And so it begins.
The NRA is calling for judicial legislation. Shameful.
Thats odd, it seems like they think the first amendment and it’s “no establishment of religion” clause, sure as hell applies to cities and states.
And it seems like 5th amendment cases are routinely enforced against municipal and state police departments.
This after the US Supreme Court Heller decision, unfreakinbelievable!
The USSC needs to not only reverse this decision, it needs to come down hard on the 7th circuit judges who ignored their decision to drive this point home to the hardest heads in the federal and state judiciary, the 2nd protects the people from ALL governments at EVERY level that try to disarm them.
MOLWN LABE!
What???? I ain't no constitutional scholar but did the SCOTUS recently rule *exactly* the opposite in the Heller case?
Lawyers...enlighten me here.
I’ll ask this [rhetorical] question again: Why is it so all fired important at this point in the nation’s history to chip away at our basic right of self defense?
Why is it so hard to understand that restricting the rights of the Law-abiding only empowers the criminal element of society?
The Heller decision defined the right of ALL Americans to self defense under the 2nd. Nordyke v. Alameda County decision by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, basically incorporated the 2nd Amendment.
So what is missing from this conversation? The NRA is doing exactly what it's supposed to do, defend the right of free Americans to possess the tools for self defense.
The various courts have already defined it as an individual right, not a collective one. And the Ninth's decision says there cannot be selective laws from one place to another.
So why is this debate on this thread going any further?
I’m glad I live in a state that has enacted robust constitutional protections that make such opinions irrelevant where I live. Heller gives me the space I need from the federal government. At the state and local levels I don’t think it’s a good idea to have to rely on any branch of the federal government to step in to define and defend my right to keep and bear arms.
The Seventh Circuit got it wrong. As the Supreme Court said in last year's landmark Heller decision, the Second Amendment is an individual right that belongs to all Americans'. Therefore, we are taking our case to the highest court in the land, said Chris W. Cox, NRA chief lobbyist.
An excerpt from their news release
Advice to the reader:
you can cruise though reading this thread a lot quicker if
you ignore any message that is either to or from mojave
and you will not miss anything important.
The 7th circuit is flagging their nose at the SCOTUS.