Posted on 07/19/2014 7:12:34 AM PDT by marktwain
The first and second amendments of the Bill of Rights are essential for supporting each other. The first amendment is essential to support the second, while the second amendment provides the means to protect the first. It is clear that the open carry of firearms is itself a strong political message. Openly carrying a gun is protected political speech.
In Texas, open carry activists have been pushing hard to have the right to open carry modern handguns restored. It was lost during reconstruction when the carpet bagger government rewrote the state constitution. Open carry activists have participated in hundreds, perhaps as many as a thousand open carry walks or demonstrations throughout the state, educating the public and being smeared in a media campaign by the Bloomberg machine designed to blunt their success.
Local elites sometimes oppose open carry, even in Texas. In Arlington, the local government started to enforce an ordinance that forbid demonstrators from handing out literature to people in vehicles on the public streets.
The ordinance dated from 1994, and had not been enforced before the open carry movement.
Kory Watkins and Open Carry Tarrant County filed suit against the City of Arlington for violation of their first amendment rights and filed for a preliminary Injunction and Temporary Restraining Order on May 28th, 2014. The City of Arlington argued against the injunction and restraining order.
On July 14, 2014, the United States District Court found for Kory Watkins and Open Carry Tarrant County. The City of Arlington will have to cease enforcement of the ordinance while the lawsuit is in progress. In order to reach this finding, the judge found that it was likely that Watkins and Open Carry Tarrant County would prevail in their lawsuit.
The decision runs to 26 pages of tightly argued case law. Here is the summation at the beginning of the decision:
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The decision makes it clear that the City Ordinance violates the first amendment. I will be surprised if the City does not settle soon. It would cut their losses. They have nothing to gain from prolonging this law suit, but then, they are spending other people's money.
Before the Court are Plaintiffs Combined Application for Preliminary Injunction and Temporary Restraining Order and Memorandum in Support (ECF Nos. 5-6), filed May 28, 2014;Defendants Response and Brief in Opposition (ECF No. 11), filed June 2, 2014; and Plaintiffs Reply (ECF No. 13), filed June 5, 2014. Plaintiffs seek injunctive relief preventing the enforcement of the City of Arlingtons ordinance prohibiting interactions between pedestrians and occupants of vehicles at particular intersections in Arlington, asserting the ordinance unconstitutionally prohibits Plaintiffs free speech rights. Having reviewed the motion, the briefing, and the applicable law, the Court finds that Plaintiffs motion should be and is hereby GRANTED.
Watkins testified that in the past year he has personally been on over 200 walks and has organized and been a part of [h]undreds and hundreds of walks and, to his knowledge, nobody has ever been hurt or cited for impeding traffic.
See id.
I have known that Texas open carry activists were, well, active. I did not know the extent of the activity. Hundreds, perhaps more than a thousand open carry walks and demonstrations all over the state. No wonder they are having a positive effect. With that amount of activity, I am not surprised that the Bloomberg media campaign was able to find a photograph to demonize the open carriers. No one can be perfect 100 percent of the time.
at 3-4. He stated that the only time anyone has been cited for something were the two individuals cited for violations of the previous version of Section 15.02.
Id. at 4.
They are there to protect us from GOVERNMENT. They are needed now more than ever because GOVERNMENT is now our enemy.
And Texas will show the way! Love this! And, of course, they can never let up, because the left never will either. They are seemingly tireless.
Some people are terrified at the sight of a gun of any kind. We were deer hunting in south Texas and we were still working on our hunting camp. The first night down there we stayed at a hotel in Laredo and were going out the next morning to get our camp ready for us to stay there.
The next morning we all came down in the elevator, 6 people all carrying rifles. The elevator door open and 3 people were waiting to go up. When they saw all our guns they gasp for breath and I was afraid they were going to pass out from fear. A funny memory (for us) and one that still makes me (evil hunter) smile.
I’m all for open carry—to a certain extent.
As a woman, there are times when a gun just doesn’t look all that good with a nice dress, for instance.
In my perfect world, we would have the right to choose whether to carry concealed or openly.
It is not permissible to allow other people’s fears to trump our rights.
If that were the case, then anyone could violate any other persons rights at will, simply by claiming that they “fear” whatever the other person is doing that they wish to stop.
For example, someone fight “fear” a black person eating in a restaurant near them.
Glad you had fun on your Texas hunt.
Without the Second, none of the others are enforceable.
Thanks for the great bumper sticker idea: Your Fears Do Not Trump My Rights!
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