A Small Gun Store Owner Will Fight Washington’s Magazine Ban in State Supreme Court Next Week
Our national right to keep and bear arms isn’t a second-class civil right subject to local rules, opinions, or interpretations. […]
Our national right to keep and bear arms isn’t a second-class civil right subject to local rules, opinions, or interpretations. […]
CNN is hyperventilating over a Florida case in which prosecutors cleared a 79-year-old man of charges using the state’s stand your ground laws after he shot and killed his neighbor’s son who threatened him with a chainsaw.
Common use of AR-15s for self-defense can be the secondary argument, but the primary argument should be that common bearable arms that are useful in combat are the most protected of all, as all of the historical commentary confirms.
“To preserve our democracy through peaceful civil engagement, states must be able to appropriately regulate firearms in modern First Amendment-protected spaces.”
Today the Third Circuit reaffirmed its earlier finding that someone who commits a “nonviolent, nondangerous misdemeanor” and hasn’t been incarcerated can’t be deprived of his Second Amendment rights.
“The magazines at issue in this case are not ‘dangerous and unusual,’ but instead are standard components of the sorts of bearable arms in common use for lawful purposes,” the lawsuit argues.
In the mind of the New York Giants, the New York City subway system was too dangerous for its star quarterback. If that’s the case, how is the average New Yorker or tourist expected to fare when they head underground?
One doesn’t have to look very far to see that activist lawfare that intentionally distorts the law’s meaning and intent remains a popular way for the far left to pursue its agenda of ending civilian gun ownership in America.
“The second Bruen came down, there was the starting gun for a sprint, for which we have not stopped yet,” Bill Sack, director of legal operations for SAF told Stateline. “Stuff is ripe for a fresh challenge.”
It the latest salvo of lawfare launched against a lawful firearm manufacturer, New Jersey’s enthusiastically hoplophobic Attorney General, Matt Platkin, announced yesterday that he had filed suit against GLOCK for…making guns.