The Embarrassining Second Amendment Part 1
                         By Sanford Levinson
University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Reprinted from the Yale Law Journal, Volume 99, pp. 637-659
          One of the best known pieces of American popular art in 
     this  century  is  the New Yorker cover  by  Saul  Steinberg 
     presenting  a  map  of the United States as seen  by  a  New 
     Yorker,  As  most  readers can no  doubt  recall,  Manhattan 
     dominates the map; everything west of the Hudson is more  or 
     less  collapsed  together  and minimally  displayed  to  the 
     viewer.    Steinberg’s great cover depends for its force  on 
     the  reality  of what social psychologists  call  “cognitive 
     maps.” If one asks inhabitants ostensibly of the same cities 
     to  draw maps of that city, one will quickly  discover  that 
     the  images  carried around in people’s minds will  vary  by 
     race,  social class, and the like.  What is true of maps  of 
     places — that they differ according to the perspectives  of 
     the mapmakers–is certainly true of all conceptual maps.
          To  continue the map analogy, consider in this  context 
     the Bill of Rights; is there an agreed upon “projection”  of 
     the  concept? Is there even a canonical text of the Bill  of 
     Rights? Does it include the first eight, nine, or ten Amend-
     ments  to the Constitution? [1] Imagine two individuals  who 
     are  asked to draw a “map” of the Bill of Rights.  One is  a 
     (stereo-)  typical  member of the American  Civil  Liberties 
     Union  (of which I am a card-carrying member); the other  is 
     an equally (stereo-) typical member of the “New Right.”  The 
     first,  I suggest, would feature the First Amendment [2]  as 
     Main Street, dominating the map, though more, one  suspects, 
     in its role as protector of speech and prohibitor of  estab-
     lished religion than as guardian of the rights of  religious 
     believers.  The other principal avenues would be the  crimi-
     nal  procedures aspects of the Constitution drawn  from  the 
     Fourth, [3] Fifth, [4] Sixth, [5] and Eighth [6] Amendments.  
     Also depicted prominently would be the Ninth Amendment,  [7] 
     although  perhaps as in the process of construction.   I  am 
     confident that the ACLU map would exclude any display of the 
     just  compensation clause of the Fifth Amendment [8]  or  of 
     the Tenth Amendment.  [9] 
          The second map, drawn by the New Rightist, would  high-
     light the free exercise clause of the First Amendment,  [10] 
     the  just compensation clause of the Fifth  Amendment,  [11] 
     and  the  Tenth Amendment.  [12] Perhaps  the  most  notable 
     difference between the two maps, though, would be in  regard 
     to  the  Second Amendment: “A well regulated  militia  being 
     necessary to the security of a free State, the right of  the 
     people  to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.”  What 
     would be at most a blind alley for the ACLU mapmaker  would, 
     I am confident, be a major boulevard in the map drawn by the 
     New Right adherent.  It is this last anomaly that I want  to 
     explore in this essay.
I. The Politics Of Interpreting The Second Amendment
          To  put it mildly, the Second Amendment is not  at  the 
     forefront  of constitutional discussion, at least as  regis-
     tered  in  what the academy regards as the venues  for  such 
     discussion  –law  reviews, [13] casebooks, [14]  and  other 
     scholarly  legal publications.  As Professor Larue  has  re-
     cently written, “the second amendment is not taken seriously 
     by most scholars.” [15]
          Both  Laurence  Tribe  [16] and the  Illinois  team  of 
     Nowak,  Rotunda,  and Young [17] at  least  acknowledge  the 
     existence of the Second Amendment in their respective  trea-
     tises  on constitutional law, perhaps because  the  treatise 
     genre  demands  more  encyclopedic coverage  than  does  the 
     casebook.   Neither, however, pays it the compliment of  ex-
     tended  analysis.   Both marginalize the Amendment by  rele-
     gating it to footnotes; it becomes what a  deconstructionist 
     might call a “supplement” to the ostensibly “real” Constitu-
     tion  that  is privileged by discussion in the  text.   [18] 
     Professor  Tribe’s  footnote appears as part  of  a  general 
     discussion  of  congressional power.  He  asserts  that  the 
     history  of  the  Amendment “indicate[s]  that  the  central 
     concern of [its] framers was to prevent such federal  inter-
     ferences  with the state militia as would permit the  estab-
     lishment  of  a standing national army  and  the  consequent 
     destruction of local autonomy.” [19] He does note, how ever, 
     that “the debates surrounding congressional approval of  the 
     second  amendment do contain references to individual  self-
     protection as well as to states’ rights,” but he argues that 
     the qualifying phrase “‘well regulated” makes any invocation 
     of  the  Amendment as a restriction on state  or  local  gun 
     control measures extremely problematic.” [20] Nowak,  Rotun-
     da,  and Young mention the Amendment in the context  of  the 
     incorporation  controversy, though they discuss its  meaning 
     at  slightly  greater length.  [21] They state  that  “[t]he 
     Supreme  Court  has not determined, at least  not  with  any 
     clarity,  whether  the amendment protects only  a  right  of 
     state  governments against federal interference  with  state 
     militia  and  police forces…  or a  right  of  individuals 
     against the federal and state government[s].” [22] 
          Clearly  the Second Amendment is not the  only  ignored 
     patch of text in our constitutional conversations.  One will 
     find extraordinarily little discussion about another one  of 
     the initial Bill of Rights, the Third Amendment: “No Soldier 
     shall,  in time of peace be quartered in any house,  without 
     the  consent  of  the Owner, nor in time of war,  but  in  a 
     manner  to  be prescribed by law.” Nor does  one  hear  much 
     about letters of marque and reprisal [23] or the granting of 
     titles  of nobility.  [24] There are, however, some  differ-
     ences that are worth noting.
          The  Third  Amendment,  to take the  easiest  case,  is 
     ignored because it is in fact of no current importance  what 
     whatsoever  (although  it  did, for  obvious  reasons,  have 
     importance at the time of the founding).  It has never,  for 
     a single instant, been viewed by any body of modern  lawyers 
     or  groups  of laity as highly relevant to  their  legal  or 
     political  concerns.   For this reason, there is  almost  no 
     case  law on the Amendment.   [25] I suspect that few  among 
     even  the  highly sophisticated readers of the  Journal  can 
     summon up the Amendment without the aid of the text.
          The  Second Amendment, though, is  radically  different 
     from  these  other pieces of constitutional text  just  men-
     tioned,  which  all share the attribute of  being  basically 
     irrelevant to any ongoing political struggles.  To grasp the 
     difference, one might simply begin by noting that it is  not 
     at  all unusual for the Second Amendment to show up in  let-
     ters to the editors of newspapers and magazines.  [26]  That 
     judges  and academic lawyers, including the ones that  write 
     casebooks, ignore it is most certainly not evidence for  the 
     proposition  that no one else cares about it.  The  National 
     Rifle  Association, to name the most obvious example,  cares 
     deeply about the Amendment, and an apparently serious  Sena-
     tor of the United States averred that the right to keep  and 
     bear  arms  is  the “right most valued by  free  men.”  [27] 
     Campaigns  for Congress in both political parties, and  even 
     presidential campaigns, may turn on the apparent  commitment 
     of the candidates to a particular view of the Second  Amend-
     ment.   This reality of the political process  reflects  the 
     fact  that millions of Americans, even if (or perhaps  espe-
     cially  if) they are not academics, can quote the  Amendment 
     and  would  disdain any presentation of the Bill  of  Rights 
     that did not give it a place of pride.
          I cannot help but suspect that the best explanation for 
     the  absence  of the Second Amendment from  the  legal  con-
     sciousness of the elite bar, including that component  found 
     in  the  legal academy, [28] is derived from  a  mixture  of 
     sheer  opposition to the idea of private ownership  of  guns 
     and the perhaps subconscious fear that altogether plausible, 
     perhaps even “winning,” interpretations of the Second Amend-
     ment  would present real hurdles to those of  us  supporting 
     prohibitory regulation.   Thus the title of this essay –The 
     Embarrassing Second Amendment — for I want to suggest  that 
     the  Amendment  may be profoundly embarrassing to  many  who 
     both support such regulation and view themselves as  commit-
     ted to zealous adherence to the Bill of Rights (such as most 
     members of the ACLU).  Indeed, one sometimes discovers  mem-
     bers  of  the NRA who are equally committed members  of  the 
     ACLU,  differing  with the latter only on the issue  of  the 
     Second Amendment but otherwise genuinely sharing the  liber-
     tarian viewpoint of the ACLU.
          It  is not my style to offer “correct”  or  “incorrect” 
     interpretations of the Constitution.  [29] My major interest 
     is  in  delineating the rhetorical  structures  of  American 
     constitutional  argument and elaborating what  is  sometimes 
     called  the “politics of interpretation,” that is, the  fac-
     tors that explain why one or another approach will appeal to 
     certain analysts at certain times, while other analysts,  or 
     times,  will  favor  quite different  approaches.   Thus  my 
     general tendency to regard as wholly untenable any  approach 
     to  the  Constitution  that describes  itself  as  obviously 
     correct  and condemns its opposition as simply  wrong  holds 
     for  the Second Amendment as well.  In some  contexts,  this 
     would  lead me to label as tendentious the certainty of  NRA 
     advocates  that  the  Amendment means  precisely  what  they 
     assert  it  does.   In this  particular  context–i.e.,  the 
     pages of a journal whose audience is much more likely to  be 
     drawn  from an elite, liberal portion of the public–I  will 
     instead be suggesting that the skepticism should run in  the 
     other direction, That is, we might consider the  possibility 
     that “our” views of the Amendment, perhaps best reflected in 
     Professor Tribe’s offhand treatment of it, might  themselves 
     be equally deserving of the “tendentious” label.
          II.   The  Rhetorical Structures of the Right  to  Bear 
     Arms
          My colleague Philip Bobbitt has, in his book  Constitu-
     tional Fate, [30] spelled out six approaches — or  “modali-
     ties,”  as  he  terms them —  of  constitutional  argument.  
     These  approaches, he argues, comprise what might be  termed 
     our  legal  grammar.   They are  the  rhetorical  structures 
     within which “law-talk” as a recognizable form of  conversa-
tion is carried on. The six are as follows:
      1.  textual  argument — appeals to the unadorned  language 
          of the text; [31]
      2.  historical argument — appeals to the historical  back-
          ground  of  the vision being  considered,  whether  the 
          history  considered be general, such as background  but 
          clearly  crucial events (such as the  American  Revolu-
          tion).  or specific appeals to the so-called intentions 
          of framers; [32]
      3.  structural argument — analyses inferred from the  par-
          ticular  structures  established by  the  Constitution, 
          including  the  tripartite  division  of  the  national 
          government;  the separate existence of both  state  and 
          nation  as political entities; and the structured  role 
          of citizens within the political order; [33]
      4.  doctrinal  argument — emphasis on the implications  of 
          prior cases decided by the Supreme Court; [34]
      5.  prudential argument — emphasis on the consequences  of 
          adopting a proferred decision in any given case; [35]
      6.  ethical argument — reliance on the overall “ethos”  of 
          limited  government as centrally constituting  American 
          political culture.  [36]
          I  want to frame my consideration of the Second  Amend-
     ment within the first five of Bobbitt’s categories; they are 
     all  richly present in consideration of the Amendment  might 
     mean.   The  sixth, which emphasizes the  ethos  of  limited 
     government,  does not play a significant role in the  debate 
     of the Second Amendment.  [37]
A. Text
          I  begin  with the appeal to text.  Recall  the  Second 
     Amendment: “A well regulated Militia being necessary to  the 
     security  of a free State, the right of the people  to  keep 
     and  bear  Arms  shall not be infringed.” No  one  has  ever 
     described  the Constitution as a marvel of clarity, and  the 
     Second Amendment is perhaps one of the worst drafted of  all 
     its provisions.  What is special about the Amendment is  the 
     inclusion of an opening clause — a preamble, if you will — 
     that  seems  to set out its purpose.  No similar  clause  is 
     part  of any other Amendment, [38] though that does not,  of 
     course,  mean that we do not ascribe purposes to them.    It 
     would be impossible to make sense of the Constitution if  we 
     did  not engage in the ascription of purpose.   Indeed,  the 
     major debates about The First Amendment arise precisely when 
     one tries to discern a purpose, given that “literalism” is a 
     hopelessly failing approach to interpreting it.  We  usually 
     do  not  even  recognize punishment of fraud  —  a  classic 
     speech act — as a free speech problem because we so  sensi-
     bly assume that the purpose of the First Amendment could not 
     have  been, for example, to protect the circulation of  pat-
     ently  deceptive information to potential investors in  com-
     mercial enterprises.  The sharp differences that distinguish 
     those  who would limit the reach of the First  Amendment  to 
     “political”  speech  from  those who would  extend  it  much 
     further,  encompassing non-deceptive commercial speech,  are 
     all  derived  from different readings of  the  purpose  that 
     underlies the raw text.  [39]
          A  standard  move of those legal analysts who  wish  to 
     limit  the  Second  Amendment’s force is  to  focus  on  its 
     “preamble”  as  setting out a restrictive  purpose.   Recall 
     Laurence Tribe’s assertion that the purpose was to allow the 
     states  to keep their militias and to protect  them  against 
     the  possibility that the new national government  will  use 
     its  power to establish a powerful standing army  and  elim-
     inate  the state militias.  This purposive  reading  quickly 
     disposes  of any notion that there is an “individual”  right 
     to keep and bear arms.  The right, if such it be, is only  a 
     states’s right.  The consequence of this reading is obvious: 
     the  national government has the power to  regulate–to  the 
     point of prohibition–private ownership of guns, since  that 
     has,  by  stipulation, nothing to do with  preserving  state 
     militias.  This is, indeed, the position of the ACLU,  which 
     reads  the Amendment as protection only the right of  “main-
     taining  an  effective  state  militia…[T]he  individual’s 
     right  to keep a nd bear arms applies only to the  preserva-
     tion  or  efficiency of a  well-regulated  [state]  militia.   
     Except for lawful police and military purposes, the  posses-
     sion  of  weapons  by individuals  is  not  constitutionally 
     protected.” [40]
          This is not a wholly implausible reading, but one might 
     ask  why  the  Framers did not  simply  say  something  like 
     “Congress  shall have no power to  prohibit  state-organized 
     and  directed  militias.” Perhaps they in fact meant  to  do 
     something else.  Moreover, we might ask if ordinary  readers 
     of the late 18th Century legal prose would have  interpreted 
     it  as  meaning something else.  The text at  best  provides 
     only a starting point for a conversation.  In this  specific 
     instance, it does not come close to resolving the  questions 
     posed by federal regulation of arms.  Even if we accept  the 
     preamble  as  significant, we must still try to  figure  out 
     what  might be suggested by guaranteeing to “the people  the 
     right  to  keep and bear arms;” moreover, as  we  shall  see 
     presently,  even the preamble presents unexpected  difficul-
     ties in interpretation.   
B. History
          One  might argue (and some have) that  the  substantive 
     right  is  one  pertaining  to a  collective  body  —  “the 
     people”– rather than to individuals.  Professor Cress,  for 
     example,  argues that state constitutions regularly use  the 
     words “man” or “person” in regard to “individual rights such 
     as freedom of conscience,” whereas the use in those  constitutions  of  the term “the people” in regard to a  right  to 
     bear arms is intended to refer to the “sovereign  citizenry” 
     collectively  organized.   [41] Such an  argument  founders, 
     however, upon examination of the text of the federal Bill of 
     Rights  itself and the usage there of terms “the people”  in 
     the First, Fourth, Ninth, and Tenth Amendments.

 
        


