A Right, Not a Privilege: Why Every Gun Law Is an Infringement

Let’s be clear: the Second Amendment doesn’t say, “the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed… unless the government says otherwise.” It doesn’t carve out exceptions for background checks, waiting periods, or fees. The right to bear arms is exactly that. It’s a right. Not a privilege, not a maybe, and not a “we’ll see.” ‘Keep’ means you can have them, and ‘bear’ means there’s probably at least one on me right now.

Yet here we are, so conditioned to government overreach that we jump through hoops just to exercise something that was never the government’s to regulate in the first place.

We’ve allowed politicians and bureaucrats, many who have never even held a gun, to place a chokehold on our Second Amendment rights. From red flag laws to magazine capacity restrictions, gun-free zones, and mandatory background checks, the list of infringements keeps growing. And somehow, we’ve accepted this. We’ve let them turn a God-given right into a permission slip. Isn’t the government supposed to serve us? Isn’t government overreach and slimy bureaucrats the reason the 2nd Amendment was written in the first place? Now they regulate it?

Take Hawaii, for instance. Here’s a state that says we recognize the 2nd Amendment, we just don’t allow it in our state. They say, “the right of the people to keep and bear shall not be infringed, except for every privately owned public space in the state.”

Let’s revisit the reason we have the 2nd Amendment to begin with. It wasn’t written for deer hunters. It wasn’t about paper targets. The Founders drafted it to ensure that “We the People” had the means to keep a tyrannical government in check. That’s right, to override it if necessary. So how is it that today, we let the very institution the 2nd Amendment was meant to restrain decide how much of it we’re allowed to keep?

It didn’t happen all at once. It was one small restriction after another. A background check here, a magazine capacity limit there. “Common sense” gun laws, they told us. And we gun owners, patriots, citizens, too often just went along with it. Now, we live in a culture where these infringements have become normal, if not expected. That’s the real danger. We’re no longer throwing the tyrants in jail; we’re debating with them about how much of our rights we have to give up.

Imagine James Madison walking into a modern gun shop. He watches an American citizen fill out forms, hand over ID, and wait for government approval to buy a firearm. What do you think he’d say? He’d be furious and he’d be embarrassed that we squandered such an important component of our freedom.

And yet, we barely flinch. In some states, we even need permission to buy ammunition. We obediently wait days or even months to find out if we’re “allowed” to take home a firearm. In too many cases, that delay becomes a death sentence.

The media, the political Left, and even some on the Right have pushed a narrative that runs completely counter to the intent of our Founders. They’ve rewritten the cultural script to convince us that begging for permission is normal. But let’s be honest: every time we walk into a gun shop and let a camera record us as we register our purchase with the government, we’re participating in the slow dismantling of our rights.

A right is not a privilege. It’s inherent. God-given. It’s not something handed out by the government. It’s something the government is supposed to protect. But we’ve allowed that right to be eroded. Let’s not pretend we’re blameless. Too many gun owners have stood by, silent, hoping someone else would do the hard work of defending our liberty.

So how did it come to this? Simple: we got complacent. We let the anti-gun crowd twist tragedies into opportunities to strip rights from law-abiding citizens. We let them write the script while we stayed quiet, hoping it wouldn’t get worse. Well, it has. And it will continue until we wake up and fight back.

We don’t have the luxury of silence anymore. I won’t leave my grandchildren a country where freedom is a memory and tyranny is the norm. I don’t want to be the generation that stood by while the Constitution was gutted and the government grabbed all the power.

The good news? We still have a chance. Right now. Today. We can push back. We must push back. Every gun law on the books. Every single one is an infringement. It’s time to stop compromising.

The truth is, the Second Amendment means exactly what it says. No fine print, no exceptions, no permission needed, and no infringements.

So ask yourself—what would our Founding Fathers say?

More importantly, what will our grandchildren say if we don’t act now?

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About Dan Wos, Author – Good Gun Bad Guy

Dan Wos is available for Press Commentary. For more information, contact PR HERE

Dan Wos is a nationally recognized 2nd Amendment advocate, Host of The Loaded Mic and Author of the “GOOD GUN BAD GUY” book series. He speaks at events, is a contributing writer for many publications, and can be found on radio stations across the country. Dan has been a guest on Newsmax, the Sean Hannity Show, Real America’s Voice, and several others. Speaking on behalf of gun-rights, Dan exposes the strategies of the anti-gun crowd and explains their mission to disarm law-abiding American gun-owners.

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DIYinSTL

It’s not just what our founding fathers would say, it’s what would they do? Most anyone who has seen the horrors of war will shy away from CW2 given another reasonable choice. But at times I feel aggrieved and wear my T-shirt emblazoned with a modified presidential seal and bearing the words “Our Forefathers Would Be Shooting By Now“.

WholeEagle2
Texican

Guns defend freedom and liberty. The parasites don’t like that.

StLPro2A

“We the People” had the means to keep a tyrannical government in check” A right not exercised is a right not hel. Our Founders would already have been finished shooting, a second time. One gets the tyranny to which one acquiesces. Today’s tyrants don’t fear Wimps’R’Us….

Finnky

What would our grandchildren say? Well, if we don’t act they will have been born into a country where gun ownership is restricted to privileged few, utterly controlled by the government and widely viewed as wrong. Thus they will probably be grateful when the boot momentarily lifts from their throat. They won’t know what they missed out on, unless we tell them… Most likely they won’t even understand that resistance or (gasp) fighting back is possible. We are quickly heading for a place which will make societies depicted in Orwell’s 1984 and soylent green appear utopian. With that thought…. thanks… Read more »

Thinker1

In their “Democracy,” if the majority calls it a privilege, then it’s no longer a right. Makes you want to vote Democrat, right?

swmft

and why most goobers are criminals

Liberty's Advocate

I agree 100% and here’s my research to prove it: This moment in our nation’s history demands an answer to the question, “Why have we allowed government (the courts up to the SCOTUS) to treat the Second Amendment as a second class, INalienable Civil Right (regulated) when its purpose (individual protection [self-defense] against the evil acts of other individuals and/or the governments they create) is clearly described in the Declaration as being an UNalienable HUMAN Right (meaning inherent in the individual as an Act of God, and beyond the ability of government to transfer, deny or regulate)?” The Declaration is… Read more »

2NDforever

when enough AMERICANS REALIZE THEY HAVE THE RIGHT TO FIREARM OWNERSHIP AND VOTE ACCORDINGLY then the 2ND AMENDMENT will be restored!