Rights exist that are far more important than than those stated in the Constitution.
Does anyone deny that we have "rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"? Well, those are stated nowhere in the Constitution. Why is that do you suppose?
You have a right of travel. To say otherwise is to say we are serfs. And if we have a right to travel that means we have a right to travel using the technology available today.
Are you saying that it was okay to say to a medieval peasant, "Sure, you can travel wherever you want. But you have no right to use a horse or a cart to carry yourself or your stuff. You can only travel with what you can carry on your back and in your hands"?
Yes, there are going to be times that even these "unalienable" rights have to be infringed in the name of some larger good. But not willy-nilly, and not just because there's some abstract policy interest in "safety". You want to modify a right stated in the Constitution, you have a really big burden of proof, bigger than just getting a majority in Congress, bigger than just some executive order. And, IMO, if you want to restrain a right that exists even without the Constitution, you have an even bigger one.
Signed,
In Agreement With Thomas Paine
Originally Posted by: Wade