Thursday, July 26, 2018

Interminable Adversarial Entrenchment and the “Epic” Revolution of the 99%

Thoughts on Epic Systems Corp. v Lewis, 21st Century Shrinkwrap and an Unconscionable Society 

by John J. Otrompke, JD

For more than two years, many of us have participated in what we hope will be a watershed event in American history: the emergence of an alternative to the political monopoly of mainstream, capitalist politicians- to wit, the revolution of the 99%. This is a transformation that could be accomplished swiftly: after all, historical episodes such as King John’s speedy agreement to sign Magna Carta illustrate how quickly and easily a disagreement like the revolution of the 99% could be resolved.

But the past electoral cycle shows that we are not in a conflict of the 99% against the 1%, at least not right now. Instead, we have the battle of one 50% of the voters against the other 50%. (Think also of Bush v Gore, as well as BREXIT, the vote on Scottish exit, and several other elections). That kind of conflict can be intractable.

Which brings me to Epic Systems Corp v Lewis, and a recent book, “Re-Engineering Humanity” (Frischmann and Selinger, Cambridge University Press 2018).

Epic, of course, was the case decided in May considering the proper interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act in light of the Fair Labor Standards Act. Epic was widely mourned as an upset for the labor movement, and a harbinger of worse to come. In an opinion written by Justice Gorsuch, the Supreme Court upheld the validity of “agreements” with employers which employees had “entered into” to arbitrate claims on an individual basis, over objections made by the employees, who wanted to litigate wage and hour claims collectively, based on illegality and unconscionability.

The opinions of both Gorsuch and Ginsburg could have used a lot more analysis of the unconscionability question in contract law. This issue is especially troubling to me given the growth of clickwrap contracts described in the new book by Profs. Frischmann and Selinger (see below).

The notion of unconscionability is radical, in the sense that it goes to the heart of what is wrong with our economy. I believe it is so important in our society that it should at least be a jury issue in a contract case like Epic.

However, I don’t think that Epic will actually have the apocalyptic results foreseen by some, because I don’t think things were that good for the working class even before Epic.

                 The Centrality of Unconscionability

According to Gorsuch, the Arbitration Act “allows courts to refuse to enforce arbitration agreements upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract” (internal punctuation omitted). But the employees “don’t suggest that their arbitration agreements were extracted, say, by an act of fraud or duress or in some other unconscionable way that would render any contract unenforceable.” (Gorsuch slip opinion pp. 6-7).

Gorsuch seems to suggest that the contract is not unconscionable unless the arbitration clause itself is unfair- which it cannot be, because Congress sanctions it. (At times, Gorsuch’s opinion almost sounds like he thinks the employees failed to raise the unconscionability argument).

But in fact, there are several traditional elements to the defense of unconscionability in contract law. For example, the objectionable term could be buried in a mountain of type (negating the meeting-of-minds usually required for an enforceable contract). Courts also allude to the discrepancy in negotiating power between the parties, and whether the alleged agreement was an adhesion contract, offered by the stronger party on a take-it-or-leave it basis, leaving the weaker party without any power to negotiate.

It would helpful to know more about this “contract”: its length, other terms, the circumstances of contracting, etc. But neither the Gorsuch nor the Ginsburg opinion discussed the facts in a very clear way as related to unconscionability.

For example, on page 7 of Ginsburg’s opinion, she says the company “e-mailed its employees an arbitration agreement requiring resolution of wage and hours claims by individual arbitration. The agreement provided that if the employees continued to work at Epic, they would be deemed to have accepted the Agreement” (internal punctuation omitted).

But on page 6 she says, “the employers...required their employees to sign contracts stipulating to submission of wage and hours claims to binding arbitration.”

Did the employees actually sign a written contract? Were the terms buried? Did the employee have a chance to discuss the terms? Did the employee get anything in exchange for this “contract”- or were they employed on an at-will basis?

Several of the elements of the unconscionability doctrine appear to have been met by the facts in Epic.

Also, I agree with Ginsburg that the expenses faced by an employee in mounting a wage-and-hour claim, such as the employee lawsuits at issue in Epic, may be prohibitively burdensome. This would tend to refute the central advantage claimed by some in favor of arbitration (ie, economy).

I also agree with Ginsburg that the Arbitration Act should only apply to contracts between merchants, or between parties with equal bargaining power. But it sounds like that is water that went under the bridge long ago. (Slip opinion of Ginsburg at 21, citing Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 460 U. S. 1, 24 (1983)).

Perhaps a more contemporary question is: why don’t people unionize? Why don’t the people elect a Congress to change the statute at issue in Epic? Why can’t the people get together and fight the rampant wealth inequality?

             Unconscionability and Autonomy: A Mini-Review of ‘Re-Engineering  Humanity’

Viewed in terms of the unconscionability issue, the Court’s decision in Epic also raises troubling questions about the enforceability of adhesion contracts, which have been proliferating in number, according to the recent work of Profs. Frischmann and Selinger.

‘Boilerplate’ contracts have been around since the 1900s, but since the dawn of the internet have proliferated so that today, they account for some 99% of all contracts, according to the authors (“Re-Engineering Humanity,” p. 330, n. 10).

The information age has led to an “unprecedented orgy of contract formation,” but in disproof of the autonomy-enhancing theory of contract law, the profusion of boilerplate contracts may have a future negative effect on “two basic human capabilities, the capability to deliberate and the capability to relate to others” (p. 71). Human beings, they say, are being programmed by on-line clickwrap “agreements” to behave like automatons, to click without thinking.

On-line boilerplate is just one aspect of modernity the authors worry may result in the techno-social programming of individuals, along with on-line advertising, games, and social media. But two important sections of ‘Re-engineering Humanity’ deal with on-line “contracts”: one full chapter and an important appendix on revising contract law to promote human autonomy, along with copious notes.

Epic is especially troubling if it represents a trend of the growing enforcement of unsconscionable “agreements.” Many of the cases cited in the book seem inapposite: the federal court in Sprecht v Netscape, for example, refused to enforce a clause buried in clickwrap, and the New York state court in Jerez  v JD Closeouts, 36 Misc 3d 161 (2012) refused a motion to dismiss that was based on provisions in clickwrap. True, Judge Easterbrook upheld clickwrap in ProCD v Zeidenburg, 86 F.3d 1447 (7th Cir. 1996), but that was a case between what passes for merchants these days.

Nonetheless, I was surprised to learn from Prof. Frischmann of a clickwrap victory in Fteja v Facebook, 841 F.Supp.2d 829 (SDNY 2012), in which the Southern District of New York upheld a forum selection clause contained in clickwrap promulgated by Facebook.

In any event, if the decision in Epic is any harbinger, circumstances may come to hold the people’s feet to the fire and compel them to stop behaving like automatons, and confront the hard decision of whether to suffer discomfort and refuse to consent to the outrageous unconscionability that exists in the status quo.

              Why Can’t the 99% Agree on Unconscionability?

This raises for me the even bigger question of what the people can do to create the real “revolution of the 99%” we spoke of. Why do we as a society seem to be entrenched in such a precisely evenly-divided conflict?

As I mentioned, I personally don’t feel that the economic situation we had before the Epic case was much to celebrate. And I am reminded of certain unions that recently opposed a constitutional convention in New York, because of the risk that holding a con-con would endanger all the gains that had been made for labor since Haymarket. Gains may have been made, indeed, but I don’t feel that we should let our fear hold us back.

Some 50 years ago, Bob Dylan’s song “Only a Pawn in Their Game” proffered a reason why: the ruling elite manipulates the people, and turns us against one other to prevent us from uniting to unseat them. Perhaps this is the time to stop and ask two questions: should the 99% learn how to get along? And if we should, can we?

I started with the observation that the people appear to be divided 50/50. But maybe things aren’t that bad after all. Maybe it was just the Clinton candidacy which alienated people, to make it appear that our society is so starkly divided. Perhaps recent history shows that the electorate is appropriately fickle, and switches allegiance frequently enough not to put too much power in the hands of any one party or branch, thereby heeding the concerns of the drafters of the Constitution.

My hope is that the lesson of the Trump debacle, and of the challenges to come after Epic, is that if Democrats run capitalist military hawks for president, disaster will follow.

The author is an aspiring law professor. He often comments on the law at www.otrompkescommentaries.blogspot.com . He can be reached at JOtrompke@gmail.com











Wednesday, May 23, 2018

A Bioethical Argument Against Medical Sex-Change Procedures in Children

Grounded in Neither Superstition nor Prejudice with Full Respect for Equal Protection

by John Otrompke

As I describe in my recent Lancet article, when the Endocrine Society issued its updated clinical practice guideline on sex change (“gender affirmation”) procedures late last fall, the authors acknowledged a trend that was already underway.

The guideline described four kinds of sex change procedures in children: social transitioning, the administration of puberty-blocking hormones, gender affirmation hormones, and surgery. 

Regarding social transitioning, I believe a child should be free to tell anyone they are whatever they want to be, to transition again, and to transition back, any time they want to. That’s a child’s inherent imaginative freedom, and obviously such a procedure is non-invasive and reversible. Unlike the authors of the guideline, I don’t even think consultation with a psychologist is important if a child undertakes social transitioning.

Puberty-blocking hormones administered in children as young as 9 years old prevent the child from undergoing puberty, while sex change hormones cause the child to develop sex characteristics of the other gender. 

But for bioethical reasons that have nothing to do with superstition, I hope, I am opposed to most of these medical procedures in children. I don’t believe I have a fundamental difference from many of my colleagues; I suspect the appearance of the seeming difference of opinion arises because many of my colleagues conflate the equal protection issue with the bioethical issue. I entirely support the equal protection of transgendered people, as well as LGBTQIA+ freedom and equality. 

But from a bioethics perspective, I don’t think these medical procedures should be performed in minors.

The Procedures Expose Children to Medical Risks

Here is why I take that view. Under current principles, a minor cannot consent to a medical procedure that presents some risk of harm. Nor can a parent give effective informed consent on behalf of a child to risky medical procedure which cannot benefit the child. For example, court cases that held that a child’s parents cannot consent to a child’s participation in risky non-therapeutic research, such as an experiment that may some day benefit patients with a disease the child does not have.

‘Gender affirmation’ procedures present certain risks. For example, any surgery presents certain non-negligible hazards, such as death under anesthesia. Other things can go wrong, such as stenosis of the vagina, or a failure of the neogenital nerve graft, leaving the patient without any feeling in their sex organs. The fact that these events may be rare doesn’t mean they aren’t serious. And what about other fatal adverse events during the procedure? 

Even the administration of hormone blockers, which advocates claim is reversible, comes with certain risks, because the delay of puberty is associated with weaker bones.

In addition, some studies have found that trans-women experience an increased risk for major adverse coronary events such as ischemic stroke and pulmonary embolism. 

What about regrets? The physicians who have performed the vast majority of sex change operations in Europe recently published very extensive data analyzing their large and longstanding cohort of almost 7,000 patients since 1972 for a variety of adverse events, including regret. The researchers found that a very small percentage (less than 1%) of patients reported regretting their sex change procedures, but they only looked at patients who underwent surgery (not those who just underwent hormone treatment). In my opinion, those findings were also flawed by the large proportion (36%) of patients who were lost to follow-up, and could not or would not report on whether they experienced any regret.

Most Children Desist Following Puberty

Given the risks that are attendant upon sex change procedures, do children enjoy any benefit from the procedures, such as puberty-blocking and sex change hormone treatment, or surgery, that a parent or guardian could weigh in deciding whether the risks are justified?

They do, according to advocates for gender affirmation medical treatment in children (such as Dr. Steve Rosenthal, MD, an author on the guideline), who say that children who undergo puberty in their “birth-assigned gender” have a substantially higher risk of suicide and anxiety, for example. (One study, however, which examined data from nearly 1,000 transwomen found that an increased risk of suicide was largely responsible for a risk of death that was roughly 1.5 times as great as that in the general population).

The other problem with this analysis is that the “gender dysphoria” (unhappiness with one’s birth-assigned gender) desists in 60 to 85% of children with the condition once they go through puberty. 

Advocates, and the authors of the guideline, argue that the high remission rate is due to the use of inaccurate methods of diagnosis. “Intense” anatomic dysphoria and “Real Life Experience” are the key to identifying those children whose dysphoria will persist into adulthood, according to some researchers

In my opinion, this points out the flawed nature of contemporary psychology, which I regard as a non-mature science of inherently subjective, intangible matters. Did health care providers use flawed methods to diagnose this condition in the past? How many children received the procedures based on false positives? Are the doctors really certain they have the diagnostic criteria right this time?

If the medical procedures are associated with certain non-negligible risks, and many children would enjoy no benefit from the procedure because the condition giving rise to the need for the procedure would resolve on its own if the child were to go undergo puberty without medical treatment, it seems to me that the procedures are experimental, and because they it is questionable whether they offer any medical benefit, it is unnecessary to undergo the invasive procedures in most children. 

Hence, I conclude that the administration of physical sex change procedures, including puberty-blocking hormones, is unethical in children. 

Thoughtful opinions to the contrary are welcome. If you disagree with me, you may write to me telling me why; if I like your commentary, I may publish it on my website.





Friday, May 11, 2018

Proposed Amendment to South Korea’s Constitution Refers to Animal Protection

Does the Nation Join a Historic March Toward Animal Rights?

by John Otrompke

On or about the first day of spring this year, the president of South Korea announced a proposed amendment to the country’s constitution. The lengthy proposal (a copy of the Korean text of which is on file with this author) addresses a variety of topics including presidential term limits, as well as animal protection.

If the amendment passes, Korea will join other countries such as Ecuador, Germany, India, and Switzerland whose constitutions specifically mention animal welfare. While the language in the South Korean proposal relating to animals is brief in relation to the entire text, it could have significant impact on efforts to improve the well-being of animals in Korea.

“The proposed amendment bill includes, for the first time in constitutional history, the nation’s responsibility for animal protection. Article 38 (3) stipulates that ‘the nation must implement a policy for the protection of animals,’” said Jooyeon Park, LLM, attorney and co-president of People for Nonhuman Rights.

But how useful will this proposed language be in addressing specific animal problems in Korea, such as the dog meat trade? Possibly very useful, experts say.

“It will make it possible to file a constitutional complaint against the government’s neglect to establish a policy and laws for fundamental and better animal welfare- for example, the insufficient law articles for wildlife protection. It is expected to be a stepping stone for securing the special status and rights of animals, as it recognizes ‘animal protection’ as a constitutional value,” explained Park, who is currently litigating an animal rights case involving dog slaughter in South Korea (see below).

A Growing Chorus of Opposition Among Enlightened Constitutions

“Animal welfare is an important part of our constitution in Austria, Germany and Switzerland. The constitutional provisions don’t provide a private citizen with the means of bringing a case, but at least he could cooperate with law enforcement bodies,” said Antoine Goetschel, JD, founder and president of the Global Animal Law Association in Zurich.

In Germany, the effect of such a constitutional provision is simple, explained Goetschel, who has drafted a UN convention on animal health and protection. “It just foresees since 2002 that the animals in the short term ought to be protected by the state. It sounds boring, but in those countries when animals are protected by the Constitution, for example, artists are not allowed to abuse animals to produce their artwork. It gives a balance to the animal, and the judge has to balance that out.”

By incorporating the concept of dignity into its constitution, however, Switzerland is quite unique. “The idea is to acknowledge an inherent or intrinsic value of animals, who are not to be reduced just to a machine, or instrumentalized,” added Goetschel, formerly the  prosecutor and chief animal welfare attorney for the canton of Zurich.
“Based on the Constitution, we have animal welfare legislation in Switzerland, and based on the legislation, we have an animal welfare ordinance which is quite large.” As an example, he said, the boiling of lobster is illegal in Switzerland.

“Constitutional provisions in Ecuador, Germany and Switzerland recognize animals as sentient beings and gives them a legal status that is more than mere property, but not fully human; a third legal status. This new constitutional amendment doesn’t state specific animal rights, but it is a big step,” added Minhee Janet Yoo, policy team manager for Coexistence of Animal Rights on Earth (CARE) in Seoul.

Growing Concern for Animals in South Korea

Under South Korean law, within 60 days of the proposal to amend the constitution, the National Assembly must vote on it, according to Park. If two-thirds of the National Assembly approve the bill, a referendum must be held within 30 days. But even if the constitution is amended, a separate law enactment is necessary for the distribution of dog meat to be prohibited, she said.

“The dog meat trade is not banned by the proposed new constitutional amendment, but it could make it possible to regulate inhumane industries in South Korea such as the dog meat trade,” noted Yoo of CARE.

Concern about dog meat, for example, has been growing among humanitarians around the world. (It is sometimes said that In the dog meat trade, dogs are sometimes slaughtered by hanging them by the neck until dead, because of a superstitious belief that the meat tastes better).

“Fortunately, there are less people who think that dog meat is Korean culture these days,” said the attorney, Park. “Recently, as the Korean population with companion animals highly increased up to over 10 million, it is seen that the awareness and movement for animal rights is on its rise; more than half a million people signed a petition put forward by the Humane Society and Korea Animal Rights Advocates (KARA) this year.

“Currently the dog meat trade is neither legal nor illegal under the law,” added Park. “The Livestock Products Sanitary Control Act, which regulates animal slaughter and distribution for edible purposes, excludes ‘dogs’ from the livestock subject to slaughter, so slaughtering dogs for food is not covered by the Act.”

Progress in Korea as Measured by Other Laws

However, another law, the Animal Protection Act, was also amended in March.
“The keeping, transportation, and slaughtering of dogs is done in ways that cause much unnecessary physical (as well as mental) suffering. The amended Animal Protection Act enables us to press definitive and specific charges of ‘physical suffering’ on the dog meat farmers and traders,” explained Yoo of CARE.

“Seals, as one of the endangered species, are protected by the Wildlife Protection and Management Act as endangered; thus it is punishable to capture, collect, damage or kill any of them. If an animal is not one of the endangered species, it is likely to be prohibited to kill it for fur by Animal Protection Act. For example, it is illegal to kill in front of other dogs or to kill by a cruel method under the Animal Protection Act,” said attorney Park.

“Most of the dog slaughters use an electric stick to kill a dog, so it must be considered as a ‘cruel’ method. However, judgments in the courts (and sometimes prosecution itself) may be different in judging this ‘cruelty.’ Also, prosecutors or courts tend not to strictly enforce the APA. Hence, the same slaughtering of a dog may have different results depending on the court. For example, even though a court once ruled that killing a dog using electric rods violated the APA, the other court recently decided that the same action is not illegal as they consider the method is not cruel, because of the fact that electric slaughter is also used in pigs.”

The question of whether slaughtering a dog by means of an electric pole is prohibited as cruel by Korea’s Animal Protection Act is currently pending before the Supreme Court of Korea, in a prosecutor-initiated case (2017-do-16732). (The link connects to a Korean language website concerning the case in the Court of Appeal).

Park’s organization, People for Nonhuman Rights, has filed an attorney’s written opinion with the court in that case, she noted.



Monday, May 7, 2018

Let’s Interpret the Lack of a Nobel Prize for Literature this Year as a Tribute to Leonard Cohen

While We're At It, Could Someone Bring a Trust Enforcement Action Against the Nobel Committee?

When the Swedish Academy announced on Friday, May 4, that there would be no Nobel Prize for literature awarded this year, it struck me that an entire 18 months had gone by since we lost Leonard Cohen. I rejoiced in Dylan’s receipt of the Prize in 2016 (for his songs of rebellion and romanticism, of course, not his spiritual contrition or whiskey), because his works played a memorable role in a very happy era in my life.

I also yearned for Cohen to get the Prize as well, for much the same reason. However, Cohen was a very different creature from Dylan, of course (although they worked in the same genre and locations and were contemporaries). For one thing, Cohen’s work in his youth was never sarcastic or bitter, and Cohen’s work is more consistently mysterious and full of tenderly romantic spirituality.

I don’t mean to be a Shiite about it (although I love partisanship in general), but Cohen deserved the Nobel Prize for literature for his songs every bit as much as Dylan did.

The Academy can chalk it up to scandal and “the currently diminished Academy and the reduced public confidence in the Academy" if they want to; they may even believe it.

However, I can’t conceive how something the Academy allegedly did wrong could entitle them to withhold all that money for another year. As far as I can see, old man Nobel told them to give the prize to the artist who created the greatest work “in an idealish direction” in the preceding year, and gave them no discretion to withhold the prize and the money based on their own behavior. In fact, that would have been fraught with moral hazard, as it would have presented an incentive toward wrong-doing on the Academy’s part.

So the Academy can explain the lack of an award this year however they’d like; as for you and I, let’s rest in peace in the knowledge that this year’s lack of a Nobel Prize for Literature award is a silent tribute to the late, great Leonard Cohen- in my opinion, one of the greatest English language artists of the last hundred years.

Kudos, Leonard!

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Commemorating Innocent Victims of Violence Everywhere

Tomorrow is Holocaust Remembrance Day, according to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. 




In fact, it looks like there are two of them: according to UNESCO, the day is around January 27 (the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau by Soviet troops).




My sympathies go out to innocent victims of violence everywhere.

Monday, February 26, 2018

A Preliminary, Optimistic Response to Bret Stephens’ Call to "Repeal" the Second Amendment

Deal with the Crisis, then Reform Society and Enhance Amendment II's Penumbra. 

by John Otrompke

New York Times newspaper writer Bret Stephens recently wrote an editorial calling for the “repeal” of the Second Amendment,1 apparently motivated by the unabated massacre of schoolchildren.2 

This phenomenon is both historically new and uniquely objectionable, and I agree that society must make the most diligent efforts to uncover what’s going on. I write only to express the objection that repeal is premature, because I don’t believe that either the current Supreme Court, or the Second Amendment, pose much of an obstacle to solving the problem. I’m afraid that Stephens is wasting his time fighting a paper tiger.

Personal enforceability of the Second Amendment is a notion of recent vintage, deriving from two recent Supreme Court cases,3 which were however limited in scope. 
The Supreme Court only upheld the right to own a handgun in one’s home,4 and hasn’t touched the Second Amendment in almost ten years. 

In fact, I believe that if Congress were to temporarily ban virtually every gun in the country except handguns in the home, while figuring out what to do, the Roberts Court might allow it, reasoning that the continuous series of atrocities is a crisis that meets the strict standards for interfering with enumerated rights.

It seems to me that might be a good idea, because hopefully researchers and policy experts could uncover what’s been going on, and solve the problem of massacres of children and young people.

On the other hand, the idea of arming some teachers and probably some students, is also not a bad idea. The practice of compulsory education causes problems with both proposed solutions. What gives a society that can’t even protect its young people from being slaughtered the right to use compulsion to teach anyone anything?

Probably the worst thing that could be done would be for the two sides to continue arguing and trying to twist one another’s arm, without doing anything. It is an emergency, and the people need to conduct pilot experiments to see what works.

That problem being solved, the people should indeed consider Stephens’ proposal for a constitutional amendment, because there are actually several shortcomings of the Second Amendment, in addition to the abominable problem of young people being massacred; that is, there are other ways in which the penumbra of interests referred to in the Second Amendment is mismatched with the society we have today. 

Within this penumbra is included the notion of civic virtue. I suspect that we would face the question of whether it is the Second Amendment we want to reform, or our society, and in my opinion, the answer is both.

                         An Unnecessary Linguistic Mystery Unraveled: 
                         The Missing Prong to the Second Amendment

Although I am a meta-pacifist (a neologism I will explain momentarily), I was very glad to discover the notions behind the Second Amendment, because they help me translate certain radical ideas I’m familiar with into American constitutional language. They also illustrate something which is wrong with our society: nobody- Democrats, “Republicans,” or the NRA, adequately support the values that are behind it. The residue of the Second Amendment and its three prongs are like the archaeological shards of an ideal which our society destroyed, buried, and forgot about centuries ago, and we suffer mightily for not understanding them.

Many have commented on the curious wording of the Second Amendment,5 and some used to opine that the first clause, about militias, restricts the second, about guns. But what these commentators miss is that in the original draft language proposed by states, there was a second clause about a phenomenon which was unpopular at the time: “the standing army.”6

At the time the Constitution, and thereafter the Bill of Rights, were created, “standing armies” (professional armies maintained by the sovereign in peacetime), were unpopular. The American revolutionaries inherited this aversion from the British, who had had their own revolution in the preceding century. The British generally hated their country’s soldiers, viewed them as untrustworthy potential oppressors of the state, and called them “Redcoats”; Rudyard Kipling wrote a poem about it called “Tommy.” The feeling was so ingrained that during the American Revolution, the British Crown had to recruit Hessian mercenaries to fight in America.

Another argument against having a standing professional army in peacetime is that once the army exists, its members have to invent reasons for them to continue to have their jobs, so they travel the world stirring up unnecessary quarrels.

Personally, I loved the discovery that the authors of the Second Amendment opposed the military, because In my view, America’s extensive foreign military policy of the past 100 years (including World War I and the works of Theodore Roosevelt) are a huge part of what’s been wrong with our society.

Ultimately, the framers of the Constitution decided to permit a professional army, but the policy against a permanent standing army survived in the constitution, in the provision forbidding Congress from financing it for more than two years at a time.7
Society was not intended to be defended permanently by a professional army; instead, it was to be defended by “the entire people in arms,” that is, the “militia.” 

There was also a history of religious violence in Britain between religious groups, with some groups having been disarmed, so the framers wanted everyone to be able to have guns. 

Draft versions of the Second Amendment also contained the language that became the Third Amendment (no quartering of troops in homes); hence, three prongs.

       A Penumbra Unloved by Liberals and Conservatives Alike

The “militia” being the entire people in arms, and primarily responsible for the security of society, it was also thought that the militia would have the blessing of the founders if it became necessary to overthrow the government.8

This “right of revolution” was also associated with other aspects of the vision of the 18th century “republican” authors of what became the Second Amendment: in a society governed by civic virtue, and both united and equalized by arms, there would be relatively little economic disparity, because everyone must have a stake in the social order. And in a society in which the people are armed, and the government is not very well-armed, the government would rule with a much lighter touch:

When tyrants tremble in their fear
And hear their death knell ringing, 
When friends rejoice both far and near
How can I keep from singing?

No storm can shake my inmost calm,
While to that rock I’m clinging
Since love is lord of heaven and earth,
How can I keep from singing?

-Robert Wadsworth Lowry

I should add a recognition that the racist notions of some of those who authored the Second Amendment were evil; but I assume that the crimes against humanity they committed do not hopelessly doom the rest of their vision.

In a sense, then, Stephens and other liberal commentators are right: the notions associated with the Second Amendment do not match our society, causing important problems. In addition to the atrocities to which innocent children are so often exposed, there are at least two others.

First, we have a permanent standing army. Especially given the creation of our nuclear arsenal, it would be unlikely for Congress ever not to renew the biennial  financing for the U.S. military.9

Secondly, given the sophistication of the federal military’s armament, it would be inappropriately difficult for the people to overthrow the government.10

According to some, the realization of the Second Amendment as originally intended would be dangerous and inappropriate, because the American people lack the “civic virtue” anticipated by the 18th century “republicans.” 

The answer, according to one author, is to remake not the Constitution, but remake society to be like the society the framers envisioned, by building civic virtue.11

             What is to be Done?

Hence, we are led to an important question: do we want to reform the constitution, or to reform the body politic to more closely resemble the idealistic society the framers envisioned?

I say both. 

I generally favor constitutional amendment, because it reminds people that we are capable of self-organization; exercises in self-government build civic virtue.
And according to Stephens, we need constitutional change anyway: If society decides that we don’t want the Second Amendment, we have to change the constitution; if, on the other hand, we want a real Second Amendment, we still have to change it. 

We have to choose: do we want our society to have the power to overthrow the government? Stephens argues almost as if he believes it’s impossible that the federal government could ever commit a great evil (like Viet Nam).12 Or does he think that we should ignore it? Or that we should not be able to use violence against the state to redress such evil?

I told you earlier that I am a “meta-pacifist,” a category I invented. I believe it conceivable that people may discover a cure for violence, and I assume it would be a good thing, and make people more rational and benevolent. I also assume such an invention (peace) would be a greater contribution to the human project than another violent revolution. That’s what I work toward.

Because of the government’s violent potential, a pacifist might believe in getting rid of guns, but not by government fiat.

I am also in favor of abolishing nuclear weapons, but I don’t know how, or whether we should do so unilaterally. But whether abolishing our professional military is a good idea or not, it was one of two essential viewpoints that made our constitution.

And neither of these notions are articulated by either side- neither the gun abolitionists, nor the gun freedom advocates. You’re not likely to hear the NRA criticizing the U.S. military, and the “Republican” is really just a party of counterrevolutionary neoconservatives. As for the liberal Democrats, they are supposed to be the party that favors international peace and relief for the poor, but they too often run pro-Wall Street foreign policy hawks for president (and maybe next, even another billionaire).

I say a pox on both of their houses- but as far as innocent young people are concerned, we should spare no effort to spare them from the world’s brutality.

The vision of the 18th century “republicans” is not present in either major political party. In order to break the duopoly, we have to be willing to risk everything- by refusing to compromise, we run the risk of electing Trumps. In my view, we need a strong voice in our national polity that opposes our foreign policy and believes that we have a right to revolution, the way an 18th century “republican” would.

One way to restore the Right to Revolution: amend the constitution to abolish the police, and to prohibit our military from being within the borders of the United States. 

                   Conclusion

On the other hand, if society concludes that the Second Amendment is no longer workable, and we want to abolish the right to violent resistance and revolution, we should decide whether we need to do other things to recalibrate the machinery of the Constitution to assure a mix of liberty and security.

Without a real Second Amendment, what other constitutional protections could we possibly add that could ever replace a body politic united by love and virtue and capable of subduing evil without turning to the state for intervention?

Would you change the Second Am? If so, how?

In my opinion, it is unnecessary to do what Stephens says and repeal the Second Amendment, because according to Heller and McDonald, the personal right to self-defense under the Second Amendment is actually much more limited than our statutory gun laws.

Nonetheless there are other mismatches between the Second Amendment and our society, and we should reform both the Constitution and society.

Notes:

1 “To Repeat: Repeal the Second Amendment,” B. Stephens, New York Times, Feb. 16, 2018. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/16/opinion/repeat-repeal-second-amendment.html . This was actually the second time Stephens had made the argument; the first time was on Oct. 5.
2 “What about another 17 murdered souls, and their classmates and families, and the inability of today’s conservatives to offer anything except false bromides and empty prayers?” Id.
3 District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008). McDonald v Chicago, 561 U.S. 742 (2010).
4 “The Interactive Constitution: The Second Amendment’s meaning,” National Constitution Center staff,   February 19, 2018.https://constitutioncenter.org/blog/interactive-constitution-the-second-amendments-meaning
5 “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.”
6 See, for example, Vermont Constitution, 1777: “That the People have a Right to bear Arms, for the Defence of the themselves and the State: -And, as standing Armies, in the Time of Peace, are dangerous to Liberty, they ought not to be kept up; and that the military should be kept under strict Subordination to, and governed by, the civil Power.” See also other contemporary state constitutions. http://constitutionalrights.constitutioncenter.org/app/home/writing 
7 US CONST., art. !, s. 8, clause 12: “To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years[.]”
8 “The Embarrassing Second Amendment,” S. Levinson 99 Yale L.J. 637 (1989). https://www.firearmsandliberty.com/embar.html
9 “War and the Social Contract: Nuclear Policy, Distribution, and the Right to Bear Arms,” E. Scarry, 139 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1257 (1991).
10 “The Revolutionary Second Amendment,” B. McIntosh, 51 Ala. L. Rev. 673 (2000). Levinson (note 9 above) says that small arms alone would be sufficient to prevent the government from becoming tyrannical; McIntosh, on the other hand, says that the capabilities permitted by small arms would be sufficient for people to exercise the “right of resistance,” but not good enough to exercise the “right of revolution.”
11 “Civic Republicanism and the Citizen Militia: The Terrifying Second Amendment,” D. Williams, 
101 Yale L.J. 551 (1991).  
12 “I know what the objections to this argument will be. What about John Locke and Cesare Beccaria? What about the preservation of American liberties and the encroachments of bureaucratic liberal despotism? Right.” Stephens, n. 1, supra.