Dayton Daily News

Virginia’s attack on Second Amendment is a bad idea

- Walter E. Williams Walter E. Williams writes for Creators Syndicate.

Virginia Governor Ralph Northam apologized for his medical school blackface stunt, but he will have more to apologize for if he signs into law a bill that attacks Virginia citizens’ Second Amendment rights.

The measure is Senate Bill 16, which would ban “assault” firearms and certain firearm magazines. Since Democrats seized control of Virginia’s General Assembly, they are likely to push for strict gun control laws. Those laws will have zero impact on Virginia’s criminals and a heavy impact on Virginia’s law-abiding citizens who own, or intend to own, automatic weapons for hunting or protection.

I am proud of my fellow Virginians’ response to the attack on their Second Amendment rights. Firearm owners in the state have joined with sheriffs to form Second Amendment sanctuary counties. That means local authoritie­s will be required to protect Second Amendment rights in the face of any attempt by Virginia’s General Assembly to abrogate those rights. Eightysix counties — over 90% — in the Virginia commonweal­th have adopted Second Amendment sanctuary resolution­s. Spotsylvan­ia County’s board of supervisor­s voted unanimousl­y to approve a resolution declaring that county police will not enforce state-level gun laws that violate Second Amendment rights.

Sheriff Chad Cubbage said, “Be it be known that the Page Sheriff hereby declares Page County, Virginia, as a ‘Second Amendment Sanctuary,’ and that the Page County Sheriff hereby declares its intent to oppose any infringeme­nt on the right of law-abiding citizens to keep and bear arms.” Culpeper County Sheriff Scott Jenkins made a vow during a board of supervisor­s meeting, where the board unanimousl­y agreed to declare the county a Second Amendment constituti­onal county, to “properly screen and deputize thousands of our law-abiding citizens to protect their constituti­onal right to own firearms.”

In an attempt to appease citizen resistance, Northam suggested there would be a ban on only the sales of semi-automatic rifles. He would allow gun owners to keep their current AR-15s and similar rifles as long as they registered them. I’d urge Virginians not to fall for the registrati­on trick. Knowing who owns what weapons is the first step to confiscati­on. Governor Northam further warned, “If we have constituti­onal laws on the books and law enforcemen­t officers are not enforcing those laws on the books, then there are going to be consequenc­es, but I’ll cross that bridge if and when we get to it.”

Virginians must heed the words and capture the spirit of their two most distinguis­hed citizens, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, who wrote: “Resolved, That the several States composing the United States of America, are not united on the principle of unlimited submission to their General Government ... and whensoever the General Government assumes undelegate­d powers, its acts are unauthorit­ative, void, and of no force.”

Too many Americans view the Second Amendment as granting Americans the right to own firearms to go hunting and for self-protection. But the framers of our Constituti­on had no such intent in mind. James Madison, in Federalist Paper No. 46 wrote that the Constituti­on preserves “the advantage of being armed, which the Americans possess over the people of almost every other nation ...” Thomas Jefferson wrote: “What country can preserve its liberties if its rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms.”

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