyranny.

Yes make political events

Yes make political events gun-free and the police can't carry guns, either, not for teargass, rubber bullets, wooden bullets, or tasers, either. Make political events safe enough for children, and then we'll have democracy.

Mr Sirota speaks rationally

Mr Sirota speaks rationally of the need for all of us to feel safe at political rallies. In a country where almost 10% of our top leaders have been murdered in office, it's little to ask to control guns in the public arena. As his article states, our collective need for peace in public debate outweighs the needs of gun-rights activists (or actual assassins) to tote guns about near the president. Common sense has to prevail, or we'll be in dangerous collaboration with those who'd squeeze in the door behind the right to keep a well-regulated militia. It is guns which have killed our presidents. Keeping them away from our leaders makes sense.

Yes, guns at public rallies

Yes, guns at public rallies are there to make a point. It is simply intimidation. My gun is locked up at home. I don't need to carry it to a public rally to prove I can own one. The rallies have NOTHING to do with gun ownership. They are for HEALTH CARE primarily. Grow up. Stop playing militiamen and start acting like responsible citizens. And if you respect our military's efforts at keeping your freedom to assemble and speak in public safe .. ..then be respectful of each other's ideas and comments. Don't shout or threaten people or you disrespect people who put their lives on the line for your freedoms.

Mike in NYC, have you ever

Mike in NYC, have you ever been shot by one of these pistol-toting bullies? I got lucky, the shot missed. All I asked is that he not have his weapon out in the open in my establishment. Not an unfair request for a family restaurant. I asked nicely, but tried to make it clear that his firearm wasn't welcome. How did he reply? A couple curses, a bland statement of rhetoric about the right to bear arms, and after I asked him to leave a gunshot WHICH COULD'VE KILLED MYSELF, OR ANY NUMBER OF OTHER PEOPLE THERE THAT DAY. Hell, I don't really care that the guy has a gun on him. Most gun owners I know have their heads on straight and know that a gun is not a toy, nor a statement of purpose. The majority of the ones I know don't even carry loaded weapons, and only carry them at night. Fine by me. Problem is, it only takes that one to bugger it all up for everyone else and TAKE THE LIFE OF SOMEONE WHO JUST HAPPENED TO BE STANDING THERE. Keep the guns, but keep them in places they belong.