Workers Vanguard No. 1021
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5 April 2013
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Gun Rights and Shays’ Rebellion
(Letter)
14 February 2013
Dear Workers Vanguard:
Issue No. 1015 of WV reprinted the 1989 Spartacist article
on the Second Amendment concerning the right to form militias (usually
mislabeled as the right to bear arms). The article states: “American colonial
revolutionaries wanted the whole people armed...in order to be able to
kill British soldiers and to forestall the threat of any standing
army.”
Since the British surrender at Yorktown in 1783 effectively ended
the American Revolution, it is not strictly true that the Second Amendment had
to do with killing British soldiers. This telescopes historical events and
leaves out the single most critical event in prompting the adoption of the
Constitution (1787) and the Bill of Rights (1789): what is known as Shays’
Rebellion, in the winter of 1786-87.
Leonard Richards’ excellent 2002 book, Shays’s Rebellion: the
American Revolution’s Final Battle, is based on a detailed demographic
analysis of some 4,000 members of “Shays’ Rebellion.” Burdened by crippling
taxes and lawsuits that put many people into debtor’s prison, much of Western
Massachusetts rose up in the fall of 1786 and closed down court sessions
whenever they were meeting. They referred to themselves as Regulators whose goal
was “the Suppressing of tyrannical government in Massachusetts State” (P.
63).
Daniel Shays was a heavily decorated eight-year veteran officer of
the American Revolution and had been presented with a gold-handled sword by
Lafayette, under whom he served. The core of the Shays’ officer corps was
long-time veterans of the Revolution, not a bunch of poor disgruntled
debt-ridden farmers. The insurrection was extremely popular. In fact, when the
State sent an army of about 1,000 men to suppress Shays, someone suggested they
vote on supporting the insurrection. 800 men moved to the side of the road
supporting Shays (12).
Prior to Shays’ Rebellion, efforts to adopt a centralized
Constitution had failed. However, the specter of Shays’ Rebellion crystallized
antidemocratic sentiment. Proponents of the Constitution justified it as
necessary to limit the “excess of democracy” (134). Reports of the rebellion so
concerned George Washington that he agreed to attend the constitutional
convention in Philadelphia because, as Richards puts it, “the country
desperately needed a stronger national government, one that could maintain
order, one that could protect property holders like him, one that could suppress
malcontents like those in Massachusetts.”
At first it was not at all clear that it would pass. In addition to
the notorious “compromise” characterizing slaves as being only 3/5 of a person
(which effectively gave control of the government to the South for the next 60
years), the Federalist supporters of the Constitution behind Alexander Hamilton
succeeded in sticking a “Shaysites” label on all opponents of the
Constitution.
One of the main arguments of those opposing the Constitution was
that it had no Bill of Rights, a staple of English law, as the Spartacist
article points out. The agreement to add a bill of rights to the constitution
was probably the key factor in providing the narrow margin by which the
Massachusetts convention approved it.
In short, Shays’ Rebellion was a key factor both in frightening the
nascent bourgeoisie into adopting the Constitution and providing the impetus for
the Bill of Rights. The Second Amendment is not about the right of an individual
to go hunting or target shooting, but the right to organize an armed militia to
“suppress tyrannical government.”
Fraternally,
John H.
John H.
WV replies:
John H. points out that Shays’ Rebellion in Western Massachusetts
helped convince leaders of both the Southern slavocracy and the Northern
merchant bourgeoisie that a new centralized federal government was necessary. It
is also true that in parts of Massachusetts a significant portion of the
population both sympathized with Shays and distrusted the Constitution. As to
the Second Amendment, the right to bear arms was widely accepted in the
English-speaking world well before Shays’ Rebellion, as were the other rights
codified in the Bill of Rights. And in fact, the Second Amendment did have to do
with combating British military forces, which would continue to pose a threat to
the young republic for some years after Yorktown.
The intent of the amendment was to provide for a people’s militia
as against a standing army. At the same time, as the Spartacist article
excerpted in WV No. 1015 (11 January) underlined, “The right to ‘keep and
bear arms’ was universally recognized as an individual right” by
American colonial revolutionaries. This was part of the heritage of the English
bourgeois revolution of the mid 17th century. The article noted: “Carrying
forward the English tradition, the American revolutionaries expanded on this
right, in light of their own experience in struggle against the British king,
when they drew up the Constitution.”
The roots of the right to bear arms go back to the Middle Ages. As
early as the 13th century, England’s yeoman farmers, who served in wars for
“king and country,” were encouraged to arm themselves with longbows, the
preeminent weapon of the time. During the Hundred Years War, batteries of yeoman
archers were decisive in defeating the French at the battles of Crécy (1346) and
Agincourt (1415). Of note is that England had a substantial population of free
peasants, i.e., not feudal vassals. As early as the 15th century, the peasants
were compelled by royal decree to personally own a longbow and to participate in
weekly target practice. This obligation was widely resented, particularly since
it meant being available to serve in militias. The customary practice of bearing
arms was formalized as a “true, ancient, and indubitable” right in the 1689 Bill
of Rights that issued from the English bourgeois revolution.
The right to bear arms is bound up with social
defense—that is, safeguarding the interests of a class, nation or other
social entity. The American Revolution itself began when British soldiers tried
to confiscate weapons in Lexington, Massachusetts, in 1775. By 1777, several
states had adopted their own declarations of rights guaranteeing the right to
bear arms. Massachusetts followed suit in 1780, before Shays’ Rebellion.
But, as the Spartacist article noted: “As in any class
society, there were some big, categorical exceptions to these ‘universal’
rights.” Like everything else about the American Revolution, the Second
Amendment is particularly complicated by the fact that slavery was the bedrock
of much of the country’s economy. The assumption was that white English-speaking
Protestants were the ones wielding the guns. The Bill of Rights was adopted to
placate much of the hostility toward the Constitution’s prescription of a strong
national government, which came not only from supporters of Shays but from
representatives of the Southern slavocracy. One of the first to suggest a Bill
of Rights was Virginia planter Richard Henry Lee. With its protection of
so-called states’ rights, the Tenth Amendment further codified the power of the
slavocracy.
While the American War of Independence released a democratic spirit
that resonated internationally, it fell to the Civil War to abolish slavery and
affirm the basic democratic rights of citizenship and equal protection for the
entire population, black and white. Yet in clearing the road for the development
of capitalism, this Second American Revolution laid the basis not only for the
growth of the working class but also for the consolidation of a central
bourgeois state power. With the rise of U.S. imperialism by the end of the
century, a standing army was firmly established. Fearful of an armed population
and striving to maintain a monopoly of violence for its state, the ruling class
has over the years sought to roll back the fundamental democratic right to bear
arms.
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