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The document in question is a letter from Robert Morris of Pennsylvania to Charlie Munson, a Lansing farmer of his acquaintance. "At last you need not overheet while tilling your feelds," Morris Wrote in a letter dated May 26, 1787. "For this day we have voted a right to bear arms. However, you may still not remove your shirt entirely from your person."
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But, after a copy of the letter was posted on the Internet this morning by an unknown source, historians are already weighing in. Cornell historian Stephen Phoots says the handwriting clearly matches other documents known to have been penned by Morris. "Because of the social stigma attached to any exposed skin it would have been necessary to codify it," Phoots says. "Without the protection of the law farmers could find themselves in the public stocks when they needed to be in their fields, sleeves rolled up, harvesting their crops."
"This find will put Lansing on the National Historical Register," says Lansing Town Supervisor Steve Farkas. "We plan to sell sleeveless shirts with 'The Right To Bare Arms" printed on them. With Internet sales I am sure we can entirely pay for the upcoming sewer project and reduce Town taxes by at least 63%."
"If this document is authenticated it will have far reaching implications for every second amendment decision this court has ever made," said Chief Justice John G. Roberts in his Supreme Court office this morning. All anti-gun control decisions will have to be repealed.
Bement says experts from Washington will visit Lansing over the next several weeks to view and authenticate the document. Meanwhile Town officials claim the letter as a vindication of their policy of preserving farm land in North Lansing.
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