I've got quite the arsenal here, and love to shoot, but it's never been clear to me based on the militia wording. Does that make me a chowderhead for not seeing it that clearly?
Dan, Charon has explained it very well. I can't add much to what he said or what he quoted from Scalia's judgement.
As for your failure to see it as an individual right, I would have to assume. I assume you are a very intelligent guy from your body of posts here. Therefore, I must assume that you simply have not done your homework on this issue. The intent of the 2nd is clear as can be from the writings of the founders before and after the 2nd was written. The history of the 2nd is clear. It's there for any true scholar. So if you arrive at your conclusion because you have not seriously researched the 2nd (Scalia gives a fine history of the
right today; a good place to start and no point in me repeating stuff here) you would not be a chowderhead. If you have done the research and choose denial, well.. I guess I
would consider you a chowderhead
on this issue.
To be fair to myself, I believe I said the court libs were chowderheaded on the Kelo V New London eminent domain ruling in favor of the City of New London. Justice John Paul Stevens wrote the majority opinion; he was joined by Justices Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer. At nearly the same time I believe I said Scalia was a dead wrong chowderhead on using interstate commerce on the medical marijuana case. (Note of course that the libs were chowderheaded on that one too....).
I will point out, echoing Charon, that Constitutional support in today's dissenting opinions is sadly lacking; their primary recourse is to personal opinion. I think Scalia shames Breyer and Stevens in this area; he shows them for what they are, and they are definitely NOT judging on a Constitutional basis. But then they didn't judge on a Constitutional basis on eminent domain or medical marijuana either... sooooooo... they're tough to respect
because they dont' respect the Constitution.