Archive for the ‘Second Amendment’ Category

The Disingenuous Assault Weapons Ban – NRA ILA

On April 25, 2023, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) signed HB1240 into law. The legislation is a sweeping, and flagrantly unconstitutional ban on commonly-owned semi-automatic firearms. The law prohibits a host of rifles by name, including Americas most popular rifle, the AR-15, in all forms. The prohibition also targets centerfire rifles capable of accepting a detachable magazine and are equipped with one enumerated feature such as certain popular barrel attachments, grips, and stocks.

The ban is so wide-ranging that it includes,

A conversion kit, part, or combination of parts, from which an assault weapon can be assembled or from which a firearm can be converted into an assault weapon if those parts are in the possession or under the control of the same person

As gun owners know, parts that can be used to convert a semi-automatic centerfire rifle into a so-called assault weapon are common and often interchangeable with those used with rimfire and non-semi-automatic firearms. Have a rimfire or bolt-action rifle that utilizes an AR-15 pattern pistol grip or collapsible stock? It would appear that you cant own that alongside certain ban compliant semi-automatics.

Aside from fulfilling its role as a California satrapy, what is the reasoning behind this ridiculous attack on gun owners? A candid Inslee stated that part of the goal of the package of gun control legislation that included the semi-automatic ban is putting the gun industry in its place. One can imagine that many of the measures supporters feel likewise about the laws impact on law-abiding gun owners.

As misguided as they were, earlier gun control advocates were more forthright and connected to reality than their modern counterparts. Advocates such as Handgun Control, Inc. (later Brady Campaign) Chairman Pete Shields advocated openly for a prohibition on the civilian possession of handguns. In 1976, Shields told the New Yorker, The final problem is to make possession of all handguns and all handgun ammunition except for the military, police, licensed security guards, licensed sporting clubs, and licensed gun collectors totally illegal.

In his 1981 book Guns Dont Die People Do, the gun control advocate explained,

It is important to understand that our organization, Handgun Control, Inc., does not propose further controls on rifles and shotguns, Rifles and shotguns are not the problem;

Shields went on to add, After the handgun, the criminals next weapon of choice is the knife

Then, as now, the overwhelming majority of firearm-related homicides are committed using handguns. According to 2021 FBI crime statistics, throughout the U.S. almost thirteen times as many murders were listed as having been committed with a handgun than with a rifle of any kind. In fact, more murders were listed as having been committed with Personal weapons (hands/fists/feet/etc.) than rifles. Showing that Shields had a better grip on the facts than his ideological descendants, in 2021 the FBI reported more than twice as many murders committed with knives than rifles of any description.

As for Washington, the FBIs 2021 statistics state that 22 times as many murders were committed in the Evergreen State with handguns than rifles and more than five times as many with knives than rifles. The FBI data show twice as many homicides were listed as having been committed with narcotics than rifles in the notoriously libertine jurisdiction.

Long before the U.S. Supreme Court made clear that Americans have a Constitutional right to own and use handguns in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), gun controllers were forced to face the truth Americans enjoy having the right to own handguns. In 1976, a Massachusetts ballot initiative that would have prohibited handguns was defeated by nearly 40 points.

Further, support for a handgun ban has decreased substantially over time. For over 60 years, Gallup has polled Americans about a handgun prohibition. In 1975, 41 percent of respondents stated that they supported a ban. In 2021, Gallup recorded an all-time low 19 percent support for a handgun ban.

As their handgun ban agenda stalled, gun control advocates sought to shift focus to anywhere they might be able to advance their civilian disarmament agenda. They settled on targeting semi-automatic rifles, believing that they could prey upon the general publics ignorance.

In 1988, Violence Policy Center Communications Director Josh Sugarmann explained,

The weapons menacing looks, coupled with the publics confusion over fully automatic machine guns versus semi-automatic assault weapons - anything that looks like a machine gun is assumed to be a machine gun - can only increase the chance of public support for restrictions on these weapons.

Despite its disconnection to the reality of violence perpetrated with firearms, this cynical tactic proved more effective than gun controllers attempts to prohibit handguns. In 1994 President Bill Clinton signed a federal ban on commonly-owned semi-automatics into law.

During the course of the ban, two federally-funded studies examined the measure.

Faced with the reality that so-called assault weapons, are rarely used to commit violent crime, a 1997 Department of Justice-funded study from the Urban Institute acknowledged, At best, the assault weapons ban can have only a limited effect on total gun murders, because the banned weapons and magazines were never involved in more than a modest fraction of all gun murders.

A 2004 follow-up Department of Justice-funded study came to a similar conclusion. The study determined that AWs [assault weapons] and LCMs [large capacity magazines] were used in only a minority of gun crimes prior to the 1994 federal ban, relatively few attacks involve more than 10 shots fired, and the bans effects on gun violence are likely to be small at best and perhaps too small for reliable measurement.

Presented with the overwhelming evidence of the bans inefficacy, Congress allowed the ban to sunset after 10 years. In 2014, ten years after the ban sunset, the U.S. homicide rate reached a multi-decade low. Sadly, the homicide rate has risen in recent years amidst many cities ongoing experiment in deliberate anarchy.

Aside from bad policy, in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Courts Heller, McDonald v. Chicago (2010), and New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022) decisions, bans on commonly-owned semi-automatic firearms are legally impermissible.

Justice Antonin Scalias opinion in Heller made clear that the Second Amendment protects ownership of firearms in common use for lawful purposes. Reiterating this point in 2015, Justice Scalia signed onto a dissent from denial of certiorari in Friedman v. Highland Park, in which Justice Clarence Thomas explained,

Roughly five million Americans own AR-style semiautomatic rifles. The overwhelming majority of citizens who own and use such rifles do so for lawful purposes, including self-defense and target shooting. Under our precedents, that is all that is needed for citizens to have a right under the Second Amendment to keep such weapons.

In his Bruen opinion, Justice Thomas made clear that in order for a firearm regulation to pass constitutional muster it must fit within the text, history, and tradition of the Second Amendment right. The opinion stated,

[w]hen the Second Amendments plain text covers an individuals conduct, the Constitution presumptively protects that conduct. The government must then justify its regulation by demonstrating that it is consistent with the Nations historical tradition of firearm regulation. Only then may a court conclude that the individuals conduct falls outside the Second Amendments unqualified command.

Examining how to apply Supreme Court precedent to bans on commonly-owned semi-automatic firearms, Constitutional Scholar and Attorney Stephen Halbrook has pointed out that,

Heller and Bruen both establish that the Second Amendment extends presumptively to all bearable arms. Second, banning such firearms is not consistent with this Nation's history. Indeed, the Supreme Court established that such a ban is inconsistent with this Nation's history nearly thirty years ago by holding that AR-15 rifles "traditionally have been widely accepted as lawful possessions," Staples v. U.S. (1994).

So, if semi-automatic bans are stupid policy and constitutionally invalid, why are they pushed with such fervor by gun control advocates? One answer is that gun control advocates are eager to move their civilian disarmament agenda in any manner possible no matter how dubious. Another is that targeting these types of firearms allows politicians and their supporters to indulge their ugly cultural prejudices. In other words, banning commonly-owned semi-automatic firearms is about putting law-abiding gun owners in their place.

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The Disingenuous Assault Weapons Ban - NRA ILA

Here’s What Vivek Ramaswamy Got Wrong About The Civil War … – The Root

Last month, former CNN host Don Lemon and Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy got into a contentious exchange on CNN This Morning. The argument, which many believe was the cause of Lemons shocking sudden departure from the network, was over Ramaswamys assertions that Black Americans received certain freedoms following the Civil War.

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Black people secured their freedoms after the Civil War; it is a historical fact, Don, just study it, only after their Second Amendment rights were secured, Ramaswamy said. Lemon quickly retorted: You are discounting a whole host of things that happened after the Civil War when it comes to African Americans, including the whole reason that the Civil Rights Movement happened is because Black people did not secure their freedoms after the Civil War.

While speaking to The Root, historian, professor and author Dr. Walter Greason explained that Ramaswamys false claims are part of the GOPs larger political agenda.

[Ramaswamy] is part of a huge rhetorical effort that goes back over a century of trying to misrepresent the past, he said. So hes got lots of bad company standing on his side. Greason also explains the complexity of the Civil War that the politician inaccurately oversimplifies.

In remembering the war, people get confused. I always push people to look back at the actual acts of succession that provoke the Civil War. So look at the documents drafted in South Carolina at the end of 1860 and into early 1861. Theyre saying that they want to defend their rights to own people. That is the number one cause and it then spreads throughout the other Confederate states to justify that they feel that their right to enslave Africans is threatened by Abraham Lincolns election.

Greason continued, Now, after the war, theyll try and sanitize this argument in their law and say, Well, we were standing up for our states rights. We didnt want the federal government to encroach on our prerogatives to rule ourselves. But the core right that they identified at the beginning of the conflict was to enslave Africans. The historian expounds on the fact that Lincoln didnt want to make it a war about slavery in the beginning since he knew racial equality wasnt a popular idea in the Northern states.

Lincoln originally framed the Civil War as a way to restore the union, to negate the acts of succession and to declare that the federal government was supreme. However, according to Greason, Lincoln eventually recognized that he had to condemn and eliminate slavery in order to bring the union back together. There are a lot of misunderstandings [about the Civil War] that allow the space for someone like Ramaswamy to basically misrepresent and lie to the American people today relying on the fact that most people dont read and they certainly dont read history.

Greason believes that Lemon was correct when he stated that Black Americans did not secure their freedoms after the war was fought. We often have a simplified understanding of the way Black freedom evolves in the United States in that we see slavery in the 19th century as the worst form of oppression. But we overlook segregation in the North and in the West. If we start to see that slavery and segregation are related, in fact, there is no real Black freedom until 1965. And even beyond that point, the forces of conservatism continue to fight against Black freedom to the present day.

The professor concludes by discussing how people of colorRamaswamy is Indian-Americanare frequently conduits for hateful Republican rhetoric. White nationalist, white segregationist politicians love to find people and say, See, theyre from the Black or the Mexican or the Puerto Rican community and they agree with our conservative policies that say theres no need for serious change or systemic analysis of injustice in this country, he said.

Its a visceral point thats designed to negate centuries of dedicated work, he continued. People giving their very lives to the idea of democracy and liberty for all by saying, Oh, this one person says that theres no injustice...its fine. This is essentially what Ramaswamy is auditioning forhe wants that voice. He wants to be the new Bobby Jindal.

By referring to Jindal, who was the first Indian-American to run for president back in 2016, Greason addresses Ramaswamys disturbing ascension to power. Ultimately, this is the same strategy [used by] some wealthy conservative immigrants from different parts of the world to claim their unique individual status by embracing racism through conservatism.

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Here's What Vivek Ramaswamy Got Wrong About The Civil War ... - The Root

Ted Cruz challenger said it would’ve been ‘better’ if Second Amendment ‘had not been written’ – Fox News

A challenger to Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz said it would have been "better" if the Second Amendment "hadnt been written."

In a resurfaced video from 2018, Rep. Colin Allred, D-Texas, weighed in on the right to bear arms and said he did not believe the Second Amendment should have been written in the first place.

"Within the confines of the accurately applied Second Amendment, we can do everything we want to do, as far as regulating weapons and all that," Allred said. "The Second Amendment does have, in the first sentence, in order to maintain a well-regulated militia, and 'the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.'"

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In a resurfaced video from 2018, Rep. Colin Allred, D-Texas, weighed in on the right to bear arms and said he did not believe the Second Amendment should have been written in the first place. (Emil Lippe/Getty Images)

"And its two ideas there. The recent trend has only been to focus on the right to bear arms instead of the well-regulated militia part," Allred continued in the video, which was first resurfaced by Breitbart. "So I just think we have to accurately apply it."

"Would it be better if it had not been written? Of course. But theres no chance that were going to repeal any of the Bill of Rights amendments," the Texas Democrat said.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, is running for a third six-year term. (Fox News)

"Im not just talking about politically, it wouldnt happen. Its not within the bounds of reality in this country," he added. "But what we could do, I think, is theres plenty of room within there to not allow people to have 'weapons of war.'"

Allred's campaign manager Paige Hutchinson told Fox News Digital, "Congressman Allreds record on this is clear: He supports common-sense reforms and respects the rights of law-abiding gun owners."

"He proudly supported Senator Cornyns bipartisan bill to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people, which Ted Cruz voted against," Hutchinson said. "A highly edited clip from six years ago is not in any way an accurate reflection of Allreds position."

Allred voted for Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn's Bipartisan Safer Communities Act that was signed into law last year and bolstered states' red flag laws, enhance background checks for gun buyers under 21, add penalties for some gun criminals and provide funding for a variety of health and mental health-related programs.

Cornyn's bill also addresses the so-called "boyfriend loophole," which is a gap in federal law that means spousal domestic abusers can have gun rights taken away but not unmarried ones.

Cruz has become a Texas powerhouse in the Senate after his victory over former Rep. Beto ORourke, a Democrat, in 2018. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

On Wednesday, Allred, a former NFL linebacker who later worked in President Obamas administration before defeating Republican Rep. Pete Sessions in 2018 in Texass 32nd Congressional District, which includes parts of the city of Dallas and its northeastern suburbs, became the first major Democrat to jump into the Senate race against Cruz, who is running for a third six-year term representing Texas.

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Allreds campaign on Friday said it raised $2 million in the first 36 hours since launching his campaign, but while his $2 million haul is significant, the Texas Democrat will need to keep the aggressive pace up. Cruz began the cycle with $3.3 million in cash on-hand, while bringing in an additional $1.2 million in the first quarter of this year.

Cruz has become a Texas powerhouse in the Senate after his victory over former Rep. Beto ORourke, a Democrat, in 2018.

Fox News Digital's Elizabeth Elkind and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

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Ted Cruz challenger said it would've been 'better' if Second Amendment 'had not been written' - Fox News

5th Circuit Courts Controversial Ruling in favor of 2nd Amendment Protections – WIBC – Indianapolis News & Politics

2nd Amendment Rights defender Guy Relford is one of the few coming in support of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals U.S. v. Rahimi, a post-Bruen Second Amendment ruling.

Read the ruling here:

21-11001-CR2.pdf (uscourts.gov)

To the layman, it appears that the court is okay with dangerous domestic abusers having the right keep their weapons that they will ultimately use against their victims. But the ruling is far more nuanced than that. The ruling maintains that ones Second Amendment right cannot be infringed if the individual has not been convicted of a crime.

The idea of you losing your gun rights if you havent committed any crime? The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals found that unconstitutional.

Domestic orders of protection arent necessarily a result of a crime that has been committed. The 5th Circuit has ruled that the order of restraint alone cannot erase ones 2nd Amendment rights.

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5th Circuit Courts Controversial Ruling in favor of 2nd Amendment Protections - WIBC - Indianapolis News & Politics

Ted Cruz’s challenger once claimed it would have been better if Second Amendment ‘had not been written’ – Washington Examiner

Sen. Ted Cruz's (R-TX) challenger in the upcoming 2024 election, Rep. Colin Allred (D-TX), once said that it would have been "better" if the Second Amendment "had not been written."

The statement that Allred made was during a campaign event in 2018 when he was discussing the interpretation and viability of the Second Amendment. During this discussion, Allred said that the Second Amendment states that "the right to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed," adding that there are "two ideas" to this, according to video journalists dug up.

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"The recent trend has only been to focus on the right to bear arms instead of the well-regulated militia part," said Allred. "So I just think we have to accurately apply it. Would it be better if it had not been written? Of course. But theres no chance that were going to repeal any of the Bill of Rights amendments."

In 2021, Allred co-sponsored a bill on universal background check legislation, with the bill criminalizing private gun sales conducted without an FBI background check. Outside of Allred, the other co-sponsors of this bill included Reps. Adam Schiff (D-CA), Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), Rashida Tlaib Rashida (D-MI), and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY).

When asked about Allred's past statement on the Second Amendment, his campaign manager Paige Hutchinson claimed that Allred "supports common-sense reforms and respects the rights of law-abiding gun owners."

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"He proudly supported Sen. Cornyns bipartisan bill to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people, which Ted Cruz voted against," Hutchinson told Fox News Digital. "A highly edited clip from six years ago is not in any way an accurate reflection of Allreds position."

Allred, who has widely been seen as a rising star within the House Democratic Caucus, announced his run against Cruz on Wednesday. Cruz has indicated he is running for reelection.

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Ted Cruz's challenger once claimed it would have been better if Second Amendment 'had not been written' - Washington Examiner