Opinion
By Larry Keane
There’s an interesting – if not devious – trend emerging in some Second Amendment cases. The first step of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Bruen test is to ask whether the conduct at issue is covered by the text of the Second Amendment, which protects a pre-existing “right to keep and bear arms.” Some lower courts in purporting to apply the Bruen test are upholding gun control laws by holding that you do not have a Second Amendment right to buy a firearm.
That’s intellectually dishonest, to say the least. The ability to freely approach the gun counter to legally purchase a firearm is paramount to exercising the Second Amendment rights to keep and bear arms. There is no “keeping” of firearms if there is no legal right to lawfully acquire those same firearms. The ramifications of this flawed legal reasoning are self-evident. The government could simply ban the buying (and selling) of firearms and therefore eviscerate the Second Amendment all without infringing upon the right.
Right to Buy
The most recent example comes from New Mexico, where a federal district court judge refused to preliminarily enjoin the state’s seven-day waiting period for purchasing a firearm. There were several serious concerns with this decision, including the judge’s determination that the lengthy waiting period doesn’t constrain the rights to keep and bear arms. The judge contended that the waiting period only minimally burdens the “ancillary right to acquire firearms.”
That might come as news to an individual facing imminent threat to their safety or even their life. A woman who is the victim of domestic violence who considers purchasing a firearm to protect herself and her family could argue that the state’s seven-day waiting period is a seven-day ban on her ability to lawfully keep and bear arms when she knows there’s a threat to her life.
That wasn’t the worst of it. The same judge concluded that the waiting-period law is presumptively constitutional” given that the first waiting period laws were enacted in the 1920s – long after U.S. Constitution was ratified, and the 14th Amendment adopted. The judge even pointed to past, discriminatory laws that restricted the sale of firearms to slaves, freedmen and Native Americans. It is astonishing that a federal judge relied on racist laws that have been repudiated by the courts and American society to justify a gun control law.
However, that’s not what the Supreme Court held in the Bruen decision. That test, the Court said, is that gun control laws must have a “history and tradition” consistent with when the Second Amendment was signed into law in 1791 at the nation’s founding.
Court Concerns
It would be tempting to dismiss this judge’s decision as a “one-off” aberration. Unfortunately, that’s not the case. A 2024 decision by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York explicitly said that there is no Second Amendment right to purchase a second handgun within a 90-day window of purchasing a previous handgun.
“The question thus becomes whether a waiting period before the purchase of a second handgun is conduct covered by the text of the Second Amendment. It is not,” the court ruled in its opinion of Knight v. City of New York.
What the court is saying is that the government can ration the exercise of a Constitutionally-protected right, in this case, to just once every 90 days. This would be unthinkable if a court ruled that a law-abiding American could only exercise their rights to free speech or attend a church, mosque of synagogue of their choosing every three months. The federal court here is relegating the Second Amendment to a second-class right, that Justice Clarence Thomas has warned about.
That line of thinking wasn’t limited to New York. The U.S. District Court for the District of Vermont upheld the state’s waiting-period law, in Vermont Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs v. Birmingham this year, by claiming there’s no Second Amendment right to legally purchasing a firearm.
“The Court finds that the relevant conduct – acquiring a firearm through a commercial transaction on-demand – is not covered by the plain text of the Second Amendment,” wrote Judge William Sessions III. He quizzically added, “Plaintiffs may keep and bear arms without immediately acquiring them.”
That defies logic. It is impossible to legally keep and bear anything without the ability to lawfully purchase it first.
In 2023, the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado ruled against Rocky Mountain Gun Owners seeking to enjoin a three-day-waiting period law signed by Gov. Jared Polis. In this decision, the federal court ruled that the Second Amendment doesn’t explicitly say anything about legally acquiring a firearm.
“From this reading of the plain text, it is clear the relevant conduct impacted by the waiting period – the receipt of a paid-for firearm without delay – is not covered,” the decision reads, adding, “To ‘keep,’ under the definitions provided in Heller, meant to retain an object one already possessed. It did not mean to receive a newly paid-for item, and it certainly did not mean to receive that item without delay. Likewise, ‘hav[ing] weapons’ indicates the weapons are already in one’s possession, not that one is receiving them.”
The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania ruled in 2023 in U.S. v. King that there is no right to buy and sell firearms. In fact, Judge Joseph Leeson Jr. clearly states that it is a factor he didn’t – and wouldn’t – consider, writing, “…the Court looks at the Second Amendment’s plain text; it does not consider ‘implicit’ rights that may be lurking beneath the surface of the plain text.”
“Even if the Court assumed that there is an implicit right in the Second Amendment to buy and sell firearms in order to keep and bear arms, that is not the same thing as a right to buy and sell firearms as a regular course of trade or business with the principal objective of livelihood and profit through the repetitive purchase and resale of firearms,” Judge Leeson wrote. “In other words, the Second Amendment does not protect the commercial dealing of firearms.” Of course, while Heller said commercial regulations could be presumptively valid, it never suggested that the buying and selling of commonly used “arms” could be banned.
Governors Knew in 2020
Juxtapose that with governors who, just four years ago, quickly reversed their policies to order firearm retailers to close their doors during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. New Jersey’s Gov. Phil Murphy reversed course from his initial ordering of gun stores to be closed. He recognized that denying the ability of law-abiding citizens to legally obtain a firearm is denying them the ability to exercise their Second Amendment rights. Pennsylvania’s former Gov. Tom Wolf did the same, even after Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court denied a challenge to the order. The quiet about-face was in light of what could have become a U.S. Supreme Court challenge.
A federal judge ordered former Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker to allow firearm retailers there to reopen. The judge ordering the injunction wrote, “The exigencies surrounding this viral pandemic both justify and necessitate changes in the manner in which people live their lives and conduct their daily business. However, this emergency – like any other emergency – has its constitutional limits. It would not justify a prior restraint on speech nor a suspension of the right to vote. Just the same, it does not justify a ban on obtaining guns and ammunition.”
Divorcing the right to freely approach the gun counter at a firearm retailer and the right to keep and bear arms is a dangerous slope. Firearms are legal products available for anyone to freely purchase who is over the age of 18 for long guns or 21 for handguns, provided that the individual is purchasing the firearm for him or herself and can pass the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS). Conditioning that right – whether through waiting periods, which are an attempt to delay the exercise of that right – or by unmooring the right to legally purchase a firearm is a violation of the rights that belong to the people.
Imagine a court ruling that the First Amendment doesn’t include the right to buy a book. Or a law that said you can only buy a newspaper after waiting seven days. Or a law that limits how many books you can buy in a month. Or a law in which the government decides which books you are allowed to buy and read? Obviously, no one would tolerate such laws. So why is it acceptable for Second Amendment rights?
The answer, sadly, is that despite the Heller, McDonald, and Bruen decisions, some legislative bodies and judges treat the Second Amendment as a “second-class right.”
About The National Shooting Sports Foundation
NSSF is the trade association for the firearm industry. Its mission is to promote, protect and preserve hunting and shooting sports. Formed in 1961, NSSF has a membership of thousands of manufacturers, distributors, firearm retailers, shooting ranges, sportsmen’s organizations, and publishers nationwide. For more information, visit nssf.org
One Federal judge or court rules one way on firearms and another Federal judge or court rules another way. There are not any grounds for any Federal court to rule on firearms in any way. The Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution states that any authority NOT given as province to the Federal government is left to the authority of the individual States respectively. The Second Amendment DENIES the Federal government ANY authority related to firearms hence by the U.S. Constitution any Federal firearms law is technically NULL and VOID. Any politician who runs contrary to the aforementioned should be… Read more »
You missed a point. Constitution was amended to incorporate civil rights (as in the bill of rights) to apply to all governments within the US (states and subdivisions of the state such as city or county). Constitution is federal law so federal courts are bound to uphold our rights when citizens sue states or cities. Thus they do have authority to rule on firearms. They have authority to strike down any infringements. They do not have authority to uphold infringements – which is where our problems are coming from – because they rule contrary to the law. Not just any… Read more »
Well said.
Saved me writing about the same.
🙂
I wonder if there is an FFL willing to test a premise.
The premise is, the you can legally sell something that is worthless, if the buyer is willing to pay money for it; and therefore, sell a holster for hundreds of dollars and get the firearm as a free gift. Can that somehow skirt the law?
Democrats make it their mission to skirt the laws, why not the rest of us.
Why play their stupid games and try to “skirt the law”, when the completely corrupted legal system has no valid power or authority over anyone? Try doing this, if you can confront it. Call up any number of lawyers, and ask them if someone who is committing a crime against you, a crime of any kind, has any amount of power or authority over you! You will hear nothing but crickets, or a bunch of word salad like we get from Kamaltoe. That question exposes the legal system for what it truly is, a world wide crime syndicate!
Because the vast majority of us don’t break the law. Maybe a little speeding now and again. But even that is technically unconstitutional to cite me for.
Whose rights did I deprive by speeding?
Unless I deprive someone of their rights, leave me the fטck alone.
Sadly the repercussions of FJB will cause this type of thing for years to come. All of his nominees for Federal District Court (and Curcuit Court) are the most Radical Crazy Hateful people. Just watching the hearings on FJB Nominees questioned by Senators Josh Hawly, John Kennedy, Ted Cruz, etc it is brought out in papers they have written or things said, etc. that many hate whites, Trump, Conservatives on Supreme Court, Abortion in the 8-9th. month or even after birth; many are lesbians with an inbread hate for society, etc. And they lie to the Senators about it claiming… Read more »
I agree 100%, having watched those same hearings of which you speak. Even a broken clock is right twice a day, and Barack Obama was right when he said, “elections have consequences”. Sometimes those consequences are unintended, and not foreseeable by the average voter. Confirmation of radical justices by a Democrat majority in the house and senate, is a case in point. The fact remains, that not even voter ID is enough to ensure a free and fair result. The unidentifiable voters are just one plus for the Democrats; there are others. Which is why we should also demand Voter… Read more »
Anyone caught committing any type of voter fraud should hang.
Unfortunately, literacy tests have been (rightly) ruled unconstitutional mainly because they were used for racial discrimination. That principle would likely apply to IQ tests as well, though intelligence and literacy are two different things. What I would like to see is that one would have to go through exactly the same process to vote that you have to go through to buy a gun from an FFL. Except, of course, there would be no charge for voting. This would have to be repeated every time you vote, just like every time you buy a gun. Challenging this would definitely put… Read more »
The answer is simple.
Unconstitutional acts demand swinging from a rope.
Plain text from the “Bill of Bubba”
We don’t see the pyramid of effects that the Decenting Judge caused thru her delay sleeze tactics against the 2nd. Amendment. Had she been honorable and timely filed her decent many during her year of sleeze delay could have been arrest, jail time, large court related funds, fines, maybe some were shot dead. This dishonorable sleezy Cuircut Judge should at minimum be removed in dishonor.
Dissent, not decent. That judge is definitely not decent.
Again, leftist thinkers realize that modern Americans employ professional police and military forces now. Liberals imagining the 2A invalid after that should surprise no one. In fact, with a Johnny-on-the-spot force on 24 hr. call, keeping the old 2A active now would be “double dipping”. And don’t think loads of them don’t think that way either.
‘The judge contended that the waiting period only minimally burdens the “ancillary right to acquire firearms.”’
I’m going to assume that the part in quotation marks (“ancillary right to acquire firearms.”) was in the judge’s ruling. With that in mind, and if my assumption is correct, that statement should constitute a court ruling that purchasing a firearm IS a right, whether or not the statement categorizes it as an “ancillary” right.
these lower court justices have shat all over the Constitution, Bill of Rights and scotus decisions by ruling as they have in these cases, especially the recent maryland case. how they could rule against that ban defies any kind of logic or common sense. their twisted little minds cannot comprehend simple language, or more likely, they are just evil.
Hang em high. All of them.
Check out who runs American courts now. It’s always Delta house cutie-pies who spent years in “college”.
What does that mean?
It should be no secret that the government will outlaw possession of firearms in spite of the Constitution. The real question is what will you do about it?
You’re close to hitting the mark there, Saddletramp! As soon as you see the clear distinction between what a gun and a “firearm” is, you will be right over the target! Too many people confuse one with the other and think that they mean the same thing, when they do not. This one man I know can never remember that free market enterprise is NOT the same thing as capitalism, no matter how many times I have told him. Let’s not be the same way when talking about guns and firearms. And if you read my papers exposing the crimes… Read more »