More Proof the Second Amendment Is a Cornerstone of Freedom

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posted on March 15, 2019
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At times like these, when the battle lines in the fight for freedom are so numerous, it’s worth stepping back a moment for perspective.

The original intent of the U.S. Bill of Rights was to deprive the federal government of certain powers. One of the powers the federal government—and now state and local governments [thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court in McDonald v. Chicago (2010)]—is barred from infringing upon is a citizen’s right to keep and bear (carry) firearms.

Any protected right comes with certain restrictions that are considered to be reasonable—no shouting fire in a crowded theater unless there really is a fire is the most often-cited reasonable restriction on the First Amendment.

The late Justice Antonin Scalia boxed in what is a reasonable restriction on the Second Amendment when he wrote the majority opinion for the Supreme Court in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008). “A constitutional guarantee subject to future judges’ assessments of its usefulness is no constitutional guarantee at all,” wrote Scalia in the decision that found the Second Amendment to indeed be an individual right. “Constitutional rights are enshrined with the scope they were understood to have when the people adopted them, whether or not future legislatures or (yes) even future judges think that scope too broad.”

Despite those clear words, what is a “reasonable” restriction of the Second Amendment is still a big, complex and pivotal question. It is a question that the U.S. Supreme Court may begin to answer in a recently accepted case called New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. City of New York, New York. Right now the high court is accepting “friend-of-the-court” (or amicus curiae) briefs for this case.

Last week Judicial Watch filed a friend-of-the-court brief or this case, which said in part:

“The second amendment should be interpreted consistently with the remainder of the Bill of Rights which ‘concerned restrictions upon federal power’ imposed by means of ‘basic and fundamental rights which the Constitution guaranteed to the people’…. The only lawful process for changing this balance of power between the people and their government is constitutional amendment. Accordingly, the only question is whether [New York City’s] regulations ‘unduly’ burden the right or not. The Court should find that the regulations are an undue burden the people’s Second Amendment rights, which have always included the right to travel with firearms. The second amendment right to self-defense against unlawful aggression by any actor does not disappear when one travels outside the home.”

This coming pivotal decision from the Supreme Court puts the words “ELECTIONS MATTER” in all caps, as the additions of the two justices nominated by President Donald J. Trump—Justice Neil Gorsuch and Justice Brett Kavanaugh—may well balance the scale toward freedom.

16 States Now Have “Permitless” Carry

“It’s worth noting there are now twice as many states (16) that require no permit for legal gun owners to carry than states (8) that require legal gun owners show ‘good cause’ to carry,” said Cam Edwards, host of Cam & Co, this week after Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin (R) signed the NRA-backed Senate Bill 150 into law. This “permitless” or “constitutional” carry law allows anyone who is legally allowed to own a gun, and is at least 21 years old, to carry a concealed handgun without a permit in the state of Kentucky.

 Federal Court Declines to Toss Out Gun-Rights Case

Meanwhile, in the less-free state of Massachusetts, the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts denied Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey’s attempt to stay a federal lawsuit. This lawsuit was brought by four federally licensed firearms retailers in Massachusetts after Healey attempted to rewrite a gun-control law with an “Enforcement Notice” in 2016 to redefine what an “assault weapon” is. By trying to expand the political definition—which is the only way to define this political term—outside the legislature she clearly overstepped her legal authority and deprived retailers of their due-process protections guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution.

Dick’s Sporting Goods Can’t Have it Both Ways

As retailers in Massachusetts fight for due-process protections, Dick’s Sporting Goods is stumbling all over its politically correct contradictions. About a year back Dick’s Sporting Goods decided not just to stop selling certain un-PC (according to Hollywood and the media elite) firearms, but to actually pay to have certain semiautomatic rifles destroyed. Now Dick’s, reeling from a falling stock price from a dip in sales as gun owners go elsewhere, has opted to pull all firearms out of 125 of its stores.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Dick’s CEO, Ed Stack, “blamed much of the decline [of its sales] on its stance on guns, saying some gun enthusiasts have stopped shopping at the chain.” Duh.American consumers are free to spend their dollars where they chose, and Stack hasn’t just pulled politically incorrect guns and destroyed them, Stack also joined the business council of Michael Bloomberg’s anti-gun group Everytown.

 Most-Revealing Anti-Freedom Quote of the Week

“If I had a gun, I’d blow away Sampson and a large group of NRA.” —This was a text message photographed on someone’s phone at a Connecticut Senate hearing. The unnamed woman writing the message was escorted from the building. Sampson is likely State Sen. Rob Sampson, a member of the Judiciary Committee, which had just heard testimony on gun-control bills.

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