The Wilson County Board of
Commissioners has joined a number of other local governments in passing a
resolution declaring the county to be a “Second Amendment Sanctuary.” Local
governments in North Carolina and other states have passed sanctuary resolutions
at the urging of a nationwide movement to declare the Second Amendment in need
of sanctuary, refuge, haven, shelter, safety, protection (to list several of
the synonyms for sanctuary in a thesaurus). This newspaper has weighed in with
its support of the resolution.
I’m still wondering: Why?
The Second Amendment is,
after all, a key element of the U.S. Constitution, which North Carolina
ratified Nov. 21,1789. The Second Amendment has withstood 231 years without
embellishment or special protections. Some county commissioners pointed out
that they had sworn an oath to protect and defend the Constitution (including
the Second Amendment).
If Second Amendment
advocates are getting cities and counties across the country to impose a
“sanctuary” status for one amendment, will fans of other amendments demand
sanctuary for their favorite amendments? As a religious person as well as a
long-time journalist and loudmouth, I am partial to the First Amendment. Does
it need sanctuary? Well, why not?
The Second Amendment is
pretty narrowly written. It protects the right to “keep and bear arms” because
“a well-regulated militia” is “necessary to the security of a free state.”
Supreme Court decisions of the past 50 years have pretty much ignored the
militia clause and focused on the “keep and bear arms” alone. But this interpretation
that broadens the amendment and extends the right to bear arms to those not in
the militia. So why does it need sanctuary status?
It seems to me the First
Amendment is in far more imminent danger than the Second Amendment. The
president of the United States has declared journalists to be “the enemies of
the people” and routinely calls respected news organizations “fake news.” Polls
show that younger people, in particular, don’t think a free press or free
speech is very important. They say it would be OK for the president to shut
down newspapers he doesn’t like, the way dictators do. A lobbying group works
to protect Americans “from religion,” instead of the First Amendment’s freedom
of religion. Without the support of voters, freedom of the press is in real
danger.
Maybe sanctuaries should be
declared for the Third Amendment because, despite a surge in appreciation of
military members and veterans, no one wants the government to quarter soldiers
in private homes without the owner’s permission. The military is facing a
housing shortage and lawsuits over toxic substances in military housing, so
dumping the Third Amendment might seem sensible to Congress.
Fourth Amendment injunctions
against unreasonable searches and seizures cause frequent controversies and
criticism. Many are certain that accusal is tantamount to conviction, so why
worry about how evidence was obtained?
This sanctuary city/county
movement started in response to crackdowns on illegal immigration. Some
churches offered sanctuary to illegal immigrants because ICE (Immigration and
Customs Enforcement) was reluctant to force its way into houses of worship to
make arrests. Some cities went further. They refused to cooperate with ICE or
allow agents to make arrests.
I thought the tragic war of
1861-65 settled the primacy of federal law over local and state statutes. The
States’ Rights crowd lost that war, but 150 years later some cities are
determined to defy the federal government.
Sanctuary for constitutional
amendments do not violate the Constitution and aren’t likely to lead to war,
but they are and would be redundancies and distractions from more imminent
threats.
Advocates for these
sanctuaries should remember, as I’ve written many times, that the rights
enumerated in the Constitution are not absolute. Freedom of the press is
limited by libel laws and privacy. Free speech is limited by laws against
slander and inciting a riot.
Even the Second Amendment
(with or without sanctuary) can be limited by the scale of “arms” one wishes to
bear. The courts are not likely to allow people to “bear” an atomic bomb, a
B-52 or a shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missile. A local “sanctuary” won’t
change that.
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