Posted on 09/24/2020 7:40:23 PM PDT by rogerantone1
It has been 10 years since the court has heard any gun control cases. In the meantime, circuit courts controlled by Democrats (with jurisdiction over 24 states, plus D.C.) have approved even the most draconian state gun control regulations.
(Excerpt) Read more at realclearpolitics.com ...
Does she blend in with the curtains?
“Someday son, all this will be yours.”
“What? The curtains?”
“No, not the curtains!”
gratuitous monty python skit reference
:-)
kind of a weak back handed argument in favor of acb by lott imho.
i just hope he is right.
hopefully we will get a nominee who will preserve the sanctity of the ballot box for the short term.
continue to hold off on 2a cases until trump gets another bite of the USSC nominee apple during his second term.
this presumes we are not all preoccupied with CWII by that time.
We do not have a 2nd amendment in California.
I blame the spineless John Roberts and by extension Bush.
Equal protection under the law?
Not in America.
It’s very simple. You stay here and guard him until I get back.
Good.
The Right to Life, The First Amendment, and The Second Amendment are things that any nominee must embrace.
Good.
I want the hughs act repealed and I wanna buy a minigun out of a vending machine.
Anything less is infringement, PERIOD.
Agreed. It's revolting here.
I would go for the last one named by Trump on September 9; to wit, Kate Comerford Todd (click here). Read about her:
https://www.freedomworks.org/content/meet-women-most-likely-replace-ruth-bader-ginsburg
Excerpt (my bolding to key elements of the description):
Todd, a graduate of Harvard Law School, is the only member of this shortlist who has no judicial experience. During her education, she was editor of Harvard Law Review. She served as a partner at Wiley Rein, a prominent D.C. law firm before entering government work in 2009. She has also clerked for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. .So far, she hasn't been tainted by the process of compromises one becomes accustomed to whilst rising up through the ranks of competing for judgeships. Going straight from being Donald's advisor directly to the Supremes, she could enter that level without having been compromised already by the foregoing process. Something worth thinking about.
By the fact that she has never had judicial experience, she has a very miniscule paper trail on judicial philosophy and opinion. However, those who know her describe her as very dedicated to her principles and to judicial originalism. According to Adam Morata, I think the first person that I ever met, other than Justice Thomas, who I realized fully embodied that principle is Kate [Todd], he said I've never seen her back down on an issue of principle. I've never seen her compromise her principles. He added, On issues of right or wrong, or on issues of what the law is or isn't, there is no moving her.
She has publicly decried the excessive executive regulation of businesses, calling it terrible at a Federalist Society event. Her legal record has a decidedly pro-business trend and that is also reflected from her time at the U.S. Chamber Litigation Center.
Todd was added to the list of potential Supreme Court nominees on September 9, 2020 by President Trump.
Read this:
Wrong choice President Trump, Catholic never Trumpers will not care when they take her down and you along with it. Put your trust in the Cuban community and they will save your presidency like they did for Bush.
Trust your instincts.
“Once in love with Amy,
Tear up your list,
It’s Amy!!!”
l8r
For those of you who can understand...
If you scroll down to where it says, Barrett, Circuit Judge, dissenting and read through it very carefully, youll see that its not what others claimed it to be.
https://casetext.com/case/kanter-v-barr
Read more carefully, the language around “weapons or activities” and “arms and activities.” Also note the references to Heller and Volokh.
Kavanaugh wrote against an assault weapons ban. If you read that document, you’ll see the differences in interpretation of the Constitution. I’ll try to find it again when time allows.
https://www.politico.com/f/?id=00000174-572b-d057-a37d-7fef3ec60000
Barrett is a statist. Read her findings along with her two cohorts. This is who she is.
Why the hell would anyone live in commiefornia? I don’t care what the salary is, if you’re not communist RUN
Fortunately, I have a copy of the entire thing right here. There are exactly 3 times the word "activities" is used. All are contained in the following paragraph.
In my view, the latter is the better way to approach the problem. It is one thing to say that certain weapons or activities fall outside the scope of the right. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 627 (2008) (explaining that the sorts of weapons protected were those in common use at the time (citation omitted)); Ezell v. City of Chicago, 846 F.3d 888, 892 (7th Cir. 2017) (Ezell II) ([I]f ... the challenged law regulates activity falling outside the scope of the right as originally understood, then the regulated activity is categorically unprotected, and the law is not subject to further Second Amendment review. (citation omitted)); Ezell v. City of Chicago, 651 F.3d 684, 702 (7th Cir. 2011) (Ezell I) (drawing an analogy between categories of speech, like obscenity, that fall outside the First Amendment and activities that fall outside the Second Amendment). It is another thing to say that certain people fall outside the Amendments scope. Arms and activities would always be in or out. But a person could be in one day and out the next: the moment he was convicted of a violent crime or suffered the onset of mental illness, his rights would be stripped as a self-executing consequence of his new status. No state action would be required.
I really don't see much there. Anything "in common use" would certainly apply to the AR platform, and the associated standard magazines.
So, lets look at references to "Volokh"... (I quote as much as required for context)
The following paragraph actually immediately precedes the paragraph above
At the outset, it is worth clarifying a conceptual point. There are competing ways of approaching the constitutionality of gun dispossession laws. Some maintain that there are certain groups of peoplefor example, violent felonswho fall entirely outside the Second Amendments scope. See, e.g., Binderup v. Attorney Gen. U.S., 836 F.3d 336, 357 (3d Cir. 2016) (en banc) (Hardiman, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgments) ([T]he Founders understood that not everyone possessed Second Amendment rights. These appeals require us to decide who count among the people entitled to keep and bear arms.). Others maintain that all people have the right to keep and bear arms but that history and tradition support Congresss power to strip certain groups of that right. See Eugene Volokh, Implementing the Right to Keep and Bear Arms for Self-Defense: An Analytical Framework and a Research Agenda, 56 UCLA L. REV. 1443, 1497 98 (2009) (describing these competing views). These approaches will typically yield the same result; one uses history and tradition to identify the scope of the right, and the other uses that same body of evidence to identify the scope of the legislatures power to take it away.
The following is from the section discussing the ratification of the 2nd Amendment...
Several things bear emphasis here. First, none of the relevant limiting language made its way into the Second Amendment. Second, only New Hampshires proposalthe least restrictive of the threeeven carried a majority of its convention. See 2 SCHWARTZ, supra, at 628, 675, 758. Third, proposals from other states that advocated a constitutional right to arms did not contain similar language of limitation or exclusion. See Kates, 82 MICH. L. REV. at 222 (citing 1 ELLIOT , supra, at 328, 335). And finally, similar limitations or exclusions do not appear in any of the four parallel state constitutional provisions enacted before ratification of the Second Amendment. See Eugene Volokh, State Constitutional Rights to Keep and Bear Arms, 11 TEX. REV. L. & POL. 191, 208 (2006) (North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Massachusetts). All that said, these proposals may indicate some common if imprecise understanding at the Founding regarding the boundaries of a right to keep and bear arms. Marshall, 32 H ARV. J.L. & PUB. POLY at 713. And at a minimum, the fact that they are routinely invoked in support of blanket felon disarmament makes it necessary to consider them.
Another Volokh mention, arguing against the idea that any felon should be disarmed merely because he is a felon...
Slaves and Native Americans, on the other hand, were thought to pose more immediate threats to public safety and stability and were disarmed as a matter of course. See MALCOLM, supra, at 14041; WINKLER, supra, at 11516 (noting forcible disarmament out of fear that these groups would use guns to revolt or otherwise threaten the public safety); DECONDE, supra, at 2122 (noting anxiety that slaves would rebel). And this practice of keeping guns out of the hands of distrusted groups continued after the Revolution. For example, many states even constitutionalized the disarmament of slaves and Native Americans. See Volokh, 11 TEX. REV. L. & POL. at 20809. 7
In sum, founding-era legislatures categorically disarmed groups whom they judged to be a threat to the public safety. But neither the convention proposals nor historical practice supports a legislative power to categorically disarm felons because of their status as felons.
Another mention...
State constitutions protecting the right to bear arms do not follow a similar pattern. Between 1790 and 1820, nine states enacted their own right-to-arms provisions in their constitutions. See Volokh, 11 TEX. REV. L. & POL. at 20809 (four more had enacted such provisions prior to 1790). None of those provisions made an exception for criminals. Id. And notably, seven of those nine states explicitly excluded or authorized the exclusion of certain criminals from the right to vote. Compare id. (identifying Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Mississippi, Connecticut, Alabama, and Missouri as seven of the nine states with right-to-arms provisions in their constitutions by 1820), with KEYSSAR, supra, at tbl. A.7 (the same seven state constitutions specifically excluded certain criminals from the right to vote). The same pattern held true in 1857. Compare Volokh, 11 TEX. REV. L. & POL. at 20910, with KEYSSAR, supra, at tbl. A.7. There is no basis, then, for assuming that a virtue requirement on the right to vote applies equally to the right to keep and bear arms. See Binderup, 836 F.3d at 372 (Hardiman, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgments) (We have found no historical evidence on the public meaning of the right to keep and bear arms indicating that virtuousness was a limitation on ones qualification for the rightcontemporary insistence to the contrary falls somewhere between guesswork and ipse dixit.).12
There are so many references to Heller, I'd have to post the whole thing. I do not see what it is that you are complaining about.
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