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<![CDATA[Bruen decision]]>

Legislators considering Constitution before passing laws? THE HORROR

March 23, 2023 by Tom Knighton Leave a Comment

When laws are challenged, they’re challenged on constitutional grounds. Is this law in keeping with the Constitution or is this a case of legislative overreach?

In fact, lawmakers are supposed to at least consider such things before passing laws. After all, they swear to support and defend the Constitution, which one would imagine requires them to consider it at a minimum before passing some bill.

But it seems that the folks at the Huffington Post are upset that lawmakers are considering court rulings before passing gun control. They made this pretty clear recently.

In fact, they’re so upset, they said it all over again.

Left In The Legislative Lurch

Eight more states have laws similar to California’s assault weapons ban that could be affected if the Supreme Court ultimately weighs in.

The expectation that these laws may be doomed is already complicating the politics of passing new ones like them.

In New Mexico, Democratic Gov. Michelle Luján Grisham has repeatedly urged the legislature to send her an assault weapons ban to sign this session, but lawmakers tabled the effort — partly over concerns that it wouldn’t withstand scrutiny in federal court.

“There’s absolutely no point to passing new laws which federal courts will strike down and which are clearly going to be deemed unconstitutional,” state Sen. Joseph Cervantes, a Democrat, tweeted last month.

With those lawsuits still playing out, the future of gun policy remains in flux. But that legal panorama makes it hard to imagine clear lanes for reform in the near future.

“We’re in a very difficult spot with that Bruen ruling,” said Miranda Viscoli, co-president of New Mexicans to Prevent Gun Violence. “Even though it was only about concealed carry, it’s just made everybody afraid who wants to pass common sense gun violence prevention legislation.”

Now, in fairness, this is only one part of a much longer piece lamenting the rulings and the impact they’re having on gun control.

Still, it’s interesting that they’re still complaining about states not passing gun control because they figure it’ll be tossed by the courts.

I’m sorry, that’s not a bug. It’s a feature.

Huffington Post can be big mad all they want, but the truth of the matter is that gun control isn’t constitutional. The author tries to get hung up on the militia clause at one point–a matter that has been thoroughly and completely debunked–and then laments the text and history test laid down in Bruen, but at no point can they actually make a legitimate case that gun control is within keeping behind the text or spirit of the Second Amendment.

That’s unsurprising, of course.

I’m glad to see legislatures hold up a bit before infringing on people’s rights. I’m upset that they’re only starting to do it just now, but this is a case of better late than never.

If they’re holding up, that’s great, but as the piece also notes, a lot of places aren’t. In truth, that is the real problem, not those exercising a bit of caution and, dare I say, common sense.

Then again, it’s Huffington Post. What can you really expect?

Filed Under: <![CDATA[Bruen decision]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Control]]>, <![CDATA[Guns]]>, <![CDATA[Heller decision]]>, <![CDATA[Huffington Post]]>, <![CDATA[Video]]>, Bearing Arms, News

Senate Republicans wants pro-2A rulings codified into law

March 17, 2023 by Tom Knighton Leave a Comment

The Second Amendment shouldn’t be a partisan thing. It’s a right enshrined in our Constitution, one lawmakers from both parties swear to support and defend upon taking office.

However, reality has a funny way of working out differently than it should.

As a result, Republicans tend to support the Second Amendment while Democrats tend to be the ones eager to upend it.

It’s not a universal thing–there are pro-gun Democrats and anti-gun Republicans, after all–but, by and large, that’s how it works out, anyway.

And now a couple of Republicans are taking steps to defend the Second Amendment just a bit more.

Senate Republicans on Thursday introduced legislation to nationally codify the right of Americans to both own guns and use them for self-defense outside the home.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said the legislation is intended to protect court rulings in two key gun rights cases by writing them into law.

Those cases are Washington, D.C. v. Heller and New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen. The Heller case found that Americans have an individual right to bear arms irrespective of participation in a militia. The Bruen case held that Americans have the right to carry firearms outside their homes.

“There’s nothing in the Second Amendment about ‘You can own a gun in your home and nowhere else,’” Graham said in a news conference, according to Fox News. “(Liberals) want to change that law, and if they get control of the Supreme Court these cases will change.

“This is a concerted effort to attack the fundamentals of the Second Amendment as part of an effort to maintain control of the Senate, take back the House and win the White House,” Graham said. “To conservatives, this is a wake-up call. We need you. Understand what’s going on here.”

Now, let’s start by me saying I like it. I like where their head is at on this.

With that said, let’s also be realistic. Absolutely nothing is going to happen.

For one thing, the Senate isn’t Republican-controlled. That means there’s absolutely no chance of this even coming up for a vote, much less passing if it did.

Sure, the House would likely vote for it, but that means nothing in and of itself.

The upside here is that it doesn’t matter. Supreme Court decisions ultimately carry enough force on their own that we don’t need laws saying the same thing. Not right now, anyway. Further, even if the law is passed, an anti-gun Supreme Court could arguably overturn those laws, so I don’t really see what this would truly accomplish.

Yet if it would do something I can’t help but wonder why do it now.

The Heller decision was over a decade ago. The Bruen decision wasn’t necessarily needed before any GOP-controlled Congress–you know, like the one we had a few years ago–could have passed all of this as federal law. They didn’t. It wasn’t even up for discussion.

So while I like where their head is on this, I wonder where it was a few years back when they could have actually done something.

Filed Under: <![CDATA[Bruen decision]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Control]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Rights]]>, <![CDATA[Guns]]>, <![CDATA[Heller decision]]>, <![CDATA[Lindsey Graham]]>, <![CDATA[Video]]>, Bearing Arms, News

Maryland carry bill passes state Senate

March 15, 2023 by Tom Knighton Leave a Comment

The state of Maryland isn’t a bad place, so long as you exclude Baltimore from any crime statistics. Add that city in and things look very different.

The fact that the city also has an oversized impact on the politics of the state as a whole has made it a pretty anti-gun state.

And now, they’re treading the path set by New York in the wake of the Bruen decision. The Senate there passed a very similar concealed-carry measure.

The Maryland Senate passed the controversial Gun Safety Act of 2023, which limits the circumstances where someone can carry a weapon even with a concealed carry permit, on Monday evening following a spirited debate.

Initially sponsored by Sen. Jeff Waldstreicher, D-Montgomery and then-Sen. Susan Lee, D-Montgomery, now secretary of state, SB 1 would tighten state gun laws in an effort to combat gun violence and in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court decision that rendered some Maryland gun laws unconstitutional. Following friendly amendments on the Senate floor, the bill now has 24 sponsors.

If enacted, the bill would make the licensing process for wear and carry permits stricter, prohibit an individual from knowingly wearing, carrying or transporting a firearm on private property without consent, and prohibit guns “under certain circumstances” and in “certain locations,” including courthouses, hospitals, schools and areas where alcohol is served.

Waldstreicher said this bill was drafted in direct response to the Supreme Court’s decision in NYSRPA v. Bruen, the case in June that decided that law abiding citizens do not need a “good and substantial” reason to be permitted to carry a concealed firearm and that any “proper cause to carry” requirement, used in several states, including Maryland, was unconstitutional according to the 14th Amendment.

SB 1 was initially written to prohibit individuals, including those with a wear and carry permit, from bringing a firearm within 100 feet of certain public places, including restaurants, stadiums, hotels or retailers, according to the original bill.

Now, it should be noted that the 100-foot rule has been removed. Instead, it’s been replaced with some specific locations such as preschools, hospitals, and courthouses.

Those three places, at least, are far less contentious than being unable to carry a firearm within 100 feet of pretty much anything.

That doesn’t make this a good bill, though. It just makes it a smidge less sucky.

That’s it.

The bill now goes to the House, where it’s unlikely to meet significant resistance unless someone thinks it doesn’t go far enough or something. From there, it will likely become law.

At that point, things get interesting.

It’s obvious that the law will be challenged in federal court. The 100-foot rule would make overturning it obvious, but even as things currently stand, there’s a decent chance the courts will see the law as a huge problem post-Bruen.

I know that lawmakers say this was a response to Bruen, but it’s really not. What they did was look at what Bruen seemed to say rather than what it actually said. I think they’re going to find that they went way beyond what Bruen ruled was permissible.

Take the rule prohibiting the carry of a firearm on private property with express permission, as an example.

In no other way do we accept the idea that one needs permission to exercise their rights on private property. Property owners arguably have a right to restrict your actions on their property–they can ask you to leave if you say something they don’t like, for example–but there’s not really a blanket prohibition without explicit permission.

And I suspect that’s going to be the undoing of this measure.

Filed Under: <![CDATA[Bruen decision]]>, <![CDATA[Concealed Carry]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Control]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Rights]]>, <![CDATA[Guns]]>, <![CDATA[Maryland]]>, <![CDATA[Video]]>, Bearing Arms, News

NYTimes frets over 2A history and the future of the gun control movement

March 14, 2023 by Cam Edwards Leave a Comment

The anti-gun media’s campaign to delegitimize the Supreme Court’s decision in Bruen continues unabated, with the latest salvo fired by the New York Times. On Tuesday, the Times published its latest hit piece on the Bruen decision, this time focusing on the Court’s “text, history, and tradition” test, which the paper says has “forced courts to consider what gun restrictions existed two centuries ago, sending demand soaring for historians.”

Unsurprisingly, while both plaintiffs and defendants in challenges to gun control laws are now combing through old statutes in search of evidence bolstering their position, the Times spends the vast majority of the piece highlighting the historians that the gun control lobby is relying on to defend their infringements.

Saul Cornell’s corner of academia has historically been sleepy. So few scholars share his specialty that the Fordham University professor jokes that he and his colleagues could hold a national convention “in an English phone booth.”

But in the months since a landmark Supreme Court decision upended the standards for determining the constitutionality of gun laws, Dr. Cornell has been booked solid. An authority on the history and laws around American weapons, he has served as an expert witness in at least 15 federal cases on gun control laws, which is roughly 14 requests more than he used to get in a busy year.

Gun historians across the country are in demand like never before as lawyers must now comb through statutes drafted in the Colonial era and the early years of the Republic to litigate modern firearms restrictions. From experts on military gun stamping to scholars of American homicide through the ages, they have been called — many for the first time — to parse the nation’s gun culture in court.

Cases now explore weapons bans in early saloons, novelty air rifles on the Lewis and Clark expedition, concealed carry restrictions on bowie knives and 18th-century daggers known as “Arkansas toothpicks,” and a string-operated “trap gun” that may or may not be comparable to an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle.

“This is what the courts have unleashed upon us,” said Darrell A. H. Miller, a Duke University law professor and faculty co-director at the Duke Center for Firearms Law. “Suddenly everyone is looking for early Republic scholars to tell them what the culture and norms around firearms law were in the 18th century.”

While the Times presented Cornell as an undisputed expert on gun laws, they broadly ignored what he’s actually had to say about the right to keep and bear arms. Cornell wrote in 2006 that the right to keep and bear arms isn’t an individual right at all, but rather a “civic right” guaranteeing that “citizens would be able to keep and bear those arms needed to meet their legal obligation to participate in a well-regulated militia.” Conveniently, Cornell’s maintained that because we’re not talking about a right of individuals to keep and bear arms “there can be no right to bear arms without extensive regulation.”

Of course, the Supreme Court squarely rejected Cornell’s theory in 2008 when it issued its decision in Heller, striking down Washington, D.C.’s ban on handguns and its requirement mandating all registered firearms be stored locked and unloaded with ammunition stored separately, but as the Times reports, he continues to be a favorite source for anti-gun politicians defending infringements old and new.

Demand has similarly boomed for scholars who can put gun technology and law into context, particularly among Democratic attorneys general defending restrictions.

Jennifer Tucker, who directs the Center for the Study of Guns and Society at Wesleyan University, said lawyers have reached out to seek experts on topics as disparate as weapon restrictions on stage coaches and the contested history around an 18th-century attempt at an extended capacity firearm — which supposedly would fire round bullets at Christians and square ones at “heathens” — known as the “Puckle gun.”

Robert J. Spitzer, a retired political science professor at SUNY Cortland who has written a half-dozen books on the history of gun rights, has consulted on at least 10 gun law cases. “The typical image of every adult white male owning a gun, using it to defend hearth and home, the wild West being tamed by the Colt and the Winchester — basically none of that stuff is true,” he said, adding that some of the first laws in Colonial America were gun controls.

That may very well be the case, but were those laws longstanding or widespread? More importantly, is a statute from 1619 particularly relevant when the Supreme Court has said that courts should be looking at the history and tradition of the right to keep and bear arms at the time the Second Amendment was ratified in 1791 and the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868?

The Times report tries to put on a brave face for it’s largely anti-gun audience, but there’s no getting around the fact that the gun control lobby is a modern creation, quite unlike the right to keep and bear arms. As the paper concludes:

Adam Winkler, a University of California, Los Angeles, law professor who has written widely on gun rights, said that inconsistency in the way the appellate courts interpret history will likely force the Supreme Court to eventually clarify or revise the Bruen test, but the bar will be high for firearm restrictions. “The fact of the matter is, a large number of our gun laws are 20th century inventions,” he said.

The bar should be high, given that we’re talking about an individual right. The interest-balancing test incorrectly applied by lower courts in the wake of Heller and McDonald gave far too much deference to the government to enact gun control laws even when they implicated the right to keep and bear arms. The Ninth Circuit, for example, has still never ruled a gun control law out of order in the fifteen years since Heller came down; upholding California’s “may issue” carry laws and Hawaii’s open-carry prohibition, bans on “assault weapons” and “large capacity” magazines, and dozens of other anti-gun statutes. That’s the history that anti-gun activists would rather point to, but as Adam Winkler suggests, those modern creations aren’t going to fare well when the Bruen test is fairly applied to them.

Filed Under: <![CDATA[2A history]]>, <![CDATA[Bruen case]]>, <![CDATA[Bruen decision]]>, <![CDATA[Cam &amp; Co]]>, <![CDATA[Cam Edwards]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Control]]>, <![CDATA[Saul Cornell]]>, <![CDATA[Second Amendment history]]>, <![CDATA[Video]]>, Bearing Arms, News

Huffington Post laments Bruen preventing gun control

March 13, 2023 by Tom Knighton Leave a Comment

The Bruen decision really upset the gun control apple cart.

Based on the history and text standard laid out in the Supreme Court’s decision, a lot of existing gun control laws are likely just counting the days before they’re overturned by the courts.

As Cam mentioned earlier today, over at the Huffington Post they’re upset about something different. They’re upset that gun control laws aren’t even passing.

New Mexico’s Senate Judiciary Committee gathered recently to figure out how much latitude they had to regulate guns after last year’s bombshell Second Amendment ruling from the Supreme Court.

Most sounded confused. Some seemed unaware that the laws they passed might not hold up in court if a similar regulation hadn’t been on the books in the 18th century. One lawmaker called the ruling “mind-boggling.” Another asked whether their authority was now limited to regulating firearms “where you have to manually load the gunpowder.”

New Mexico’s legislative session last month opened with gun reform high on the agenda. After a string of politically motivated shootings at the homes of Democratic legislators in Albuquerque, Gov. Michelle Luján Grisham (D) called for a series of firearm restrictions, including an assault weapons ban, in her State of the State speech in January.

But with a week left to go before the session ends, lawmakers are cautiously approaching gun bills and are wary of passing laws that will run afoul of a Supreme Court that has taken a firm stance on the side of gun rights. The legislature is likely to pass some gun reform before the session ends, but lawmakers say an assault weapons ban would be unlikely to hold up in court, and they’re uncertain about a proposal to raise the age to buy some types of firearms from age 18 to 21.

They see that as a bug whereas I see it as a feature.

The truth of the matter is that gun control isn’t a solution. It’s just a new set of problems dressed up to make lawmakers appear to give a damn about a different problem.

The fact that Bruen is making lawmakers pause before they pass new gun control laws is hardly a bad thing. In fact, they should have been pausing all along.

It’s not like the Second Amendment is new. It’s been on the books for over two centuries, after all, and the text isn’t that difficult to comprehend unless you will yourself to misunderstand it.

So lawmakers pausing is hardly a bad thing. The only issue is, as I’ve said, it should have happened a long time ago.

But the folks at the Huffington Post would rather try and paint the Bruen decision as some obstacle.

Well, they’re free to do so. The First Amendment is also a thing that’s been on the books for more than two centuries.

However, I’m also free to point and laugh at them.

The reason New Mexico is pausing before passing gun control laws that are likely to be slapped down by the courts is because Bruen isn’t that difficult to understand. They see where things are going and, for once, lawmakers are thinking of the Constitution before passing blatantly unconstitutional laws.

That’s cause for celebration, not lamentation.

Unless, of course, you work for the Huffington Post.

Filed Under: <![CDATA[Bruen decision]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Control]]>, <![CDATA[Gun Rights]]>, <![CDATA[Guns]]>, <![CDATA[Huffington Post]]>, <![CDATA[New Mexico]]>, <![CDATA[Video]]>, Bearing Arms, News

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