Washington, Jan 15 : Talk of reviving an assault
weapons ban and creating a national gun registry in the wake of the Newtown,
Conn., school massacre is touching a deep nerve in America, epitomized this week
by debate over a stern open letter to Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D) from a former
Marine.
After Adam Lanza used a semiautomatic assault-style rifle to kill
20 students and six school staff Dec. 14, Senator Feinstein of California has
said she will try to revive the 1994 assault weapons ban, which sunsetted in
2004. She would also push for Americans to be required to register
"grandfathered" weapons.
But the open letter from Joshua Boston, which
has caused a raucous online debate after being posted on CNN's iReport website
on Dec. 27, is a reminder of the huge stakes involved. Namely, many of America's
80 million gun owners are liable to balk at having to register their weapons,
raising the potential for confrontations with federal
authorities.
Addressing Feinstein directly, Mr. Boston, who served tours
in Afghanistan and Iraq, says he'll refuse to register his weapons and writes,
"You ma'am have overstepped a line that is not your domain."
"I am not
your subject," he continues. "I am the man who keeps you free. I am not your
servant. I am the person whom you serve. I am not your peasant."
As
Democrats, led by President Obama, have pushed to expand the purview of the
federal government in recent years, a recoil has ensued – on display in the rise
of the tea party, a massive run on guns, and an explosion in the number of
concealed-weapons permits. At times, the recoil has taken on tones of warning
and alarm. Many in this camp, especially in the wake of several mass shootings
last year, fear that America is entering a post-constitutional era where basic
precepts like the Second Amendment are curtailed by a central
authority.
"If you take out the heat and the emotion of this
[Connecticut] tragedy, the reaction is an interesting case study in public
versus individual rights," says James Wright, a sociologist at the University of
Central Florida in Orlando. "It puts the issue on a knife point in a way that a
lot of other issues don't. It's hard to deny the public interest in gun crimes,
but at the same time there's that old Second Amendment, and it's hard to deny
what it seems to imply."
Indeed, what it implies for some Americans,
including many in the so-called warrior class – hundreds of thousands of retired
soldiers – is that an armed population is an essential guarantee against
centralized tyranny. The lobbying of the National Rifle Association and the
expansion of gun rights by federal courts have tended to further the idea that
the Second Amendment is a safeguard against tyranny, as well as a key to
personally protecting oneself against crime.
Feinstein's office replied
to Boston's letter this past week, pointing out that there's another side to the
argument – the millions of Americans who worry about US society becoming
militarized through the expansion of weaponry. What's more, Feinstein says, the
law won't affect Americans’ basic right to purchase and use
weapons.
"Senator Feinstein respects Cpl. Boston's service. She has heard
from thousands of people – including many gun owners – who support her plan to
stop the sale, transfer, importation and manufacturing of assault weapons and
large capacity magazines, strips and drums that hold more than 10 rounds,” the
statement from Feinstein’s office read. “As Senator Feinstein has said, the
legislation will be carefully focused to protect the rights of existing gun
owners by exempting hundreds of weapons used for hunting and sporting
purposes."
In response to Boston's letter, a commenter on the iReport
website suggested that the former Marine, by refusing to comply with a law,
would be going against the Constitution.
"Ms. Feinstein is an elected
official who was selected by voters to represent their interests in a governing
body," YankCT wrote. "She has the authority and responsibility to do just that
until the people whom she represents decide otherwise through their votes. This
gentleman believes that he is above the law. This is untrue; in fact, my guess
is that he swore to defend the country and respect its laws when he entered the
Marines."
One point Boston makes in his letter is that many of the 120
guns that would be banned under Feinstein's bill are cosmetic variations of
standard semiautomatic hunting rifles. Boston says he's angered by "the fact
that I'm supposed to be punished for doing nothing more than owning a rifle that
looks scary because its stock isn't made out of wood," he said.
Feinstein
contends that America should "put weapons under some kind of appropriate
authority," as she recently told Fox News. Yet many gun owners believe there is
already an authority in place – the Constitution.
"With everything that
has happened these last four years under President Obama and with the fresh
attacks on the Second Amendment by gun grabbers like Dianne Feinstein (and David
Gregory and Piers Morgan and Nanny Bloomberg, plus dozens more) I can safely
[say that] yes we do live in a post constitutional Republic, and that is very
troubling," writes Ulysses Arn on the RedState
blog.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Gun owners push back: A former Marine's letter to Dianne Feinstein
Gun owners push back: A former Marine's letter to Dianne Feinstein
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