You can cast your vote and buy some ammo HERE
Well, nice to hear of at least one sane legal decision in the last while.
Wow. Matsch is a Nixon judge !
Federal Judicial Service:
Judge, U.S. District Court, District of Colorado
Nominated by Richard M. Nixon on January 31, 1974, to a seat vacated by Olin H. Chilson. Confirmed by the Senate on March 1, 1974, and received commission on March 8, 1974. Served as chief judge, 1994-2000. Assumed senior status on July 1, 2003.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge, District of Colorado, 1973-1974
Education:
University of Michigan, A.B., 1951
University of Michigan Law School, J.D., 1953
Professional Career:
U.S. Army, 1953-1955
Private practice, Denver, Colorado, 1956-1959, 1963-1965
Assistant U.S. attorney, District of Colorado, 1959-1961
Deputy city attorney, City and County of Denver, Colorado, 1961-1963
Referee in bankruptcy, District of Colorado, 1965-1973
Question: Sir, why do you have a pallet of 5.56 ammunition in your garage?
Answer: If Safeway puts yogurt on sale at a good price if you buy 5, do you buy only 3?
Question: But this is not yogurt.
Answer: Exactly. I can’t barter the yogurt that I don’t eat.
Just like a Liberal, seeking to enforce laws that don't exist, but they "feel it should".
Hmmm...just some honest clarity:
The company’s insurance paid the legal bills.
They cant donate moneys destined to reimburse the insurance company.
The company is donating their own $$.
It sounds lofty, but they could have donated their own $$ at any time...
Bump
In the matter of the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, and self defense, the left paints the picture of a world in which if the customer fails to meet the subjective qualifying criteria and personal opinion of a store, he has every right to decline to sell you something. Stores that violate this must be sued out of existence.
In the matter of same sex marriage, the left paints the picture of a world in which if the customer fails to meet the subjective qualifying criteria and personal opinion of the store, the store has no right to politely decline to sell them the item or service in question. Stores that violate this must be sued out of existence.
Matsch doesn’t screw around in his court. He is known to be very tough.