In 2021 and 2022, as the lights went off all over Europe—and Australia, and Canada—via lockdowns and vaccine passports and the forced control of the movements, commerce, and education of formerly free people—the last thing that was keeping us in America free was, yes, the Second Amendment.
I can’t believe I wrote those words. But I stand by them.
I am a child of the peace movement. A daughter of the Left, of a dashingly bearded proto-beatnik poet (my late dad) and of a Summer of Love activist/cultural anthropologist (my lovely mom). We are a lineage of anti-war, longhaired folks who believe in talking things out.
By the time I was growing up in California in the 1960s and 1970s, weapons were supposed to have become passé. When I played at friends’ houses in our neighborhood in San Francisco, there were posters on the walls: “War is not healthy for children and other living things.” Protesters had iconically placed daisies in the rifle barrels of unhip-looking National Guardsmen.
We were obviously supposed to side with the daisies.
Weapons were archaic, benighted—tacky. A general peace was surely to prevail, in the dawning Age of Aquarius.
My young adulthood, too, unfolded in a context that reviled all guns all the time. The media was seared with images of gun mayhem. Drive-by shootings devastated inner cities. Gun violence was glorified in hip-hop videos, which, in turn, was rightly denounced by leaders of victimized communities.
As I grew older, the catastrophes related to lawless gun violence in this country did not abate: Columbine, Virginia Tech, Sandy Hook—the horrors were endless. After every burst of violence, the same question was asked: How can we allow anyone access to any weapons such as these when they cause such devastation?
Because there were mass shootings and criminal gun violence in America, and because Americans, unlike citizens of other nations, owned and had access to firearms, guns themselves were identified, uncritically, in my progressive circles (or perhaps I should say, in my former progressive circles) as being the scourge. My liberal community generally reacted to gun violence with a simple, literal arithmetic. Surely the sensible reaction to these catastrophic scenes was simply to remove the guns. End of problem.
The catastrophic scenes of gun violence were connected, in my former circles, directly to all gun owners, but without much equivocation or nuance. And since none of us knew people who owned firearms, or had ever asked such people why they did so, it was easy to believe in broad generalizations and crude, even racist stereotypes: All gun owners or National Rifle Association members, for instance, we were sure, were unexploded emotional landmines—any one of them could become a mass murderer in a heartbeat. All gun owners or NRA members were surely, we believed, one cheap beer or one fentanyl hit away from spraying a church or workplace or parade with bullets.
It was hard for us to conceive that anyone might own guns and be law-abiding, responsible, and peaceful.
My former progressive circles even saw hunting not as a symbol of conservatorship of the land nor a means of sustainable food sourcing, and a relatively humane one compared with the harvesting of animals in factory farms, but as a sign of the bloodlust of backwoods yokels straight out of Deliverance.
We assumed all gun owners were driven by fear or by rage.
It certainly did not occur to us that anyone might enjoy marksmanship, or like being a collector, and that thus there might be good reasons to own more than one firearm.
We always interpreted the ownership of multiple weapons as a sign of mental instability. Obviously! Who would need more than one gun, we asked one another, even if we conceded that anyone needed a gun at all?
Living in safe (wealthy) neighborhoods, assuming that a stable democracy would last forever, and relying, with our costly educations, on talking above all, we could not fathom the “need” for guns or for gun rights.
We used to roll our eyes at the claims made by supporters of the Second Amendment. In my former circles, “2A” was often interpreted, even by constitutional scholars and certainly by the news outlets that we read, as applying only to government-run militias such as the US Army or the National Guard. I was told more times than I could count that the Second Amendment was never meant to apply to individuals’ ownership of guns; and I believed that.
Grammar, too, was used to make the case against individual gun ownership. Often, commentators in our circles described the phrasing of the Second Amendment as being so twisted and archaic that no one today could ever truly confirm the Founders’ intentions regarding gun ownership by individuals.
Indeed, I heard these truisms so often, that when I sat down and read the Second Amendment carefully—as I was writing The End of America—I was startled: because the Second Amendment wasn’t unclear at all.
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.1
Critics of individual gun rights on the Left often described this sentence as being opaque because it has two clauses, and two commas prior to the final clause, so they read the first two sections as relating unclearly to the last assertion.
But if you are familiar with late-eighteenth-century rhetoric and sentence construction, the meaning of this sentence is transparent.
The construction of this sentence is typical of late-eighteenth into early-nineteenth-century English grammar, in which there can be quite a few dependent clauses, gerunds, and commas that come before the verb, and the object of, the sentence.
Thus, the correct way to read the Second Amendment, if you understand eighteenth-century English grammar, is:
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.
Or, translated into modern English construction: “Because a well-regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free State, therefore the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”
Here is another example of many dependent clauses, commas, and gerunds prior to the verb and object of the sentence, from the second paragraph of Thomas Paine’s pamphlet Common Sense (1776):
As a long and violent abuse of power is generally the means of calling the right of it in question, (and in matters too which might never have been thought of, had not the sufferers been aggravated into the inquiry,) and as the King of England hath undertaken in his own right, to support the Parliament in what he calls Theirs, and as the good People of this Country are grievously oppressed by the Combination, they have an undoubted privilege to enquire into the Pretensions of both, and equally to reject the Usurpation of either.2
This would translate into modern English: “The good people of this Country are grievously oppressed by the combination of a long and violent abuse of power and of the King of England’s support of Parliament in what he calls his rights and theirs. Thus, the [good people of this country] have an undoubted privilege to enquire into [ask about] the Pretension [claims] of both [King and Parliament], and by the same token to reject the Usurpation [of rights] of either.” The logic of the sentence, with its multiple clauses, gerunds, and commas before the final verb and object of the sentence, is perfectly clear to anyone who is familiar with eighteenth-century rhetoric.
Here is the famous first sentence of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, with the similar construction—common still in 1813, though uncommon today—of two commas and two clauses prior to the verb and object of the sentence: “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.”3
So: there is no ambiguity whatsoever about the Second Amendment to readers of Paine and Austen. The Second Amendment says with zero ambiguity, in the English grammar of 1791, that Americans have an absolute right (“shall not be infringed”) to keep (“own”) and bear (“carry”) arms because they as individuals may be summoned to become a “well-regulated militia.” In the grammar of the eighteenth century, it’s the militia that is “well-regulated”—orderly, with a clear chain of command, not a chaotic mob—and not the guns.
Why do I raise all of this?
In part because I have evolved my view about firearms, and I understand that doing so is in fact in alignment with the Constitution. And the thing about really supporting the Constitution is that you do not get to pick and choose. I can’t choose my favorite amendment, the easy one, the First Amendment, and then shy away from the glass-clear directive of the Second Amendment, simply as a result of my own cultural discomfort. You have to stand up for it all, if you are to call yourself a supporter of the Constitution.
In part I am addressing this difficult, tender topic because I now know people who “keep and bear arms.” And they do not match the stereotypes I had long taken for granted.
I met my husband, as many know, because I was receiving death threats and I needed protection. He was highly trained in the use of firearms via eleven years in active-duty service with the US Army—in military intelligence, seven years of which he spent assigned to two Special Forces groups—and another ten years working in various defense and intelligence roles as a contractor. The fact is, I was relieved to have someone who could physically protect me during a time that felt dangerous to me. I’d be a hypocrite if I pretended that that was not the case.
Reader, I married him.
I have recently become a firearm owner myself.
Nonetheless, my old resistances died hard.
For years, I remained jumpy knowing he had weapons in our home. People from my cultural background are taught to think of firearms as being innately incredibly dangerous; as being always loaded, always half an inch away from causing a fatal accident indoors. I had no idea, until Brian showed me, of how safely one can responsibly store a weapon; or of the many layers of prevention, from storing ammunition separately, to the safety mechanism on the firearm itself, that should keep accidents from happening in conscientious homes. I also did not know, until I met responsible gun owners, that they do not in fact want mentally ill or unstable people to have access to arsenals at will; most support reasonable restrictions such as required safety classes and background checks.
Nonetheless, for years, I had intense anxiety when Brian would keep his Glock in the glove compartment of his vehicle, or when he had his weapon on his person. When we arrived at our country home late at night after being away, if something seemed “off”—a light on, or a screen door open, for example—he would check the perimeter of the property to make sure all was safe, armed with a flashlight, and with his gun ready to be drawn. I would lock myself in the car and look away, heart racing. But I was . . . glad that it would be safe.
And then . . . there was the day a relative took us shooting, and I was carefully taught to fire a pistol against a deserted hillside in the Pacific Northwest. It terrified me, and I vowed never to do it again.
And then . . . there was the day, a bit later, that the same relative took me back to the hillside, and carefully taught me to fire a Galil ACE assault rifle. I leaned into it as instructed, and I shot the target and hit it; and I felt that the weapon was not a chaotic animal that could turn on me or another, creating havoc, but rather that it was an instrument of power that I could control and use with direction and will.
And then . . . there was the night Brian had to be away from home, and he showed me how to shoot his 12-gauge Mossberg shotgun that he kept in a safe. I was scared—but then I was not scared. I prepared to go to sleep with it within arm’s reach, in a safe place in the bedroom.
I thought of the many nights when I had been a single mother in that house, when any sound outside, especially sounds of footsteps—animal footsteps often sound human—would turn me rigid from fear in my bed, wondering what to do. Back then I’d have been nearly helpless if an intruder, armed or unarmed, had, God forbid, tried to come in and harm my family.
But that night, after I’d gotten used to the shotgun being in my bedroom, I fell asleep; and then I slept the sweetest sleep I’d ever slept out of all the nights I’d spent alone, or with small children to protect, in that house.
When I awoke, I thought: Could it have been this easy the whole time? And then I thought: I was irresponsible, as a single mother, not to have been trained and not to have been armed.
And then . . . there was the day when I went to a gun shop with Brian, because we were possibly about to lose our national sovereignty, and he wanted to make sure I could protect myself, God forbid, if needed. In the gun shop, a smart, pleasant, woman in her late twenties, named Nadine, showed me what she recommended for me—a handgun that would fit nicely in a woman’s hand and that would not have too much of a kick. She showed me the size of the bullets that would stop an intruder. And she showed me a holster, designed by a woman, with soft edges that fit around one’s hips and tucked into the waistband of one’s jeans. If your blouse is a bit loose, no one knows you are carrying a weapon.
She demonstrated, hitching the holster around her own hips and tucking the handgun under the waistband of her jeans. Her light cotton summer blouse did indeed conceal it.
She looked like any slight young woman who was ready to go out to a concert or a club. But she was secretly armed, and therefore protected.
I thought of all the young women I knew who were harmed—badly—at concerts, at clubs, in alleyways. I thought about what would happen to rapists and abusers if young women—if women in general—were armed or even if many were reputed to be armed. And I thought of my decades of struggling with the issue of female victimization: the existential vulnerability of women who are always in danger from anyone bigger and stronger who wished to injure or exploit them.
And I thought: Could it always have been this easy?
Could women resist and deter victimization—by simply owning, and knowing how to use, firearms?
Obviously.
How had this issue escaped me so long, as a rape survivor myself, and as a feminist? The rape survivor in me longed, on an animal level, for a weapon. Longed, on an animal level, to deter any future attacker. The rape survivor in me wanted a weapon the way an injured creature wants teeth and claws.
I did not buy the handgun, as I needed first to take a safety class and procure a permit and four references. But I did buy a .22 Rossi Rimfire rifle.
Brian assembled it. When I came downstairs in the morning, he had attached a bipod and had positioned it above my computer on my writing desk (with a safety lock and no ammunition nearby, of course). An assortment of dried flowers in a vase, and the stacks of books from my research, surrounded it.
I started laughing at the contrast: the elegant diagonal line of the sleek black weapon, stabilized and ready to be placed into defensive use, standing guard over my computer.
It was nonetheless a powerful symbol—as powerful as had been the image of the holster tucked low around the hips of the no-longer- vulnerable young woman.
I thought not only of rape survivors. I thought, too, when I saw the rifle on my desk, of writers, of journalists, of critics of the State, of dissidents. I thought of reporters around the world hauled off to prison by the minions of tyrants. I thought of our own recently created Ministry of Truth, and of the armed men who might make note of what was emerging from the computers of American writers.
What would happen to tyrants—to threats of violence and arrests for free speech—if writers, too, were defensively trained and armed? What if words themselves had a defense against violent tyranny, one that was always ready for action?
The writers of our nation’s birth—they were armed. The writers who forged our country’s founding documents were armed because they were writers. In Britain, when our nation was born, the crime of “seditious libel” punished criticism of the government.
Sedition was defined broadly: “The common law of seditious libel prohibits all writings and other utterances which tend to bring about hatred or contempt for the king, the Government or the constitution as by law established. Sedition consists of any act done or word spoken or written and published which has a seditious tendency, and done or spoken or written and published with a seditious intent.”4
As historian Clare Feikert-Ahalt described in a Library of Congress blog post: “The punishments for this offense were rather steep—up to life imprisonment and/or a fine. . . . The earlier punishments were significantly more severe in which perpetrators would have their ears cut off for a first offense and recidivism was punishable by death.”5
King George III issued a Royal Proclamation in which the authorities were charged with seeking out the authors and printers of “wicked and seditious writings” and reporting to government on radical activities.6 Thomas Paine and his book Rights of Man were targeted.7
To the ruling class Paine’s proposals spelled “bloody revolution,” and the government ordered the book banned and the publisher jailed. . . . Paine was tried in absentia, found guilty of seditious libel, and declared an outlaw, and Rights of Man was ordered permanently suppressed.8
I am also reexamining my reflexes about the Second Amendment because I believe that we are at a moment that our Founders, in their nearly prophetic wisdom, knew might come to pass. We are at the kind of moment for which the Second Amendment may have been written in just the clear, unequivocal way that it was.
Tyranny is descending all around the formerly free nations of the world. I say these days that the coup in America has already taken place—a stealthy, sneaky coup, mounted without a shot being fired.
In February 2022, President Biden extended emergency powers due to COVID.9 A few months later, in May of 2023, he extended them due to the situation in Iraq.10
In June 2023, he extended emergency powers again—due to the Balkans—and I didn’t see this massive news covered anywhere.11
At which point we must ask, since it is almost comical: who writes his material?
Many states around the country, such as New York State, where I live, existed under continually renewed emergency laws. Governor Andrew Cuomo declared a COVID state of emergency in March of 2020 and did not end it till June of 2021.12 But that was not the end of emergency powers! Cuomo declared a state of emergency on July 6, 2021, due to “gun violence.”13 The next New York governor, Kathy Hochul, extended the emergency law month after month. On May 16, 2023, she extended it again—due to “gun violence.”14 On August 13, 2023, she extended it again.15 Due to gun violence.
Even when there was no “disaster emergency,” of this or any other kind, in New York.
Emergency orders strip citizens of our usual protections provided by legislative actions and leave us vulnerable to future depredations: the return of lockdowns, of forcible quarantines such as we saw in Shanghai, of confiscations of our property, of mandated masks and injections, and of indeed far worse. That is the nature of emergency laws in history. They are almost never given up willingly. They eventually, almost always, lead to the imprisonment or terrorization of the now-subject people.
The democratic protections of the so-called free nations of the world—Canada, the Republic of Ireland, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand—were shut down with the ease of someone switching off a light, and with almost no resistance from citizens. Yes, there have been protests, and there were petitions and innumerable complaints online, and a few brave legislators spoke up, if only to echoing chambers.
But the fact remains that when the unidentifiable police or mercenary forces, as in Canada, are violent, and the protesters have nothing but the moral high ground with which to deter their violence, then even the bravest of resistances is fleeting.
In Australia, citizens were arrested when they sought to escape forcible quarantine. Police in Melbourne, in 2021, shot citizens who were protesting against Draconian lockdowns, with rubber bullets.16 This happened to this formerly robust democracy, so easily. Australians yielded 650,000 privately owned guns in a mandatory gun buyback program in 1996 and 1997.17 Australians are weaker now in deterring violence against them by the State. New Zealanders handed in more than 50,000 weapons in their own country’s gun buyback program in 2019—right before the global pandemic.18 New Zealanders were attacked with sound canons during the pandemic years and suffered one of the worst of the lockdowns.
The unarmed people of China had nothing with which to deter the way their own State leaders dealt with the COVID pandemic. From 2020 onward, in the name of public health, authorities welded shut the doors of Chinese citizens suspected of having infections.19 Leaders used mass incarceration—“a strict lockdown”—against the inhabitants of Shanghai.20 Neither can the unarmed citizens of China deter the transportation of ethnic minorities into detention camps, or organ harvesting, or forced abortions. About half a million Shanghai residents who “tested positive” for COVID were sent to quarantine camps.21
You can hate guns. I have hated guns most of my life. I hate violence. I hate gun violence. I hate the slaughter of innocents. I am a peaceful person.
But it is becoming obvious, even to us pacifists, vegans, and tree huggers, that formerly free people who are unarmed are defenseless against the criminal tyrannies exerting massive violence and control upon them.
And it is becoming obvious that similar tyrannical moves against the people of the United States have been thwarted in advance or deterred—and only state by state—pretty much only because the people of the United States have the right to own and carry weapons, and because many do so.
This question of who has access to firearms became more serious as the war against the US and the free world ramped up. In May 2022, the mostly Bill Gates– and CCP-funded World Health Organization planned to try to drain sovereignty from sovereign nations, in the name of Global Health and the prospect of future pandemics.
This power grab was delayed. It is not off the table. The demand for a Global WHO accord returns every six months. It returned to the US when the WEF pushed the treaty in 2023. The WHO anticipates its ratification by 2024.22
Who then will be the armed men at your door? They can easily be private mercenaries, sent by WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus; mercenaries sent to lock you in your home or take you to a quarantine camp against your will, under the guise of a “public health emergency.”
What will stop this, if not states’ refusal to comply, and if not the weapons of citizens?
Bill Gates has been making the case for just this structure of transnational power for a long time. He has long advocated for a transnational power structure to take over global decision-making, under the guise of protecting public health. In a 2018 speech to the Massachusetts Medical Society, Gates said:
This [past work on pandemics] includes simulations and other preparedness exercises so we can better understand how diseases will spread and how to deal with things like quarantine and communications to minimize panic. We need better coordination with military forces to ensure we can draw on their mobilization capacity to transport people, equipment, and supplies on a mass scale.23
Bill Gates is still trying to have his psychotic fantasies come true, worldwide; but now it appears that he—and his potential allies—may be able to do so in the future with his own private One Health army.24 He won’t give up, nor will the WEF and the WHO. There are mercenary armies available, with a phone call, to private individuals and nonprofit entities around the world. The Second Amendment alone, along with our sovereignty, protects us from them.
This realization is hard to accept. But the risks of criminal gun violence, while always tragic, are risks that sadly can’t be done away with altogether, if we are to secure a more fundamental safety for more people and more lives; the right, as a nation of 335 million people, to deter massive planned violence, criminal detentions, lockdowns, theft of assets, and violent crimes at the State, and now at metastate, levels, against our lives and freedoms and yes, against our children.
Without the brilliantly conceived and clearly worded Second Amendment, without the deterrent to state and transnational violence of responsible, lawful, careful, and defensive firearms ownership in the United States of America, it is clear that nothing at all will save our citizens from the current fates of the people of China, Australia, and Canada, including the children, who may be facing—unarmed, defenseless as their parents sadly are—even worse fates still ahead.