"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated..."
From the article:
During the first Republican presidential debate of the 2016 election cycle, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky stood out a bit when he cited America’s second president.
It came during a heated exchange with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie about how much government intrusiveness was needed to keep Americans safe from terrorism.
"I want to collect more records from terrorists, but less records from innocent Americans," said Paul, who has been a leading voice in his party for privacy from government intrusion. "The Fourth Amendment was what we fought the Revolution over. John Adams said it was the spark that led to our war for independence, and I'm proud of standing for the Bill of Rights, and I will continue to stand for the Bill of Rights."
During the first Republican presidential debate of the 2016 election cycle, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky stood out a bit when he cited America’s second president.
It came during a heated exchange with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie about how much government intrusiveness was needed to keep Americans safe from terrorism.
"I want to collect more records from terrorists, but less records from innocent Americans," said Paul, who has been a leading voice in his party for privacy from government intrusion. "The Fourth Amendment was what we fought the Revolution over. John Adams said it was the spark that led to our war for independence, and I'm proud of standing for the Bill of Rights, and I will continue to stand for the Bill of Rights."
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Therefore, any store owner that puts up a sign forbidding me from keeping or bearing arms is violating my 2nd amendment rights.
Gotta get with the times you are arguing history.
According to the historical record the "bloodshed" at Lexington occurred about 5AM. The battle at the North Bridge in Concord occurred between 9 and 10AM, 4 to 5 hours later. The minutemen consisted of well-organized companies from the numerous surrounding towns, which descended on Concord after having been alerted, according to plan. They were not "passive observers" and their preparations and actions were not "irrelevant to the start of the war". Several companies took positions and maneuvered on the hillside at the Buttrick farm overlooking the North Bridge, almost 500 men total. Sixty two of them were from Lincoln, the town between Lexington and Concord, and they did know that there had been "bloodshed" at Lexington.
The British did not turn back after Lexington because the plan was to go to Concord as the main objective and they had not been stopped at Lexington by Captain Parker's band of 60-70 men against 300-400 British. The British went through, and had planned to go through, Lexington on the way to Concord. The First and Second Provincial Congresses had just been held in Concord. The last meeting before the battle had just adjourned 4 days earlier. Concord was the center of revolutionary activity and organizing. The British hoped to capture leaders like John Hancock, President of the Provincial Congress, in Lexington, but were headed to Concord, where the main supplies were stored and where they especially hoped to capture Colonel Barret, the local head of the minutemen.
That is why the Revolution began at the North Bridge in Concord when it did, as a result of the British escalation marching on Concord -- and the preparations and courage of those fought back despite their lack of military experience.
The minutemen at the North Bridge knew of casualties at Lexington and thought their homes in the town were being burned (the smoke came from "bonfires of military stores"). That was the trigger that caused them to start down the hill from the Buttrick farm towards the British on the other side of the bridge, required to get into the town to defend it. After a volley of fire from the British wounding one minuteman came the command: "Fire, for God's sake, fire".
Lexington and Concord have been arguing over where the war started ever since. But it was all one event with the British escalation of marching out to Lexington and Concord to capture leaders and destroy military supplies. The minutemen had known they were coming and were prepared for it (many of the supplies had already been hidden), but didn't know when until the Paul Revere alert. The result, in some form, had been inevitable before the British left Boston.
Paul Revere's ride (and others by different routes that arrived much later) from Boston was to confirm that the British had left Boston for Concord. He arrived in Lexington before the British did and continued on to Concord with two others, Prescott and Dawes, who knew the local woods. Prescott lived in Concord. All three were confronted by British in Lincoln (between Lexington and Concord) but got away. Prescott was the first to escape, not being captured at all, and continued to Concord to deliver the news of the British forces on the way. They heard the volley of shots in Lexington, but didn't know the details.
There are several dramatic stories published on the battle at Lexington and Concord, but two excellent scholarly accounts are:
Frank Warren Coburn, The Battle of April 19, 1775 in Lexington, Concord, Lincoln, Arlington, Cambridge, Somerville and Charlestown, Massachusetts, 1912 and
Allen French, The Day of Concord and Lexington, 1925.
As I posted recently to FB:
If somebody busts into a house in the middle of the night without presenting a warrant and gets shot, they are not a hero or a victim of anything. The entire purpose of getting a warrant is to present a warrant. A warrant that authorizes its own non-presentation violates both the spirit and the letter of the 4th amendment.
It's like the Seinfeld bit about the car rental agency. You know how to take the reservation, you just don't know how to keep it. And keeping it is the most important part of the reservation.
Except in this case, the police know how to obtain the warrant, they just don't seem to know how to present it. And presenting it is the entire purpose of the warrant.
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