Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

May 20th, 2010 | Free Speech, Law as a reflection of its society, Law Enforcement, Legal education, legal history, Legal News, The evolution of law

A lesson for Rand Paul in the differences between the Constitution and statutory law

In the interview below with Rachel Maddow, Rand Paul is taking the position that got Robert Bork’s nomination to the Supreme Court rejected — that the federal government in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 should not have outlawed private businesses open to the public from discriminating based on race.

Moreover, he is just plain wrong to suggest that the impact of the Civil Rights Act on private businesses is the same as the impact gun rights advocates argue the 2d Amendment to the Constitution should have — Paul says those gun rights activists are arguing that private businesses, including restaurants, do not have the right to ban them from carrying guns inside those businesses.

He’s just plain wrong because the Constitution only bans discrimination based on race by government, and it only protects the right to bear arms against restrictions imposed by the government. It is a statute passed by Congress – the Civil Rights Act of 1964 — that bans private businesses open to the public from discriminating based on race. There is no such statute requiring private businesses to restrict one’s right to bear arms.

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