Greece, Rome, and the Bill of Rights (60 page)

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Authors: Susan Ford Wiltshire

Tags: #Political Science, #General, #History, #Law, #Reference, #Civil Rights, #test

BOOK: Greece, Rome, and the Bill of Rights
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117. Guterman,
Religious Toleration
, p. 140.

 

page_205<br/>
Page 205
118. Tony Honoré,
Emperors and Lawyers
(London: Gerald Duckworth, 1981), pp. viiix.
119. Honoré,
Emperors and Lawyers
, p. 6.
120. Honoré,
Emperors and Lawyers
, p. 33.
121. Cicero,
Pro Sestio
106.
122. Cornelius Fronto,
Ad M. Antoninum de eloquentia
2.7. The entire passage, quoted in Fergus Millar,
The Emperor in the Roman World
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 203, gives an insight into at least one contemporary's view of imperial duties:
page_206<br/>
Page 206
Washington. (See Freedman,
Privilege to Keep and Bear Arms
, pp. 2829.)
7. Alabama constitution, Article I, Section 26.
8. Arizona constitution, Article II, Section 26.
9. States subscribing to the collective right theory are Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, and Wyoming. (See Freedman,
Privilege to Keep and Bear Arms
, pp. 2930.)
10. Ohio constitution, Article I, Section 4.
11. Tennessee constitution, Article I, Section 26.
12. The arguments against handguns need no reiteration here. In a speech to an annual meeting of the American Bar Association in August 1988, former justice Lewis Powell of the United States Supreme Court clarified the danger posed by possession of handguns. He said that the FBI reported 20,613 murders in 1986, 60 percent of which were committed with firearms. In England and Wales, by contrast, where firearms are strictly regulated, there were only 662 homicides in 1986, of which only 8 percent were committed with firearms.
American Bar Association Journal
(October 1, 1988), p. 30.
13. Edward F. Feighan, "A Way to Control Handguns,"
New York Times
(April 15, 1987), p. A27.
14. Jean Bethke Elshtain,
Women and War
(New York: Basic Books, 1987), pp. 4950.
15. Elshtain,
Women and War
, p. 53.
16. Plato,
Republic
8.555D (tr. Cornford).
17. Plato,
Republic
8.557AB (tr. Comford).

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