
The recent Supreme Court ruling upholding the Biden administration’s regulations on so-called “ghost guns” is a dangerous step toward eroding the Second Amendment. These homemade firearms, which have been legally manufactured by individuals for centuries, are now being subjected to burdensome regulations that redefine what constitutes a firearm. The ruling in Garland v. VanDerStok represents a fundamental misunderstanding of the Constitution and the historical rights of Americans to build their own weapons.
Manufacturing Firearms: A Right, Not Just a Commercial Practice
The ability to manufacture firearms has never been limited solely to commercial entities. Throughout American history, citizens have had the right to craft their own firearms without government interference. The Supreme Court’s decision now treats this as a regulated commercial practice rather than an individual liberty. This ruling does not align with the original intent of the Second Amendment, which guarantees the right to “keep and bear arms”—a right that extends to making those arms.
How the Supreme Court Got It Wrong
The Court’s majority opinion claims that kits allowing individuals to assemble firearms quickly fall within the regulatory scope of the ATF. However, this interpretation oversteps congressional authority and contradicts previous rulings that emphasize a historical approach to gun regulation. The Firearm Owners’ Protection Act of 1986 and the Gun Control Act of 1968 did not intend for the federal government to regulate individual gun-making activities in this way. Justice Clarence Thomas, in his dissent, correctly pointed out that the ATF was never given the power to regulate firearm parts or objects that could be “readily converted” into firearms. By allowing this new definition, the Supreme Court has set a precedent that could allow further encroachments on gun rights.
The Slippery Slope of Gun Control
The decision to classify gun kits as firearms is an arbitrary expansion of government power. If an unassembled kit is a firearm, what stops regulators from going after individual parts or even raw materials that could be used to make a gun? This ruling opens the door for more intrusive policies that undermine the Second Amendment under the guise of public safety. The reality is that most gun crimes are committed with traditionally manufactured firearms, not homemade ones, making this ruling more about restricting lawful gun owners than stopping criminals.
A Call to Action
Americans must push back against judicial overreach and demand that Congress and state legislatures reaffirm the rights of individuals to make their own firearms. The right to bear arms is meaningless if citizens cannot legally obtain or manufacture them. As we have seen throughout history, government overreach in gun regulation is rarely reversed without active opposition.
The Supreme Court had an opportunity to uphold constitutional principles, but instead, it chose to allow bureaucratic overreach to dictate new firearm restrictions. This fight is far from over, and gun owners must stay vigilant to protect their rights.
