By Charles C. W. Cooke
Tuesday, March 03, 2026
During yesterday’s oral arguments in the case of United
States v. Hemani, Justice Neil Gorsuch posed a question that has not
typically been debated in detail at the Supreme Court: whether the Founding
Fathers of the United States were “all habitual drunkards.”
To casual observers this line of inquiry may have sounded
somewhat peculiar — or perhaps even rude. On the contrary: It was brilliant. At
stake in Hemani is the question of whether a person who is “an unlawful
user of or addicted to any controlled substance” can, by virtue of that habit,
be generally banned from purchasing, possessing, and carrying firearms. At
present, under 18 U.S.C. Section 922(g)(3), they can. But, in recent years this
provision has come under attack — including in recent cases heard by the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas and the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, both of which held that it is unconstitutional
when used to charge someone who regularly uses drugs but has not been shown to
have used them while in possession of a weapon.
Summing up the practical case for the rule, Justice Elena
Kagan suggested that “when reality dissolves, you don’t want guns around.” But,
while entirely defensible in a vacuum, this is not in fact the relevant legal
standard. Under the 2022 Bruen decision, the relevant legal standard is
whether, historically, any laws in the United States deprived individuals of
their right to keep and bear arms on the grounds that they were “addicted to a
controlled substance.” The answer to this question is that no such laws existed
— and, moreover, that there were no “controlled substances,” in the
legal sense of that term, until the mid-to-late 19th century. This being so, Bruen
obliges the government to reason by analogy and to find “relevantly similar”
laws to the one that it is defending in Court. To achieve this, it is all but
forced to examine the regulation of booze.
It is true that, historically, America has hosted laws
that sought to separate drunkards and drug users from their weapons. Crucially,
though, these separations were invariably temporary. An armed man who was
visibly hammered in the streets could be disarmed and thrown in a cell to sober
up. But he was given back his gun the next morning. Likewise, the taverns and
saloons that required patrons to check their firearms at the door returned them
when the customer left. Simply being a drinker — whether casually or to excess
— was not sufficient grounds for exclusion. If the use and the possession
coincided, the government could act. If they did not, it was powerless. As the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas concluded, the
“statutes” that the government points to as evidence of its historical
authority do indeed “bar the use of firearms by intoxicated people,” but “the
violation of these statutes only results in fines and imprisonment — not
disarmament” on an ongoing basis.
Hence Gorsuch’s unassailable question. One can quibble
with the exact amounts at hand, but the answer to “Were the Founders a bunch of
drunkards?” is unequivocally “yes.” The plaintiff in Hemani was
prosecuted after he told the authorities that he used marijuana every other
day. Does that constitute an “addiction” — a term that is never defined in the
statute? If so, one might have expected to find some similar rules governing
alcohol — rules that did not apply temporarily, but that foreclosed the
possibility of gun ownership to anyone who constantly imbibed. As Justice
Gorsuch noted, if Hemani was “addicted,” then so, surely, were the Founders.
The record shows that “James Madison reportedly drank a pint of whiskey every
day,” and that Thomas Jefferson, who “said he wasn’t much a user of alcohol . .
. had three or four glasses of wine a night.” Indeed, two nights before the end
of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, 55 attendees repaired to the City Tavern, where, on George Washington’s
tab, they “drank 54 bottles of Madeira, 60 bottles of Claret, 8 bottles of
Whiskey, 22 bottles of Porter, 8 bottles of Hard Cider, 12 of Beer and seven
bowls of Alcoholic Punch.” These, lest we forget, were the men who debated,
wrote, and enforced the Second Amendment, the many state-level equivalents that
preceded and succeeded it, and the majority of the statutes that filled the law
books of the original 13 colonies. Evidently, none of them expected to be
disarmed or to disarm their similarly “addicted” peers.
Permanently depriving a person of an enumerated
constitutional right is supposed to be difficult. Under existing Supreme Court
precedent, the federal government is permitted to do so in connection with the
Second Amendment only in such instances as it can point to a “historical
tradition of firearm regulation” that is consistent with its present
administration. In Hemani, the government fails in that task — and all
because the founding generation comprised a bunch of hearty libertarian
sponges.
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