Famed Law Professor, Defense Attorney Latest to Suggest Second Amendment Needs to Go
        Friday, July 31, 2015
    
 
The legal profession is full of blowhards, 
egomaniacs, hypocrites, and elitists, but even so, rarely are all those 
qualities present in a single individual to the same degree as in Alan 
Dershowitz. At age 28, Dershowitz became the youngest full professor of 
law in history with his appointment at Harvard. And, yes, it went to his
 head. He has written that he “does not hide behind the distorting 
shield of false humility” and has even suggested things might have gone 
differently for Jesus if he had been there to represent him.
 When not busy indoctrinating impressionable law students in his own 
particular brand of politics, Prof. Dershowitz has advocated on behalf 
of various celebrity clients, including in highly-publicized cases 
involving allegations of murderous domestic violence. 
Despite his reputation in some circles as a civil rights 
champion, Dershowitz is no fan of the Second Amendment. He has advocated
 for a variety of gun controls, including banning all semi-automatic 
firearms. As he said on the (since cancelled)
 Piers Morgan show, “If I could ban 100 percent of guns without 
violating the Constitution, I would do that ….” In the same appearance, 
he called the idea that guns have a role in protecting liberty “a myth.”
 Nevertheless, at least at one point,
 he was willing to go on record as admitting the Second Amendment 
protects an “individual right to ownership of guns,” although subject to
 regulation.  
Nevertheless, Dershowitz (who admitted in 2003 that he's never held a pistol) on Monday claimed America’s “experiment” with private ownership of firearms “has failed miserably.” During an appearance on Newsmax TV,
 he went on to say, “If I could write the Bill of Rights over again, I 
would skip amendment number two. We’re the only country in the world 
that puts in our Constitution the right to bear arms.”   
Even though Dershowitz is famed for his expansive readings
 of other provisions of the Bill of Rights, he would have no problem 
regulating the Second Amendment into oblivion.  “What
 is needed,” he said, “is some very tough legislation on both the 
federal and state level to make it much, much harder to get guns and to 
create a presumption against gun ownership instead of a presumption in 
favor of gun ownership ….”
Although perhaps the most obnoxious, Dershowitz is by no 
means the first legal prima donna to suggest rewriting the Bill of 
Rights to eliminate the Second Amendment. Supreme Court Justice Ruth 
Bader Ginsburg has publicly suggested that a “future, wiser court” could
 revisit the landmark Heller decision, which recognized a private right 
to arms under the Second Amendment. Later, in a televised appearance 
from Cairo, Egypt, Justice Ginsburg remarked that she “would not look to the U.S. Constitution, if I were drafting a constitution in the year 2012.” 
More recently, another dissenter from the Heller case, former U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, wrote an entire book
 about how he would refashion the U.S. Constitution to his liking. Among
 his suggestions is limiting “the right of the people to keep and bear 
Arms” in the Second Amendment with the phrase, “when serving in the 
militia.” 
While we at the NRA don’t think much of their 
constitutional scholarship, we can at least credit these influential 
legal thinkers for their candor and for illustrating the true 
philosophical underpinnings of the gun control movement. No matter how 
else they may couch their rhetoric – most recently as “gun safety” 
proponents, gun control advocates simply hate guns and do not trust the 
American people to have them.  It
 should surprise no one that the legal elites among them are perfectly 
willing to repeal or judicially nullify the Second Amendment entirely.  
The next U.S. president could appoint perhaps three or 
even four Supreme Court justices to a bench where the Heller and 
McDonald decisions currently survive by one vote. The importance of who 
makes those appointments should not be lost on those who value the right
 to keep and bear arms. Whatever else can be said of his tendency 
towards incessant bloviation, that’s one lesson from Prof. Dershowitz we
 all should heed.

 
 








 
    
   
