The following
was published in the Deseret News of Salt Lake City on April 2, 2013, written
by Utah’s junior senator, Mike Lee. His understanding of the Second Amendment
and our inalienable rights is instructive as well as his ideas of what
questions might be included in a background check for a gun purchase.
- Pam
Second
Amendment: History’s lesson and warning
by
Senator Mike Lee
As Congress
begins to consider new gun legislation this spring, it’s important for citizens
and lawmakers to keep two basic facts in mind.
Gun control
isn’t about guns—it’s about control. And the right bear arms isn’t about the arms—it’s about the right.
These facts
may be ignored in Washington, D.C., where there is no hunting to speak of, and
every government building is protected by armed guards. They are not lost on
the American people, however. They
understand that the Second Amendment is of a piece with the rest of the
Constitution—written to protect the rights Americans require to live in the
kind of nation we have chosen to be.
The protection
of individual liberty is absolutely the job of government, but it is not
exclusively the job of government. It is first and foremost the job of “we the
people”—individually as local communities and collectively as a nation.
Well-enforced laws can deter crime, but even the best police and prosecutors in
the world cannot eliminate crime. Therefore, the
first defense against criminal threats to our persons and property is ourselves.
That’s why we have a right—a right granted by God and protected by the
Constitution—to arm and protect ourselves.
We have the
Second Amendment, ultimately, for two reasons.
The first is
history’s lesson that government can’t be everywhere, all the time, so free
citizens must fill in the inevitable gaps to look out for ourselves and for
each other. The second
reason is history’ warning that we would not like to live under any government
that tried to be everywhere, all the time.
Reason number
one is why we should oppose attempts by the state to restrict law-abiding
citizens’ right to bear arms. Reason number
two is why we should oppose the less-obviously offensive measure being promoted
in Washington: the so-called “universal background check.”
A law
requiring background checks for all gun sales seems more politically palatable
than traditional gun control. After all, it doesn’t take away anyone’s guns or
restrict the sale or possession of firearms. It doesn’t directly violate the
Second Amendment at all. What’s wrong with a universal background check?
In a word:
everything.
First, it
won’t work. The federal government has trouble delivering the mail. It
literally can’t keep its trains (Amtrak) running on time. It wastes hundreds of
billions of dollars every year. There is no
reason to believe a government $17 trillion in debt has the competence to cast
a net of paperwork that will catch every single gun sale in a country of 300
million people and 300 million firearms. And even that ignores the fact—always
inconvenient when designing gun laws—that armed criminals don’t obey laws in
the first place.
The only way
to make a universal background-check system come close to working is to create
a national database capturing ownership information of every single gun in the
country. To track all
the gun sales, you first have to track all the guns. Otherwise it won’t work. And this is
the crux of the problem.
The federal
government has no right to surveil innocent citizens exercising their
constitutional rights. The federal
government has no business—none—monitoring where and how often you go to
church, what books and newspapers you read, who you vote for, your health
conditions and the details of your private life.
These
limitations may make it harder for government to do its job at times. But the
Constitution was not written to maximize the convenience of the government. It
was written to protect the liberty of the people. That’s why we
have due process--that’s why we have a Bill of Rights. And that’s why we don’t
have federal databases tracking how law-abiding citizens choose to exercise (or
not exercise) their God-given rights.
What exactly
would politicians and bureaucrats do with a database listing the home addresses
and personal habits of everyone in the country who, say, had a particular
disease or was an atheist or whose home wasn’t protected by a gun? Even if they
could guarantee the system would work, even if they could guarantee the
information would never get hacked (which they can’t), it would still be wrong.
I will oppose
any attempt by Congress to restrict Americans’ constitutional rights and I will
equally oppose any attempt to allow government surveillance of law-abiding
citizens exercising those rights.
I will remind
people in Washington that the Constitution protects everyone equally, not just
the people we happen to agree with, and the rights we happen to like.
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