[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 17 (Tuesday, February 5, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H348-H349]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SECOND AMENDMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, the Constitution of the United States of
America was written to put in statute the limits of government's
authority over citizens. It does not bestow rights or permit freedoms
upon American people; rather, it delimits what government of the
people, by the people, and for the people can and cannot do.
Since well before our country's founding, Americans have exercised
the right to keep and bear arms, a right formally protected by the
ratification of the Second Amendment in
[[Page H349]]
1791. As a lifelong defender of Second Amendment freedoms, I am
committed to ensuring that any new proposals considered in Washington
do not infringe upon the constitutionally guaranteed rights of law-
abiding citizens.
In the wake of devastating tragedies, well-meaning people feel
compelled to do something, and the government, likewise, to intercede.
But good intentions don't often make good or constitutional laws, and
they certainly are no match for those set on being lawless.
The Second Amendment reads:
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of
a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms
shall not be infringed.
If the text alone were not explicit, our Founding Fathers clarified
the purpose of the Second Amendment. James Madison wrote, in Federalist
No. 46, that Americans possess:
the advantage of being armed over the people of almost every
other nation whose governments are afraid to trust the people
with arms.
Even more applicable to our current situation is this excerpt
referenced by Thomas Jefferson, which reads:
Laws that forbid the carrying of arms disarm only those who
are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes. Such
laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the
assailants.
The rush to action in the wake of tragedies sadly heaps the price of
criminal wrongdoing onto law-abiding, responsible gun owners. When such
is the case, government flirts with construing the desire to exercise
Second Amendment rights as suspect behavior, it deems some Second
Amendment utilities superior to others, and it ignores the root causes
of mass violence, focusing instead on the means by which violence is
accomplished. Those mistakes must never be made. Federal proposals must
be well-thought, data-driven, and constitutionally sound.
The right to keep and bear arms is not one for hunters and sportsmen
alone. For centuries, it has been a right for every American citizen to
arm themselves to defend their property and the people they hold dear.
And it is a right that cannot be infringed.
____________________