When we repeat the true statement that the Second Amendment isn't about hunting, we can too easily miss what hunters do for this fundamental human right.
The deadly spread of the coronavirus might be a war without weapons, but that has not stopped leading gun manufacturers across the country from aiding those on the firing line.
Twelve centuries before the Second Amendment was written into the Constitution of the United States, Emperor Justinian I made the case for the unalienable right to bear arms as succinctly as it has ever been made: “That which someone does for the safety of his body,” Justinian confirmed in the Corpus Juris Civilis, “let it be regarded as having been done legally.”
Studies show that such programs fail to make a positive impact on crime and may enable criminal gangs to offload unwanted firearms and raise money for new guns.