Two municipalities in Illinois ban the possession of most handguns. After the Supreme Court held in
District of Columbia v. Heller,
— U.S. —,
Cruikshank, Presser,
and
Miller
rejected arguments that depended on the privileges and immunities clause of the fourteenth amendment. The
Slaughter-House Cases,
Repeatedly, in decisions that no one thinks fossilized, the Justices have directed trial and appellate judges to implement the Supreme Court’s holdings even if the reasoning in later opinions has undermined their rationale. “If a precedent of this Court has direct application in a case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of decisions, the Court of Appeals should follow the case which directly controls, leaving to this Court the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.”
Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express, Inc.,
Anyone who doubts that
Cruikshank, Presser,
and
Miller
have “direct application in [this] case” need only read footnote 23 in
Heller.
It says that
Presser
and
Miller
“reaffirmed [Cruikshank’s holding] that the Second Amendment applies only to the Federal Government.”
State Oil Co. v. Khan, 522
U.S. 3,
What’s more, the proper outcome of this case is not as straightforward as the outcome of Khan. Although the rationale of Cruikshank, Presser, and Miller is defunct, the Court has not telegraphed any plan to overrule Slaughter-House and apply all of the amendments to the states through the privileges and immunities clause, despite scholarly arguments that it should do this. See Akhil Reed Amar, America’s Constitution: A Biography 390-92 (2005) (discussing how the second amendment relates to the privileges and immunities clause). The prevailing approach is one of “selective incorporation.” Thus far neither the third nor the seventh amendment has been applied to the states — nor has the grand jury clause of the fifth amendment or the excessive bail clause of the eighth. How the second amendment will fare under the Court’s *859 selective (and subjective) approach to incorporation is hard to predict.
Nordyke
asked whether the right to keep and bear arms is “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition.”
Washington v. Glucksberg,
Plaintiffs’ reliance on William Blackstone, 1 Commentaries on the Laws of England *123-24, for the proposition that the right to keep and bear arms is “deeply rooted” not only slights the fact that Blackstone was discussing the law of another nation but also overlooks the reality that Blackstone discussed arms-bearing as a political rather than a constitutional right. The United Kingdom does not have a constitution that prevents Parliament and the Queen from matching laws to current social and economic circumstances, as the people and their representatives understand them. It is dangerous to rely on Blackstone (or for that matter modern European laws banning handguns) to show the meaning of a constitutional amendment that this nation adopted in 1868. See Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz, Condorcet and the Constitution, 59 Stan. L.Rev. 1281 (2007). Blackstone also thought determinate criminal sentences (e.g., 25 years, neither more nor less, for robbing a post office) a vital guarantee of liberty. 4 Commentaries *371-72. That’s not a plausible description of American constitutional law.
One function of the second amendment is to prevent the national government from interfering with state militias. It does this by creating individual rights,
Heller
holds, but those rights may take a different shape when asserted against a state than against the national government. Suppose Wisconsin were to decide that private ownership of long guns, but not handguns, would best serve the public interest in an effective militia; it is not clear that such a decision would be antithetical to a decision made in 1868. (The fourteenth amendment was ratified in 1868, making that rather than 1793 the important year for determining what rules must be applied to the states.) Suppose a state were to decide that people cornered in their homes must surrender rather than fight back — -in other words, that burglars should be deterred by the criminal law rather than self help. That decision would imply that no one is entitled to keep a handgun at home for self-defense, because self-defense would itself be a crime, and
Heller
concluded that the second amendment protects only the interests of law-abiding citizens. See
United States v. Jackson,
Our hypothetical is not as farfetched as it sounds. Self-defense is a common-law gloss on criminal statutes, a defense that many states have modified by requiring people to retreat when possible, and to use non-lethal force when retreat is not possible. Wayne R. LaFave, 2
Substantive Criminal Law
§ 10.4 (2d ed.2003). An obligation to avoid lethal force in self-de
*860
fense might imply an obligation to use pepper spray rather than handguns. A modification of the self-defense defense may or may not be in the best interest of public safety—whether guns deter or facilitate crime is an empirical question, compare John R. Lott, Jr.,
More Guns, Less Crime
(2d ed.2000), with Paul H. Rubin & Hashem Dzehbakhsh,
The effect of concealed handgun laws on crime,
23 International Rev. L. & Econ. 199 (2003), and Mark Duggan,
More Guns, More Crime,
109 J. Pol. Econ. 1086 (2001)—but it is difficult to argue that legislative evaluation of which weapons are appropriate for use in self-defense has been out of the people’s hands since 1868. The way to evaluate the relation between guns and crime is in scholarly journals and the political process, rather than invocation of ambiguous texts that long precede the contemporary debate. See
Clark v. Arizona,
Chicago and Oak Park are poorly placed to make these arguments. After all, Illinois has
not
abolished self-defense and has
not
expressed a preference for long guns over handguns. But the municipalities can, and do, stress another of the themes in the debate over incorporation of the Bill of Rights: That the Constitution establishes a federal republic where local differences are to be cherished as elements of liberty rather than extirpated in order to produce a single, nationally applicable rule. See
New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann,
Affirmed
