A well regulated militia . . .

John Karl Fredrich
Militia Man Massachusetts 1775

This excerpt from the Postscript of the Second Edition of my book, Delusion and Abandonment, is pertinent to the issue of the place of firearms in American society and rights of the citizens as guaranteed in the 2nd Amendment to the Constitution:

The nation cries out for remedy to the plight of about 100 fatal gun deaths a day and many mass shootings over the years, and still they (the Congress) refuse to act. The Second Amendment is quite clear about the matter of ‘a well regulated militia’, and Congress could artfully pass a Well Regulated Militia Gun Registration Act to obliterate the ill-conceived notion of unregulated firearms, to require that war weaponry and assault weapons be stored in public armories, and to create a data base and survey for all guns and owners in the United States for the simple purpose of public safety and national defense. They could require not just the inventory of all weapons in private possession but whether the owner is willing to serve in the militia. Even a world-class sophist such as Antonin Scalia, the champion of a very suspect concept of originalism about the intent of the writers of the Constitution, would be hard-pressed to delineate how this exceeds the charge of Congress to act in behalf of the general Welfare and to insure domestic Tranquility.

100 Years and Counting

Simple enough — The text of the 28th Amendment !

Women in the United States won the right to vote 100 years ago when the 19th Amendment was ratified on August 18, 1920; but challenges to removing the vestiges of second class citizenship remain. Although the 14th Amendment went a long way in trying to eradicate the denial of ‘the equal protection of the laws’, ever since it was ratified in1868 there has been a struggle to fulfill its promise. When the 15th Amendment was ratified less than two years later it inserted gender into the document for the first time, and, as Eric Foner has noted, Elizabeth Cady Stanton warned, “If that word ‘male’ be inserted, it will take us a century at least to get it out.”

That century is more than over, and the time is now long overdue for women no longer to be subjugated to any remnants of their chattel status. With the passage of a 28th Amendment to the Constitution guaranteeing gender equality, the state legislatures and the courts will not be able to apply their tortured reasoning to the issues of comparable pay, reproductive rights and other traditional and historical patterns of patriarchal abuse and denial of rights. This will not only help women, but will improve the status of children and men, increased dignity and integrity being only a few of the beneficial side effects of this action.

I believe that this change is supported by a large majority of Americans. Simple justice requires that it be done now.

Hiroshima . . . 75 Years Ago

The Atomic Bomb was born during World War II, first tested in July, 1945, and then dropped on two Japanese cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 & 9, quickly leading to the end of the war.

Nuclear weapons are preeminently genocidal by intent and design and are primarily weapons of terror as their use in war has been avoided since then. Their seductive power was once again revealed when President Barack Obama authorized the next generation of nuclear weapons before leaving office after pledging in Prague in 2013 to rid us of them. The logic of their deterrent power comes from the happy fact that they haven’t been used since 1945, but the nations who believe that they are acceptable and necessary have large storehouses of them and do not want “to take them off the table” when conflicts develop. These atomic arsenals represent a tremendous investment in what could otherwise go to humane use of our resources. They are the ultimate example of the immorality of war and should be condemned and rejected because of that.

I believe that as the only country to use these weapons against other people we have an obligation as a country to lead on this issue. Our position should be one of unilateral, incremental disarmament and rejection of first use. We should lead by signing all the international protocols for non-proliferation and any money spent on them should be for their reduction and elimination. That is the perfect place to begin the United States’s 25 % cut in military spending, monies that are much better directed to the real social and economic needs of our nation and world.

Ota River, Hiroshima after the blast.

Further information on the impact of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings can be found  here.

A video of the events surrounding the bombing and a discussion with William Perry as to whether any one person should be given the power to deploy these weapons can be found here.

90 days to go

By this time in three months it should be more obvious to most Americans what kind of a county they live in and in what direction their country is headed.

Last week in the funeral services for John R. Lewis, one of the true heroes of the fight for human rights for all in the United States, the charge to all who were listening was to answer the call to move forward in creating a society that actually lives up to its word and promise. The response from the Electoral College winner of the 2016 election was a resounding doubt as to whether the country can even hold an election on November 3rd. Never mind that Donald Trump has sworn an oath that entrusts him with the responsibility to see to it that just such an event occurs, and that he should be working mightily in behalf of all for that to come off without a hitch, his trial balloon was a bald admission of the fact that he is not qualified to hold the position, not now and not in 2021. It is unlikely that someone who cannot even manage the United States Postal Service is able to discharge the other more taxing responsibilities of office; we do know, however, that the vote will take place and that it is the duty of the states to count and report honestly and accurately the results. It’s our duty to register and to vote by one of the various methods the law allows. Not to do so would be distinctly unpatriotic.

Moreover, moving beyond patriotism and this year’s vote, now is the time to respond to former President Barack Obama’s clarion cry to advance the cause of democracy through the restoration of the Voting Rights Act, renewed by both Presidents Bush, and  blatantly subverted in the 5-4 Supreme Court decision of Shelby County v. Holder in 2013. With these rights reinsured, the importance of the principle of one person/one vote can be further actualized by passage of the 29th Amendment to the Constitution — the elimination of the Electoral College and the direct election of the President of the United States by a majority of its voters. Improved Democracy should be our goal and the President should be elected by a majority.