The Founders on the Second Amendment
The Second Amendment to the Constitution has become a target for Progressives and Liberals, who are determined to dismantle it. The Founders recognized the "right to keep and bear arms" as an inalienable right of self-defense to be protected by government rather than infringed or abridged by it. As Constitution signer John Dickinson affirmed, inalienable rights such as self-defense were rights "which God gave to you and which no inferior power has a right to take away.”
Significantly, the Second Amendment did not grant or bestow any right on the people; instead, it simply recognized and provided what Constitution signer James Wilson called “a new security” for the right of self-defense that God had already bestowed on every individual.
Numerous Founders affirmed the God-given right to self-defense and personal safety:
[T]he said Constitution [should] be never construed . . . to prevent the people of the United States, who are peaceable citizens, from keeping their own arms. Samuel Adams, Signer of the Declaration, “Father of the American Revolution”
The right . . . of bearing arms . . . is declared to be inherent in the people. Fisher Ames, A Framer of the Second Amendment in the First Congress
CONTINUED:
http://us2.campaign-archive2.com/?u=24ff978071728b002d42f126f&id=6b4b3303e6&e=95cf01bdb1
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