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How Madison's Reluctance Gave Us the Second Amendment

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    How Madison's Reluctance Gave Us the Second Amendment

    Why it matters: The guy who wrote the Second Amendment didn't even want to write it—and understanding his reluctance explains why "shall not be infringed" means what it says. James Madison worried that listing specific rights might make people think those were the only ones they had.

    Here's the thing that gets me every time I think about this: we almost didn't get the Bill of Rights at all. Madison figured the new federal government already had limited powers, so why bother spelling out what they couldn't touch?

    The legal reality: Madison believed your rights existed before any government showed up to the party. In 1792, he wrote that every person "has a property very dear to him in the safety and liberty of his person" and called conscience "the most sacred of all property."

    His logic was solid: "The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined." Translation—why list what they can't do when they weren't supposed to have that authority anyway?

    Thomas Jefferson shared this natural rights philosophy. In 1819, he defined "rightful liberty" as "unobstructed action according to our will within limits drawn around us by the equal rights of others." Notice what he didn't say—"within the limits of the law." Jefferson explained that "law is often but the tyrant's will."

    Jefferson Played the Long Game

    Between the lines: Jefferson understood Madison's principles but also understood politicians. Through their letters back and forth, Jefferson convinced Madison that the Constitution handed serious power to federal lawmakers and bureaucrats—power that needed formal guardrails.

    "If we cannot secure all our rights, let us secure what we can," Jefferson argued. Sure, paper protections weren't bulletproof, but they were "of great potency always, and rarely inefficacious."

    Madison came around. He proposed 12 amendments, 10 became our Bill of Rights, and one more finally got ratified in 1992 as the 27th Amendment. To cover his original concern, Madison included what became the Ninth Amendment—basically saying "just because we wrote these down doesn't mean these are the only rights you have."

    Mixed Results in the Real World

    What this means for you: The Bill of Rights has had a rocky track record. We've seen government censorship during wars, business takeovers, Japanese American internment camps—politicians consistently prove they hate the restrictions these 10 amendments put on their power.

    Americans send mixed signals too. Recent polls show 61% of Democrats and 52% of Republicans think the First Amendment "goes too far." Most Americans support the Second Amendment, but 58% want stricter gun laws, including bans on semiautomatic rifles and standard magazines—restrictions that make "shall not be infringed" meaningless.

    Yet the same people tell pollsters that free speech (78%), press freedom (76%), voting rights (58%), and gun rights (64%) are all under threat. As one observer put it: "Hey, folks! Have you met yourselves?"

    Rights Fight Back

    Here's what gives me hope: constitutional rights have a way of coming back swinging. World War I censorship sparked what scholars call the "Free Speech Century." Decades of gun restrictions seemed to treat the Second Amendment like a suggestion until public pushback and legal scholarship brought it back to life.

    The bottom line: Unlike the watered-down protections you see in other countries, the often absolute language in our Bill of Rights "always retains the potential to reawaken and strike down restrictive laws."

    Tim Lynch from the Cato Institute nailed it on Bill of Rights Day 2009—the Framers "would not have been surprised by the relentless attempts by government to expand its sphere of control." They knew paper barriers had limits, but as Jefferson concluded, putting safeguards in writing was better than having nothing at all.

    That reluctant compromise between Madison and Jefferson gave us the Second Amendment. Not bad for a guy who didn't want to write it in the first place.


    Read the original article in The Handbook | By Steve Duskett


    Join the Discussion

    If Madison's concerns had won out and we never got the explicit Second Amendment, do you think that would've actually changed how gun rights played out in this country, or was it more about having it in writing?

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