How Does the Second Amendment Apply to US Today?

The Second Amendment has been one of the most hotly debated political topics of recent years. It 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.” The wording of this creates a lot of gray area for lawmakers today to decide gun control regulations. What constitutes a well regulated militia? Do the people have a right to keep and bear all types of arms or just some? Do people have to the right to bear arms everywhere they go?

With new records for mass shootings appearing in the United States every year now, the current gun laws in our country seem like they are not working the way they should. From Los Vegas to Orlando to Sandy Hook, more and more mass shootings are happening, but little has been done in response. The graph below shows just how much the number of mass shootings in the U.S. has skyrocketed in recent years.

Mass shootings in the US are on the rise. What makes American men so dangerous?

Many argue that if more gun control laws are passed, it will violate the second amendment. So the question then becomes, if not all Americans are given the right to keep and bear arms, does that violate the second amendment?

I would argue that just because not all individuals have the right to keep and bear arms, the second amendment is not being violated. I think of the first amendment and how not everyone has the right to absolute free speech. You cannot yell, “fire” in a crowded theatre for example. You cannot make public threats upon someone’s life. Children under the age of eighteen and convicted felons do not have the right to vote. These examples of restricting freedom of speech are widely accepted, but it seems completely illogical that there are more restrictions on what someone gets to say than if they can own a device that has the capacity to almost instantaneously kill other people.

Those convicted of previous violent crimes and those with severe mental disabilities could be stoped from purchasing legal firearms, but background checks preventing those individuals from purchasing ultra-dangerous weapons are still not required. Perhaps most startlingly, the vast majority of guns used in these mass shootings were obtained legally.

A Guide to Mass Shootings in America

Just because a five year-old, a person with Schizophrenia or severe depression, or someone convicted of an armed robbery is not allowed to purchase a gun does not mean that the Second Amendment is not being upheld as well as other aspects of the Constitution. Just because a normal citizen should not be allowed to openly cary a gun down into a preschool does not mean the Second Amendment is lost. If we as Americans want to end are mass shootings and horrific violence that appears every week on the news, lawmakers are going to need to make changes. Background checks on firearms purchases, restrictions on the number of firearms a person is allowed to own, and more limits on who is and who is not allowed to own a gun in our country need to happen. We have to bring our gun restriction laws up to where they need to be in 2018, not in 1791.

Mass shootings in the US are on the rise. What makes American men so dangerous?

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