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View Full Version : THE RIGHT TO KEEP AND BEAR ARMS Senate Report 1982


PSM
01-14-2013, 18:37
Not sure if this has been posted before but it seems even more relevent today.


REPORT of the SUBCOMMITTEE on the CONSTITUTION, of the COMMITTEE on the JUDICIARY, UNITED STATES SENATE, NINETY-SEVENTH CONGRESS

Finally, the individual rights interpretation gives full meaning to the words chosen by the first Congress to reflect the right to keep and bear arms. The framers of the Bill of Rights consistently used the words "right of the people" to reflect individual rights—as when these words were used to recognize the "right of the people" to peaceably assemble, and the "right of the people" against unreasonable searches and seizures. They distinguished between the rights of the people and of the state in the Tenth Amendment. As discussed earlier, the "militia" itself referred to a concept of a universally armed people, not to any specifically organized unit. When the framers referred to the equivalent of our National Guard, they uniformly used the term "select militia" and distinguished this from "militia". Indeed, the debates over the Constitution constantly referred to organized militia units as a threat to freedom comparable to that of a standing army, and stressed that such organized units did not constitute, and indeed were philosophically opposed to, the concept of a militia.

Pat