Quote: Chief Justice Warren Burger on the Second Amendment

When reading an article in the recent issue (June 5) of The New York Review of Books I came across a great quote from the conservative Chief Justice Warren Burger, who opposed the NRA individual rights version of the Second Amendment, claiming that it “has been the subject of one of the greatest pieces of fraud, I repeat the word ‘fraud,’ on the American public by special interest groups that I have ever seen in my lifetime.” Of course this version has been legitimized by the Supreme Court’s 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller. It’s hard to justify this position historically but Justice Scalia insists that his decision reflects the original intent of the framers, although the decision does allow for restrictions on this “individual” right.

I would also recommend reading Cass R. Sunstein’s article, where I got this quote. He reviews the former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens’ new book (Six Amendments: How and Why We Should Change the Constitution).

Anniversary of Tiananmen Square Protests and Crackdown

Today marks the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre of Chinese citizens who had gathered at Tiananmen Square to protest government policies. The New York Times‘ Nicholas Kristof was there and recalls his memories of the event in today’s paper (“The Turning Point That Wasn’t”). I highly recommend watching Krisof’s video and his interview with Natalie Kitroeff. There is also another great article on the topic in today’s The New York Times (“Tiananmen Square: Forgotten”). This article explains how the event has been largely forgotten in China.

The Massacre at Srebrenica: What Does the Situation Look Like Almost Twenty Years Later?

It had been a long time since I had thought about Srebrenica or the war in Bosnia, so when I saw Scott Anderson’s article in The New York Times Magazine (“Life in the Valley of Death”) this past weekend I was hoping for an optimistic update. I should have known better. It is difficult to heal from such traumatic events. The war in Bosnia had been raging since 1992 and the Bosniak refugees in the so-called UN protected “safe area” of Srebrenica were war weary, homeless, and hungry long before Ratko Mladic and his Bosnian Serb army showed up in July 1995. The massacre of 8,000 men at Srebrenica that followed was the beginning of the end of the Serbian campaign of ethnic cleansing. The elimination of the Muslim island in the Serbian sea opened the way for the peace talks at Dayton, Ohio that November. Continue reading