The Insanity and Incoherence of the Bruen Test for Second Amendment Cases
Reasonable people can disagree over whether the Constitution as a whole protects an individual right to own guns apart from militia service. Although the Supreme Court has misread text and distorted history to locate that right in the Second Amendment, which only applies to militia service, such a right could be created by reasonable judicial interpretations of the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments. After all, the Court has recognized an array of fundamental unenumerated rights, such as the right of competent adults to refuse medical treatment, and Americans have prized their guns for centuries in ways that might suggest judicial protection for such a right. Reasonable people can also disagree in many cases involving gun laws over whether the right is burdened in ways that are not justified by the reasons supporting the law. The virtually complete ban on handguns in District of Columbia v. Heller , for example, might be such a law. But the Supreme Court’s decision in New York State ...