isadore;1757962 wrote:The 2nd Amendment is not unalienable, it can be repealed by a 2/3 vote of the Congress and 3/4s vote of the state legislatures or state conventions. Equal representation in the Senate is more nearly unalienable because it can not be changed by the Amendment process.
The 2nd amendment is the most inalienable of all rights by the simple fact that those actively engaged in the practice of that right have a direct means of exacting a heavy price on those who may want to take it from them. Those politicians throughout our history who have lusted for it since the founding no damn well that the forcible removal of that right will inaugurate civil war. Not a war between the state governments but but a true civil war. As Hits pointed out the 2nd amendment was added to provide checks and balances against the federal standing army. Those being a well regulated or professional militias maintained by the states as well as the individual "the people" right to personally maintain arms suitable for an individual. No we are not talking tanks/artillery etc... The regulation of these individual arms who, what, when, where, were left in the power of state and local governments.
I watched John Kerry before Congress boldly say the administration would not call the treaty with Iran a "treaty" because you can't pass a treaty in the Senate. Even though the Constitution says you need a super majority to do so. How long before an administration is frustrated by the getting a Supreme Court Justice approved does the same? Whats the diff? In the end the Constitution is nothing more than a piece of paper that every politician from Washington until today would like tear up parts of. As the founders foresaw. Easily manipulated by the wiles of a savvy politician. The only thing stopping them is fear.
Kerry fearlessly told a branch of the federal government that holds the power under the Constitution to remove his boss from power for such an act. But he knows that will not happen. No fear. Words are just words unless they are backed up by something more forceful than words. The 2nd amendment ended up being the cornerstone of the whole Constitution because it not about words. Look I have no problem with nor does the Constitution with regulating who, what, when, where when it comes to the 2nd amendment. Just the level of governance.