‘In Common Use’ Can Ultimately be Used to Make the Second Amendment a Moot Point

Far-fetched? Who knows what will be available to the military and law enforcement in 100 years,  and what it means to “the people” of the Second Amendment if the government can deny future technology because it’s “dangerous and unusual,”  and not “in common use”? (Smithsonian Institution/PD)
Far-fetched? Who knows what will be available to the military and law enforcement in 100 years,  and what it means to “the people” of the Second Amendment if the government can deny future technology because it’s “dangerous and unusual,”  and not “in common use”? (Smithsonian Institution/PD)

“The Second Amendment Allows a Ban on the AR-15,” Harvard University Professor of Law Noah Feldman once declared in a Bloomberg/Washington Post “opinion” piece.

That it’s an “opinion” is the one truthful admission in this otherwise absurd act of academic gaslighting. Harvard, Bloomberg, and WaPo are all for eviscerating the right of the people to keep and bear arms and routinely spread whatever lies they can get away with (despite the disingenuous caveat that “This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.”)

“Under current law, the Second Amendment extends only to weapons that are not ‘unusual’ and are ‘in common use’ by law-abiding citizens,” Feldman asserts. “Whether that includes AR-15s is a question the Supreme Court has not yet resolved, although the justices have recently been asked to weigh in. A key question today — though not when the Bill of Rights was ratified — is whether a weapon is ordinarily used for self-defense.”

“To give you a sense of how different things were with respect to gun issues 84 years ago, the court held unanimously that the Second Amendment didn’t protect [short barreled shotguns],” Feldman misstates, citing the case of U.S. v. Miller. That’s actually not what they said at all. In the opinion for that case, Justice McReynolds noted:

“In the absence of any evidence tending to show that possession or use of a ‘shotgun having a barrel of less than eighteen inches in length’ at this time has some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well regulated militia, we cannot say that the Second Amendment guarantees the right to keep and bear such an instrument. Certainly it is not within judicial notice that this weapon is any part of the ordinary military equipment or that its use could contribute to the common defense.”

They didn’t have evidence because the case wasn’t argued in front of them. Had it been, the military utility of such weapons could have been decisively established, starting with the flintlock blunderbuss:

“This short shotgun-type firearm utilized about a half-pint of shot. During the Revolutionary War, American warships used Blunderbusses for repelling unwanted borders. Gunsmiths made these specifically for defense at close quarters.”

Using the Bruen standard of text, history, and tradition as understood by the men who ratified the Second Amendment, plenty of subsequent “legal” rulings should fall. So would Feldman’s proposed AR ban, as his own words about citizen militias indicate, if he would only heed them.

“Those militias, in turn, were made up of ordinary citizens,” he instructs. “And the ordinary citizens in the state militia  were expected to provide their own weapons.”

What weapons were they expected to bring from home, and how did they compare to what enemy soldiers were issued?

“From this, it followed, for McReynolds, that the Second Amendment protected only weapons that had ‘some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well-regulated militia.’ That did not include the short-barreled shotgun, he added. Such a weapon was not ‘any part of the ordinary military equipment’ nor would its use ‘contribute to the common defense.’”

In fact, citizens reporting for militia duty were expected to bring weaponry suitable for battle, and in many cases, these men “outgunned the police,” especially when considering the standard issue for British troops was the Brown Bess musket, while patriots who owned them came equipped with more accurate and longer-range Kentucky/Pennsylvania rifles. Recall that the Founders considered the militia “necessary to the security of a free State,” and to expect their equipment would be inferior to that of attackers they were defending against would have been suicidally absurd.

The militia deployed with the intent to match and best a professional military threat. Its function was — and still is — to field citizen soldiers, and these citizens bore arms that were suitable for that purpose, “ordinary military equipment” intended to be taken into “common defense” battles.

Still, apparently believing he is making his case, Feldman continues offering pre-Bruen examples of infringements, in this case citing Antonin Scalia’s wholly uncalled-for concession that “Like most rights, the Second Amendment right is not unlimited. Miller’s holding that the sorts of weapons protected are those ‘in common use at the time’ finds support in the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of dangerous and unusual weapons.”

He used that to imply banning weapons such as “M-16 rifles and the like” would not be an infringement. Otherwise, he asserted, “it would mean that the National Firearms Act’s restrictions on machineguns … might be unconstitutional, machineguns being useful in warfare in 1939.”

Yes, it would be.

But naturally, Feldman (and all the other prohibitionists) rely on that to exploit, beginning with a lie.

“The virtue of the Supreme Court’s 1939 test is that it was at least true to the original meaning of the Second Amendment,” he claims. “Its practical disadvantage, of course, is that if updated to the present, the rule would protect military-style weapons — not only semiautomatic rifles but machine guns, RPG launchers, predator drones, and the like.”

Notice how he escalates “dangerous and unusual” to lump conventional small arms in with “the like,” which could conceivably escalate up to weaponized anthrax and suitcase nukes.  The 1939 non-test (because it wasn’t a test with no arguments and evidence) is hardly “true” to Founding Era intent, as the Framers never qualified the Second Amendment by declaring “the right of the people to keep and bear non-dangerous and usual arms in common use at the time shall not be infringed.”

“Scalia discounted the introductory clause that explains the purpose of amendment as ensuring a well-regulated militia,” Feldman elaborated. “He shifted the meaning of the right to bear arms to personal self-defense.”

Inexplicably and unjustifiable, he did, and we ignore the first 13 words of the Second Amendment at our peril. Feldman takes full advantage of that, writing “Today, the Second Amendment applies to all weapons that ordinary people carry on an ordinary basis for self-defense … Logically, it should also exclude AR-15s, which are not commonly carried for self-defense.”

Logically it shouldn’t. But unfortunately for gun owners, too many influencers ostensibly on “our side” won’t explore the militia aspect, and that dereliction makes the Second Amendment more vulnerable to infringements.

“Here’s hoping that, when the Supreme Court ultimately addresses the issue, the justices can recognize that that AR-15s do not belong in the same category as handguns,” Feldman concludes. “They are weapons of war — for, in fact, a well-regulated militia — not for ordinary people to carry for ordinary use.”

Going back to the Founding Era for understanding, text, and tradition, we can see what Continental Congress delegate Tench Coxe had to say about that:

“Their swords, and every other terrible implement of the soldier, are the birthright of an American… [T]he unlimited power of the sword is not in the hands of either the federal or state governments, but, where I trust in God it will ever remain, in the hands of the people.”

The tradition is that citizens have militia-capable firearms. Although “well regulated” is deliberately misrepresented to mean “gun control” is permissible, the militia system envisioned by the Framers is one where the “regulation” is through coordinated training and deployment, not in dictating what citizens are allowed to possess. That this has been intentionally ignored by those whose goal is a monopoly of violence undermines not only Founding intent, but guarantees the citizenry will be left out of all future technological developments. And that’s made inevitable by the “in common use test.”

Because what was in common use in the past is not what is in common use today, nor what will be in common use tomorrow. At least by the military and by law enforcement.

A persistent lie told by the prohibitionists is the Founders only had muskets and would be so horrified by AR-15s that they’d have never written the Second Amendment. That, of course, is a load. It relegates the role of prominent scholars, inventors, and innovators educated under the influence of the Enlightenment to that of unimaginative and non-observant dullards. They knew about multiple barrel cannons, volley guns, pepperbox revolvers, multiple shot Girardoni air rifles, crank-operated Puckle guns, breech-loading Ferguson rifles… “dangerous and unusual” all, and none of them “in common use at the time” when first developed.

The Founders were at the vanguard of the technology of their day, and of pushing it to see what else could be discovered and achieved.  They knew that times were changing, as theirs were the revolutionary, educated minds bringing the changes about. And when new developments did happen, they embraced them, as opposed to suppressing and outlawing them while “swarms of officers” issued arbitrary rule changes to ban them.

That’s what “history, text, and tradition” will tell anyone who wants to look honestly.

By relegating what’s “in common use at the time” to what’s commercially “popular,” as opposed to what modern infantry soldiers are armed with, the advantage will forever be with invaders and enforcers. Ditto the “for lawful purposes” qualifier, as outlawing firearm types makes sure they can’t be legally owned. We see that all the time with the restrictions on “civilian” possession of machine guns (which the government knows we have a right to own), and it won’t end there. (As an aside, if we relegate “in common use” to what’s popular and neither “dangerous” nor “unusual”, so-called “smart guns” would fall into that category and could be banned!)

Think about technological developments in small arms since the founding of the Republic. How would Washington’s troops have fared against Grant’s, Grant’s against Pershing’s, and Pershing’s against Patton’s…? That’s the past. What about the future?

If “the people” of the  Second Amendment can be denied arms based on them not being “in common use” for sport and for limited “self-defense” situations, what chance would they have resisting tyranny equipped with weaponry that today would be considered the stuff of science fiction? Who knows what those imposing their demands will have at their disposal, along with the power to withhold from citizens 50 years from now, or 100, or beyond?

Since no innovation begins “in common use,” a government with the power to do so can ban all new weapon developments from those they would rule, retaining them exclusively for itself. It’s what I warned about when I wrote “Things to Come” back in 2002 for Guns and Ammo (not online, and it’s copyrighted, so I can’t link to the entire essay):

It’s been said that a battle isn’t won until a man with a rifle occupies the ground. We must keep in mind that someone probably once said the same thing about spears.


About David Codrea:

David Codrea is the winner of multiple journalist awards for investigating/defending the RKBA and a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament. He blogs at “The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance,” is a regularly featured contributor to Firearms News, and posts on Twitter: @dcodrea and Facebook.

David Codrea

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Arizona

Shall not be infringed is definitive. There are no exceptions listed or suggested. It is a clear and powerfully worded prohibition on government power. It is the most strongly worded amendment in the BOR. Free men need no permission.

james

Infringe: act so as to limit or undermine

nrringlee

Blackstone’s definition is the key. To restrict, limit or “hese may be reduced to three principal or primary articles; the right of personal security, the right of personal liberty, and the right of private property: because, as there is no other known method of compulsion, or abridging man’s natural free will, but by an infringement or diminution of one or other of these important rights, the preservation of these, inviolate, may justly be said to include the preservation of our civil immunities in their largest and most extensive sense.” The preservation of the Natural Law was the purpose of the… Read more »

DDS

Apparently those who oppose RKBA need more than a “strongly worded letter”.

“We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge or gallantry would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution is designed only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate for any other.” — John Adams

Cynical

God, Family,Country!!! God trumps all. Keep the faith

DDS

It should be obvious to all professional wordsmiths, like those in the “Lame Stream Media”, that language changes even as it is being used. The lyrics of the Christmas carol “Deck the Halls” include the phrase “Don we now our gay apparel.” Unless one is going to argue that one of our most popular holiday songs advocates for cross dressing, one must come to the realization that the meanings of words change over time. That must be kept in mind when trying to determine the intent of those who wrote, debated, and eventually ratified the Constitution of the United States,… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by DDS
swmft

they change meanings with intent of nullifying past documents, the gay 90s did not refer to a period of queer activity

totbs

Never in the history of the US, has the left changed the definitions of words with such rapidity, or invented new ones to bolster their new definitions.

swmft

illusions, there is nothing but smoke and mirrors , I will stick to gunpowder and black powder and led

DDS

It’s more insidious than you might think. If you’ve looked at any of the house hunter shows on HGTV lately, or looked at a property on Zillow, you may have noticed they no longer talk about Master Bedrooms. As for their ultimate goal, consider this from George Orwell’s “1984” published in 1949. See if this doesn’t give you chills. ‘ “Don’t you see that the whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the range of thought? In the end we shall make thoughtcrime literally impossible, because there will be no words in which to express it. Every concept that can… Read more »

Boom

I still call it the master bedroom. I still call it fort Hood and I still call it fort Polk, etc …jus saying

Wild Bill

We are on the verge of that right now, with “hate crimes”… battery with an additional thought.

DDS

David, I was surprised to find that I didn’t have your interview with Mr. Young bookmarked.

Fixed!

Wild Bill

Still, it is awfully nice of authors to follow up with a comment. Mucho appriciado.

USMC0351Grunt

“Veterans! Grab your gear and report to the closest VFW within 48 hours.”

Out of the 17 million plus veterans across our Nation, all any commander would have to do is show up at their VFW on that 48th hour and give the following command:

“FALL IN! Column of fours tallest to the shortest man.”

“DRESS RIGHT DRESS!”

“AT EASE!”

“SIR, the (Enter name of city of that VFW) militia is formed and standing by for your further instruction.”

DONE DEAL. We can integrate the civilians later as we pick up on training schedule.

MILITIA

swmft

I can see that, and even those i their 90s are willing

Watch um

I am 80 and ready and I have the gear except my old uniform is too small because I have put on some weight

Mystic Wolf

I am in my 60s have had my back busted but I am still willing to get out there to defend house and country. If all VETERANS were to stand up the current administration would load their britches with a full load.

Boom

USMC — There you go with that again … You even gonna try to split the platoons /squads up with MOS-material teams? Look. I like to fantasize about all kinds of cool shit, too… But most of it will never work in real life…and I’m honest with myself about it…, at least every once in a while. You know, there’s a reason why they have different kinds of units filled with men of different skill sets… They’re not gonna send the army band in to do a Zone Reconnaissance….or track enemy armor, with intent to call fire missions…(although I once… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by Boom
Wild Bill

If the VFW provides their “standard logistics” then I”M IN!!!

Bill

Are regular citizens allowed to apply?

Hazcat

Funny, I can’t find the phrase “in common use” in the 2A. I can find the phrase “shall not be infringed”. Seems that covers any questions completely.

Last edited 1 year ago by Hazcat
HLB

Yes, using pages of words to describe the very few words in the 2nd Amendment is opening the door to creeping division of our rights. The “militia” part is not an exclusive requirement, it is an example. The “not infringed” part is an exclusive statement.

HLB

Intrepidus

There goes David droppin some dangerous and unusual truth bombs!!

Desert Guy

The entire U.S. Constitution is already moot. Governments routinely ignore it daily.

HLB

Yes, but we do not have to ignore it.

HLB

Shotsmith

The U.S. Constitution will never be moot since it doesn’t grant anything. It simply guarantees those unalienable rights emanating from our creator. It may be ignored or misinterpreted, but it will always be relevent.

Mystic Wolf

What the BILL OF RIGHTS does is to codify what we already know, that the BILL OF RIGHTS sets the law of the land in cement.

gregs

do you think these “news outlets” would publish this op-ed if it did not align with the narrative they were pushing? when was the last time these organizations published one that was opposite of their viewpoint? that this person writing this op-ed is a professor anywhere speaks volumes to the total stupidity of a college, excuse me, indoctrination camp, education. progressives wrongfully interpret words to twist the meanings to fit their narrative. a smart 6th grader could tell you what it means. how can a “learned” professor not do the same. A well regulated Militia, being necessary for the security… Read more »

Mystic Wolf

They would say that all those that read it are terrorists and white supremacists and would therefore need to be imprisoned.

Joe R.

N. District of Oklahoma Case No. 4:2023cv00217 Argues that the true “Right” to keep and bear arms comes from the second paragraph of The Declaration of Independence, wherein, as your Enumerated Rights begin with 1) Life, 2) Liberty and the 3) Pursuit of Happiness, your 4th Enumerated Right is the right of bona fide U.S. Citizens to chuck their government “whenever” they deem necessary. It is the ONLY Enumerated Right to be repeated 2x in any founding document and the ONLY Enumerated Right that has a corresponding Enumerated “duty” to exercise [repeated immediately following the second recitation of this right,… Read more »

warfinge

As we sit in our social media echo chamber, reading an excellent presentation of “Common Use” and a reasonable view on evolving firearm technology, we lack the ability to reason with hardcore gun control advocates because they have a political objective that supersedes truth. Who knows what they really expect to gain from a disarmed American population. We are the Militia, the last line of defense against invasion of the continent. Commie professors may imagine a liberation from capitalism and a position of power in the aftermath. Or maybe they are just idiots playing red vs. blue with no thought… Read more »

2A Gun Guy

Their Goal is Complete Control over the People of this Country.

warfinge

Undoubtedly. But why? to what end? What is their ultimate gain. I am not talking politicians. What does the average gun control advocate see as the payoff? Safer streets or radical, political change?

HLB

I have been searching for that answer for long time. I think they are afraid of guns being around them. If they know guns are around them then it is possible that some one may shoot them. They live their lives every day without being shot but they read about shootings. They do not connect with self defense because they do not have the mental determination to do so, because they never have had to. Since they never have had to do it, they depend on the government to do it for them. I think it is a trend that… Read more »

Courageous Lion - Hear Me Roar - Jus Meum Tuebor

Maybe what they are afraid of is people waking up and realizing they are slaves. Like in the Matrix. When people get tired of paying rent on their homes and paying for the salaries of parasites. Sorry, I mean PROPERTY TAXES on their homes. The 1st plank of the Communist Manifesto.

Boom

Warfringe — The average useful idiot, is for gun control, because someone has told them that it is the enlightened way to be, and even though they, or most of them, are the exact opposite of enlightened, they are stupid, they think that they are in life, it’s the same way they are supportive of so-called trans movements…. Because they think that it shows not everyone else but shows themselves how enlightened they are.. Like I always say, not even politics are about politics, they are about personas, people of certain personas are drawn to certain mentalities about things.. even… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by Boom
Finnky

I disagree with your comments on machine guns. It is perfectly possible to own an outlawed firearm for legal purposes. Fact ownership has been made illegal does not necessarily mean that purposes for which you use it are illegal. For example if I hung a fully functional M4 over my mantle and called it art, it would be illegally owned for lawful purposes. Purposes would be artistic display and possibly home defense, both purposes which remain legal even though implement used would not be. Could also be seen as protesting governmental over-reach, which is supposedly legal. We’ve seen in case… Read more »

Boom

Finnky — that’s what I always say, just because something’s a law doesn’t make it legal… I say it about window tint all the time, in fact.

Arkansas Rob

As always, well written. Mr. Codrea, you stand head and shoulders above all other authors here.

Nanashi

Citing Miller is inherently disingenuous. Miller is not a case of law. Miller was a criminal conspiracy that violates every law and practice of US courts. The supposed “judge” of the case literally wrote the law in question.

Larry

There was only one ruling in Miller, and it had nothing to do with guns. It was that the lower court had to go back and hear Miller’s original case (which it had twice refused to do) before concluding prima facie that NFA ’34 violated the Second Amendment… because there were “questions of fact” that needed to be answered first, the primary one being whether the guns restricted by NFA (in particular, the one Miller possessed) had usefulness to a militia. And that was never done, as Miller died at about the same time their ruling was issued… so that… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by Larry
3l120

The problem with the “well regulated militia” is that they scare the crap out of the government. Therefore, government does its best to destroy these militias. By infiltration if possible, if not by attempting to try the leaders for sedition. Look at what they did to the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys. By attempting to outlaw militias, they are trying to make the above phrase a moot point.

swmft

if they did not have malfeasants in their heart they would applaud people being ready to protect themselves

Bigfootbob

Mr. Codrea, as usual you have penned an extraordinary article. I’m not completely sure, but I believe from reading your articles that you live deep inside the communist state of California? Not that your place of residence matters one iota to me. However, no matter where you live, you are educated, driven and you possess integrity, you are the perfect example of the type of person we need in Congress or the state house. Your friends, neighbors and constituents would benefit greatly having a person of your caliber representing their interests. I would donate to your campaign as would most… Read more »

Roland T. Gunner

” ‘owed ‘e get to be king anyway?” “Well, we all voted for ‘im”.

Not an exact quote.

Larry

David lives in serious flyover country.

Courageous Lion - Hear Me Roar - Jus Meum Tuebor

“They get elected because of 2 things, attractiveness and their ability to read a teleprompter, memorize a speech and can deliver it well.” And they are well endowed with the attribute of being a psychopathic control freak PARASITE. That is the major reason no normal person wants the job. We don’t WANT to be lording over someone else and acting like we are their leader while passing idiotic victimless crime laws. When Randy lived near us and we had a number of times we spent together, remembering the day he said to me at our dinner table “Sammy used to… Read more »

Last edited 4 months ago by Courageous Lion - Hear Me Roar - Jus Meum Tuebor
Courageous Lion - Hear Me Roar - Jus Meum Tuebor

YES! YES! YES! FINALLY someone standing up for the first 13 words! THANK YOU DAVID! I tip my hat to you! You’re 2019 article is SPOT ON! “Recall that the Founders considered the militia “necessary to the security of a free State,” and to expect their equipment would be inferior to that of attackers they were defending against would have been suicidally absurd.” The link that I just embedded on those words is a post I wrote back in 2022. I’m continually telling folks on youtube to read it! Especially guys like Jared and Langley and even Colion Noir. They… Read more »

Boom

M4’s are pretty common, I would say…not unusual at all….

…and when the CAV has phasers, they’ll be in common use too…

What’s good for the goose….good for the gander…

Watch um

A quote from the Bible
Acts 26:24-25 KJV
And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice, Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad. [25] But he said, I am not mad, most noble Festus; but speak forth the words of truth and soberness.

It would seem that the esteemed gentleman of higher learning would think we who speak the truth about the 2nd Amendment are mad as in crazy.

Jerry C.

“Under current law: should be replaced by “Under current illegal misinterpretation of the Constitution”.

PistolGrip44

Do you know what is Moot?

The NRA.

Cappy

There is no shortage of stupid on the gun-ban side of things. But, as a friend recently pointed out, stupid is an amazingly renewable resource. And, as I have mentioned before, education cures ignorance, but stupidity is an often fatal condition.

nrringlee

Elections have consequences. Conservatives, and there are at least seven distinct tribes of ‘conservatives need to be of like mind when they go to the polls. And today they most certainly are not. Conservative leaders need to teach their flocks that we are first and foremost about conserving our Constitutional heritage. All of it. If one Amendment or one Section or one Article is under attack we all muster up and hit the polls and the sound waves to defend it. One for all and all for one. Note how the Progressive New Left rallies around the most recent complaint… Read more »

Greg K

Have to agree with David wholeheartedly on this. The progressives wrote the book on twisting language and we have to be careful as to what language is introduced to defend our rights.

The fact of the matter is that our rights do not even need a “Bill of Rights” to secure our “Property.” “Life, Liberty, or Property.” Article 1, secs, 9 and 10 forbid “Bills of Attainder.” Federal or State! We fix this and a whole plethora of UnConstitutional crud goes by the wayside.

Protect defend serve

So what what about the 22+ states that have citizen defense forces today? Guess who provided their arms? The citizens themselves. Liars, FUDDS, and 2A haters only want one thing: control. They will stop at nothing to corrupt, contrive and connive the actual meaning of the 2A and for that matter the Constitution.

Xaun Loc

This is an excellent discussion of several points about the 2nd Amendment and the ever-changing nature of judicial decisions related to it. But even so, David Codrea falls into one of the most common errors by thinking that civilians are banned from ownership of NFA Class III weapons (machine guns, short barreled shotguns and rifles, etc). David is 100% correct when he parenthetically mentions “machine guns (which the government knows we have a right to own).” Yes, the government does know we have a right to own these weapons — that is why they are NOT prohibited under the National Firearms… Read more »

Bill

Just a mystery, but how does one fit a half pint of shot into a blunderbuss? That’s a full cup of shot! (I have never known a pint to be a weight, but eight ounces of shot would still be an enormous payload. I don’t know of blunderbusses that large, or shoulders that could bear the recoil.) And if it were able to fit into the weapon, how could one load enough powder to propel such mass? Also, inspired by the previous dubious statement, is “unwanted borders” really the spelling of the original, or should it have been “boarders”, as… Read more »

Divino Vocamen

People need to understand that language and words often mean different things over time .”Well regulated ” does not mean “well controled ” . For hundreds of years ( 1600’s to late 1800’s ) a “Regulator ” was a military supply Sergeant and being “regulated > meant being “supplied ” so a “well regulated militia ” meant a “well supplied group of the citizenry ” .

USSF RAVEN

Is this article a Dream or a Nightmare….?

Last edited 4 months ago by USSF RAVEN