Press, Assembly, and the Right to Bear Arms
The remaining First Amendment freedoms and the Second Amendment share a common theme: the people’s ability to resist tyranny.
Freedom of the Press
The press clause protects publication and dissemination of information. It’s related to but distinct from free speech.
Press Freedom’s Core
Prior restraint is (almost) never allowed: The government cannot stop publication before it happens.
New York Times v. United States (1971): The Pentagon Papers case. The government couldn’t prevent newspapers from publishing classified documents about the Vietnam War. The Court said there’s a “heavy presumption” against prior restraint.
This doesn’t mean leakers are protected. Daniel Ellsberg was prosecuted (though charges were dropped). The press, however, could publish what he leaked.
Shield Laws and Sources
Can journalists be forced to reveal confidential sources? The First Amendment provides limited protection.
Branzburg v. Hayes (1972): No First Amendment privilege protects journalists from grand jury subpoenas. However, the decision was narrow, and many states have enacted “shield laws” providing statutory protection.
Press Access
The press has no special right of access beyond the public. But if the government opens something to the public, it generally can’t exclude the press.
The Internet Era
Traditional press protections apply to bloggers, podcasters, and anyone publishing information. “The press” isn’t a special institution; it’s an activity.
Freedom of Assembly and Petition
“…the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
Assembly Rights
People can gather to express collective views. This includes:
- Protests and demonstrations
- Marches and parades
- Picketing (with limits on blocking access)
The key word is “peaceably.” Violent assembly isn’t protected.
Time, place, and manner: Government can require permits, designate protest zones, and set time limits. It cannot discriminate based on the message.
The Right to Petition
Citizens can contact their government without fear of retaliation. This includes:
- Lobbying elected officials
- Filing lawsuits
- Writing letters and making calls
- Submitting formal petitions
It’s the foundation for citizen engagement in democracy.
The Second Amendment
“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 most contested 27 words in the Constitution.
Two Interpretations
Collective rights view: The amendment protects state militias’ right to arm their members. It’s about military organization, not personal gun ownership.
Individual rights view: The amendment protects individuals’ right to own firearms, independent of militia service.
District of Columbia v. Heller (2008)
The Supreme Court adopted the individual rights view. Key holdings:
- The Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess firearms
- This right is unconnected to militia service
- D.C.’s handgun ban and trigger-lock requirement are unconstitutional
- The right is not unlimited; regulations are permissible
Justice Scalia’s majority opinion emphasized the “core” right: self-defense in the home.
McDonald v. Chicago (2010)
The Second Amendment applies to states through the Fourteenth Amendment. States and cities can’t ban handgun ownership.
What Regulations Are Allowed?
Heller explicitly said the Second Amendment permits:
- Prohibitions on possession by felons and the mentally ill
- Laws forbidding firearms in sensitive places (schools, government buildings)
- Conditions on commercial sale of arms
- Bans on dangerous and unusual weapons
New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022)
Struck down New York’s requirement that applicants show “proper cause” to carry concealed weapons in public. The Court held:
- The Second Amendment protects the right to carry firearms outside the home
- Gun regulations must be consistent with the nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation
- “Interest balancing” tests (weighing gun rights against public safety) are improper
This decision has major implications for gun regulations nationwide.
The Ongoing Debate
Second Amendment jurisprudence remains unsettled:
What weapons are protected? Handguns yes, but what about AR-15s? Machine guns?
What regulations survive? Red flag laws? Magazine capacity limits? Age restrictions?
What’s the historical standard? Bruen requires historical analogues, but history is contested.
These questions will be litigated for years.
Connections Between These Rights
Press, assembly, and arms share a common purpose: enabling citizens to check government power.
- Press: Informs the public about government action
- Assembly: Allows collective political expression
- Arms: (In one view) Provides ultimate check against tyranny
The founders feared government oppression. These rights were designed to prevent it.
The Takeaway
These amendments protect different forms of citizen power:
- Publishing information (press)
- Gathering collectively (assembly)
- Petitioning government (petition)
- Possessing weapons (arms)
Understanding these rights means understanding:
- The near-absolute prohibition on prior restraint
- Government’s ability to regulate time, place, and manner of protests
- The individual rights interpretation of the Second Amendment
- The ongoing debate about permissible gun regulations
Each right has limits. Finding those limits is the work of constitutional law.
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