Power to the People
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
At a Brady Center event to "Prevent Gun Violence
by Jodie Foster Fans from Accidentally Hitting White
House Press Secretaries in the Head" the Brady
Center Legal Action Project Director asked retired
Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens whether
having a right to a cell phone might be a more
universal form of self-defense than gun ownership.
"Maybe you have some kind of constitutional right
to have a cell phone with a predialed 911 number at
your bedside, and that might provide you with a
little better protection than a gun, which you’re
not used to using,"
Justice Stevens mumbled.
Stevens, who often seemed unclear on the difference
between a right and an entitlement, had a point. Why
bother waiting for the laborious process of using a
gun, when you can instantly dial 911 and wait twenty
minutes while being murdered for the police to
arrive.
There still is no Constitutional right to a cell
phone, but you're already paying into a Universal
Service Fund that does just that, providing cell
phones to any and all, courtesy of Lebanese-Mexican
billionaire Carlos Slim's company, who, when he
isn't making high interest loans to the New York
Times, shovels prepaid government cell phones into
the ghetto.
Gun control advocates have been digging away at the
pesky 2nd Amendment for a while now. Their trouble
with it is that guns are loud and make big bangs
when they go off and enable the peasants to resist
when their betters decide that they should be moved
off their land. But the true trouble is that gun
ownership is an individual right. And they don't
believe in individual rights, their gospel is group
rights.
If the 2nd Amendment assigned the right to bear arms
to each racial group by degree of persecution, they
would find it much more acceptable no matter what
the annual death toll was. An LGBT 2nd Amendment
would float their boat. An amendment that treats it
as an individual right, rather than a group right,
does not.
Justice Stevens and the Legal Director of the "Brady
Project to Build a Time Machine, Travel in Time and
Convince Jodie Foster to Drop Acting and Open a
Baskin Robbins Franchise" were pondering how to make
an individual right fair by universalizing it and
redistributing it into a group right.
Some people have guns and others don't. But everyone
can have a government mandated right to a cell
phone... except perhaps the Amish, and their time is
coming. Why the average Amish farm uses child labor
and doesn't provide its child laborers with health
plan coverage for birth control and abortion, and
its barns aren't raised to OSHA standards.
If you assume that rights belong to the group,
rather than the individual, then predialed cell
phones are a better solution than guns. Just push 1
if you're being murdered, 2 if you're being raped, 3
if your house is being set on fire and 4 if you just
realized that your health plan doesn't provide
abortion coverage on all major legal holidays and 5
if your next door neighbor is having a Jodie Foster
movie marathon at ear-splitting volume at two in the
morning.
The police may not get there in time, but they will
get there to government specifications and will take
action in line with municipal, state and federal
policies that are formed in deference to group
rights. With 911, the policy hand is strong with the
government. With the 2nd Amendment, the balance of
power is with the homeowner watching a shadow moving
up his staircase.
Governments can issue a directive for how many
arrests of how many people they want to see, based
on type of crime and race. And that is the kind of
enforcement you will get through 911, backed by
Federal grants to local communities and Department
of Justice lawsuits. Whether or not the police
officer will be there in ten minutes or twenty,
whether he will even take your statement or just
doodle something while you talk, depends on policies
coming out of Washington D.C.
Group rights are centralized. They depend on
weaponizing statistics to achieve some larger goal
in the constellation of social justice whose dim
star always hangs over Washington casting its
baleful radiation down over all that marble, money
and blight, group rights are the right to wait in a
government line to find out whether your request
will be filled or not based on your socioeconomic
status, race, gender, transgender, sexual
orientation and surfing abilities, and any gimmick
that the latest Harvard faculty member slash White
House adviser has decided to experiment with on your
skin. And the line, in this case, happens to be the
phone line to the 911 system, which will send
someone to help you at a rate that depends on all
the number juggling involving money, crime
statistics and votes.
The 2nd Amendment is a very different creature.
The controllers would like to turn it into a group
right. Replace the home rifle with an IOU for
membership in the National Guard or a cell phone
from Carlos Slim that will allow you to dial 911,
unless the dam breaks or the earth quakes or the
service goes. And they would equally like to turn
the 1st Amendment into a right to say the things
that are socially beneficial, while outlawing speech
that is not socially beneficial.
In Europe, free speech means speech that is in the
public interest, not speech that undermines the
public good. That latter kind of speech can get you
a trip to a jail cell. And that is the only kind of
speech that can exist in group rights. When the
group comes first, then the individual is the last
one on the line. When rights serve the group, or the
idealized arrangement of groups meant to provide the
perfect statistical balance between skin colors,
genders, lack of genders, and choice of partners,
then the individual has no rights except as a member
of Team White, Team Black, Team Gay or Team Badly
Confused.
A gun is an individual thing. It's hard for a group
to own a gun. You can give Team Gay, Team Union or
Team Korean Men in Wheelchairs a cell phone link to
a central network of law enforcement support
services, but a gun is a thing that an individual
buys and learns to use. It is not a network, but an
object, its power does not come from pushbutton
access to a plea for government aid, but from the
skill and courage of the individual. Gun power is
merit based.
Effectively using freedom of speech, of religion, of
protest or the press has become more difficult in an
age where all four tend to be vested or barred by
massive institutions. You can still start your own
blog, your own religion, your own protest rally or
your own printing press in a shed out back, but your
ability to effectively make use of them in defense
of your own interests is likely to be limited. But
when the door breaks down, then you do not need
permission or access to large institutions to defend
yourself or your family courtesy of the 2nd
Amendment. And that is what infuriates group
rightists about the 2nd Amendment. Its function does
not require their consent or approval. It does not
even require their notice. It just is.
There is no conflict between the 1st and 2nd
Amendment as loudmouths like Piers Morgan have been
complaining of late. There is a conflict between a
2nd Amendment made use of by individuals and a 1st
Amendment that has been thoroughly colonized by
institutions and corporations that believe in the
rights of the group, not the rights of the
individual. David Gregory's belief that he was
immune from the law because he was acting as a media
agenda spokesman is just another reminder that the
institutions that have colonized the 1st Amendment
consider themselves in all regards above the law.
In an age of group rights, the Fourth Estate is
claiming the special status that it is entitled to.
But under the 2nd Amendment there are no estates, no
groups that are more or less entitled to defend
themselves, and no individuals with more or less
claim on the right to own a firearm because of their
race, religion, gender, bed partner, class or
cleverness. It is a right of the people, back when
the rights of the people referred to the people as a
whole, not some idealized urban peasantry living off
welfare checks or a coalition of official victim
groups whose tears count more than those of anyone
else.
In its purest form, the people means everyone. It
means a nation of individuals who are not broken
down into any other group and whose rights are not
allocated from any secondary source. The left spends
a great deal of time shouting, "Power to the
People", but the 2nd Amendment with its sharp
statement, "the right of the people to keep and bear
arms shall not be infringed" is a literal invocation
of power to the people. A people who are not
designated as such by any category other than their
peoplehood.
The left shouts "Power to the People", but doesn't
truly mean it. It would like to replace Power to the
People with Predialed Cell Phones to the People and
Lines at Government Offices to the People and Write
to Your Local Congressman to the People.
The people aren't supposed to have guns, they're
supposed to have government on speed dial. The
people aren't supposed to have power, they're
supposed to have a hand out to the government which
will decide whether to help them or not based on its
own priorities. And if the help doesn't arrive, then
they can shout "Power to the People" outside
government offices and demand that the rich people
give more money to the government so that it can
help them faster.
The Director of the "Brady Legal Project to Give
James Brady a Cybernetic Body Made of Titanium So He
Can Destroy All Guns Everywhere" asked the retired
Supreme Court Justice, "The Supreme Court held that
the 2nd Amendment assures our right to have a
handgun in the home for self-defense as you say.
This question’s asked: ‘That protects only gun
owners. What about those who don’t have guns? Surely
they have a right of self-defense. Instead of
relying on the 2nd Amendment and dealing with gun
laws, wouldn’t it be more rational to rely directly
on the right we all have to self-defense."
Like all gun control proposals, it would be
rational. Just as it was rational in the USSR to
move all the farmers to collective farms in order to
increase wheat production and just as it was
rational for China to protect crop yields by killing
all sparrows and just as it was rational to bail out
the banks and then spend billions more stimulating
the economy. Putting all your eggs in one centrally
planned basket is rational. It’s also stupid.
Rational is not the same thing as right and it's
certainly not the same thing as individual rights..
The Constitution is not rational. Not in the
sense that word is used by the modernist
technocracy, the worshipers at the altar of
progress, who deem a thing rational if it can be
used to social control their way to utopia. It holds
instead to the irrational idea that power should be
vested in the individual and that fairness comes
from respecting individual rights, rather than from
feudal structures that rely on government to level
all the playing fields and all the heads.
It holds to the irrational idea that a man has
rights, apart from his group or even from the public
good, and that these rights are innate, that
governments may take them away physically, but never
morally. And it holds to the stranger notion still
that individual rights become universalized through
individual power rather than government power. And
from these premises it determines that the people
shall have power, while from their premises the gun
controllers determine that the people shall have a
place on a government line. From these premises it
determines that the people shall be armed and from
their premises the gun controllers determine that
each man, woman and child shall have the right to
spend the last 30 seconds of their life begging the
government to save them.