The most comprehensive collection of source documents from the founders, constitutional law scholars, and the courts on the U.S. constitution's Second Amendment. Explains point-by-point exactly how and why the Second Amendment protects the individual human right of each and every civilian to keep arms and bear arms for self-defense, hunting, etc. inside and outside the home. Explains exactly how and why the tenth amendment limits the government's powers to those mentioned in article one, section eight, i.e. explains why the government's power to regulate interstate commerce does not include the power to disarm individuals. This does not contain my books--Individualism, American Documents, Ethics, Wisdom and Strategy, etc. ------------------------------------ Editorial (this is an editorial review of the paperback abridged version): Library Dittmer, a citizen expert who is not a historian or legal scholar, has collected here historical documents, philosophical treatises, and legal opinions pertaining to the origins and history of the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, the right to bear arms. Dittmer's coverage extends from the 17th century to recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. In his commentary, Dittmer takes an expansive view of the amendment. He ranks the right to bear arms as fundamental and places it in the context of the First, Tenth, and 14th amendments. As the right is an individual and collective privilege, Dittmer argues, it should not be subject to restriction by taxation or regulation. He plainly espouses the libertarian, "pro" view that the amendment protects every individual's right to own guns for all legal uses in and outside the home. VERDICT This title will appeal to gun rights advocates and those interested in immersing themselves in the documentary background of the Second Amendment debate.—Mark Jones, Mercantile Lib., Cincinnati -----------------------------------