Skip to main content

The Supreme Court Cannot Rewrite the Bill of Rights to Please Knee Jerk Idealists.


Let’s be absolutely clear: the Supreme Court does not have the authority to update, reinvent, or distort the Constitution to fit modern political fads. The Bill of Rights is not a set of vague suggestions or outdated guidelines—it is a line in the sand that government may not cross. It exists to restrain the state, not to accommodate it. And no matter how much the media, politicians, or judges wring their hands, the meaning of our rights does not change with the times.

Take the Second Amendment. Critics scream that we no longer “need” guns because we have police departments and standing armies. They insist that modern firearms are too deadly, too advanced, too dangerous. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: there has not been a significant leap in small arms lethality in over a century. The Gatling gun appeared in 1862. The Maxim gun—fully automatic—was invented in 1884. By the time your great-grandfather was born, weapons capable of mass fire already existed.

The Founding Fathers weren’t idiots. They anticipated technological evolution. And yet, they didn’t say, “the right of the people to keep and bear inferior, underpowered, or non-lethal arms shall not be infringed.” They didn’t limit the right to squirrel rifles or black powder pistols. They said arms—because they understood that freedom means being able to resist tyranny with effective tools. What good is a right if you’re only allowed weapons that are useless in the face of government power?

The Supreme Court’s job is not to “balance” our freedoms against modern public concerns. It is not to weigh the Bill of Rights like a suggestion box. Its job is to interpret the Constitution as it was written and intended. If the American people want to change it, they can. Only they can. The Constitution includes a clear, lawful method to amend itself: a two-thirds vote of Congress and ratification by three-fourths of the states. That is how Americans can rewrite the rules—not through judicial activism cloaked in robes and rhetoric.

The Bill of Rights is sacred. It belongs to the people—not to the courts, not to Congress, and not to the President. Any attempt to rewrite it from the bench is not law—it is theft. Let the courts take warning: the American people will not tolerate their rights being diluted, reinterpreted, or ignored. These rights are not negotiable. They are not subject to trend. They are ours. And if anyone—judge, politician, or bureaucrat—tries to gut them, the Constitution has an answer: Amend it, or leave it alone.


Comments

Anonymous said…
People still seem to believe that constitutional rights are subject to majority approval and the court has already ruled that this is not so. Is am not worried.

Popular posts from this blog

A 40 Caliber Nightmare Is Caught On Tape.

So you’re confident that that .40 caliber S&W service round will keep you safe. Maybe you’ll have second thoughts after you see this video. One hot summer night in 1994 Tempe and Mesa Arizona police were involved in a pursuit with this suspect who ran into a stranger’s apartment to hide after being shot TWICE in the chest. He was shirtless and you can see the blood pumping out of those two wounds. What’s really frightening is just how agile this fellow is as he struts to the ambulance. If he was not handcuffed and had a knife or a gun, ask yourself if he could still hurt you, your partner or a hostage? If your jurisdiction demands that officers carry either the 9MM or the .40 Caliber S&W it’s time to show this video to your bosses and lobby to have the .45 ACP round authorized. The switch may well reduce the screaming by self-appointed community activists about how many rounds police had to use on a suspect. The really talented and courageous video journalist, Karen Ke...

The origin of the feature film, COME FRIDAY…

CLick On the pictures to see full size versions. Long ago there was a young lady I had the hots for in a big way (Yes, I know that hots is not a word). She was pretty, incredibly bright, and had some real elegance about her. She had a love for children and basic kindness that you don’t often see in someone her age. I met her parents and could understand she came from a much more stable home than mine. I was raised by a single, welfare mom and suddenly found myself way out-classed. For whatever reasons things did not workout they way I had hoped. Sadly for me, we went on our separate ways. From time to time I’d run into this lady in various places where our job had taken us. Whenever this happened my heart would skip a beat or two. I left my hometown Chicago, and moved to Arizona where I founded my detective agency. As a private eye and soon a TV news producer too, my career took me to the highest profile criminal events in Arizona and throughout the country. There’s no question that ...

America Will See Its Worst Race Riot Yet This Summer

Star Prosecution Witness, Rachel Jeantel Sanford, FL —Yes, the George Zimmerman trial here has thousands of African-Americans getting ready for some serious bloodletting. I don’t want to make idle and dire predictions but this nation has never been so divided and racially sensitive.  Our African-American President took sides on this case at the very beginning.  That ratified a George Zimmerman guilty verdict in the minds of millions. There’s just one little problem, and that is the murder case should have never been filed.  It was filed purely for political reasons despite the fact that it was a simple justifiable homicide.  Zimmerman was on the block watch lookout program and followed a suspicious Trayvon Martin after he used an improper entrance to a gated community.  Zimmerman was acting as the eyes and ears of the Sanford Police Department. Martin did not like being followed and knew that he could easily beat up the out-of-shape...