Law Supreme Court says Second Amendment guarantees right to carry guns in public - The ruling expands upon a 2008 decision that said the Second Amendment safeguards a person’s right to possess firearms at home for self-protection.

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The Supreme Court on Thursday struck down a New York law that placed strict restrictions on carrying concealed firearms in public for self defense, finding its requirement that applicants seeking a license to carry a concealed handgun demonstrate a "proper cause" to do so in public is unconstitutional.

In a 6-3 ruling, the Supreme Court reversed a lower court decision upholding New York's 108-year-old law limiting who can obtain a license to carry a concealed handgun in public. Proponents of the measure warned that a ruling from the high court invalidating it could threaten gun restrictions in several states and lead to more firearms on city streets.

Justice Clarence Thomas delivered the majority opinion for the ideologically-divided court, writing that New York's "proper-cause requirement" prevented law-abiding citizens from exercising their Second Amendment right.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court-new-york-gun-law-second-amendment (A)

 

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Did anyone notice this part? Uncle Clarence is gonna break the backboard from all this dunking.

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I can't think of a more nuclear dunk than the court's only black justice (only the second in history) using Dred Scott, the most reviled opinion in SCOTUS history, to undo policies beloved by the party of the current president who just so happens to be the man who personally tried to stop his confirmation to the court. In awe of the level of legal vengeance Thomas is enacting here.
 
I can't think of a more nuclear dunk than the court's only black justice (only the second in history) using Dred Scott, the most reviled opinion in SCOTUS history, to undo policies beloved by the party of the current president who just so happens to be the man who personally tried to stop his confirmation to the court. In awe of the level of legal vengeance Thomas is enacting here.
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I can't think of a more nuclear dunk than the court's only black justice (only the second in history) using Dred Scott, the most reviled opinion in SCOTUS history, to undo policies beloved by the party of the current president who just so happens to be the man who personally tried to stop his confirmation to the court. In awe of the level of legal vengeance Thomas is enacting here.
The question is: whose karma is getting played here? Thomas' good or Biden(and the dems) bad? I think we all know the answer.
 
I know everyone is excited about Chad Clarence buckbreaking the gun-grabbers, but did anyone read Alito's concurring opinion? He basically told Breyer that he was a retard.

In light of what we have actually held, it is hard to see what legitimate purpose can possibly be served by most of the dissent’s lengthy introductory section. See post, at 1–8 (opinion of BREYER, J.). Why, for example, does the dissent think it is relevant to recount the mass shootings that have occurred in recent years? Post, at 4–5. Does the dissent think that laws like New York’s prevent or deter such atrocities? Will a person bent on carrying out a mass shooting be stopped if he knows that it is illegal to carry a handgun outside the home? And how does the dissent account for the fact that one of the mass shootings near the top of its list took place in Buffalo? The New York law at issue in this case obviously did not stop that perpetrator.

What is the relevance of statistics about the use of guns to commit suicide? See post, at 5–6. Does the dissent think that a lot of people who possess guns in their homes will be stopped or deterred from shooting themselves if they cannot lawfully take them outside? The dissent cites statistics about the use of guns in domestic disputes, see post, at 5, but it does not explain why these statistics are relevant to the question presented in this case. How many of the cases involving the use of a gun in a domestic dispute occur outside the home, and how many are prevented by laws like New York’s?

The dissent cites statistics on children and adolescents killed by guns, see post, at 1, 4, but what does this have to do with the question whether an adult who is licensed to possess a handgun may be prohibited from carrying it outside the home? Our decision, as noted, does not expand the categories of people who may lawfully possess a gun, and federal law generally forbids the possession of a handgun by a person who is under the age of 18, 18 U. S. C. §§922(x)(2)–(5), and bars the sale of a handgun to anyone under the age of 21, §§922(b)(1), (c)(1).1

The dissent cites the large number of guns in private hands—nearly 400 million—but it does not explain what this statistic has to do with the question whether a person who already has the right to keep a gun in the home for self-defense is likely to be deterred from acquiring a gun by the knowledge that the gun cannot be carried outside the home. See post, at 3. And while the dissent seemingly thinks that the ubiquity of guns and our country’s high level of gun violence provide reasons for sustaining the New York law, the dissent appears not to understand that it is these very facts that cause law-abiding citizens to feel the need to carry a gun for self-defense.

No one apparently knows how many of the 400 million privately held guns are in the hands of criminals, but there can be little doubt that many muggers and rapists are armed and are undeterred by the Sullivan Law. Each year, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) confiscates thousands of guns,2 and it is fair to assume that the number of guns seized is a fraction of the total number held unlawfully. The police cannot disarm every person who acquires a gun for use in criminal activity; nor can they provide bodyguard protection for the State’s nearly 20 million residents or the 8.8 million people who live in New York City. Some of these people live in high-crime neighborhoods. Some must traverse dark and dangerous streets in order to reach their homes after work or other evening activities. Some are members of groups whose members feel especially vulnerable. And some of these people reasonably believe that unless they can brandish or, if necessary, use a handgun in the case of attack, they may be murdered, raped, or suffer some other serious injury.
:story:
 
No need to guess then the guys of the Daily Kos had gone full RREEEEEEeeeee!
 
I know everyone is excited about Chad Clarence buckbreaking the gun-grabbers, but did anyone read Alito's concurring opinion? He basically told Breyer that he was a retard.


:story:
god i love alito. i would have loved to see scalia rip breyers ass up about this too if he hadnt' been murdered by the clintons.
 
Americans will soon be able to use their God-given right to carry a firearm to force women at gunpoint to carry their babies to term :smug:
The funny thing is that everyone is always up in arms about abortion, but nobody ever points out how people get pregnant in the first place.

Oh that's right, it just happens by magic. These people really are stupid enough to believe in the stork theory of reproduction.

On the other hand, LOL

 
I know everyone is excited about Chad Clarence buckbreaking the gun-grabbers, but did anyone read Alito's concurring opinion? He basically told Breyer that he was a retard.
Then he rubs New Yorks own legal fuck around games right in their face.
My final point concerns the dissent’s complaint that the Court relies too heavily on history and should instead approve the sort of “means-end” analysis employed in this case by the Second Circuit. Under that approach, a court, in most cases, assesses a law’s burden on the Second Amendment right and the strength of the State’s interest in imposing the challenged restriction. See post, at 20. This mode of analysis places no firm limits on the ability of judges to sustain any law restricting the possession or use of a gun. Two examples illustrate the point.
Oh. Do tell!

The first is the Second Circuit’s decision in a case the Court decided two Terms ago, New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. City of New York, 590 U. S. ___ (2020). The law in that case affected New York City residents who had been issued permits to keep a gun in the home for self- defense. The city recommended that these permit holders practice at a range to ensure that they are able to handle their guns safely, but the law prohibited them from taking their guns to any range other than the seven that were spread around the city’s five boroughs. Even if such a person unloaded the gun, locked it in the trunk of a car, and drove to the nearest range, that person would violate the law if the nearest range range happened to be outside city limits. The Second Circuit held that the law was constitutional, concluding, among other things, that the restriction was substantially related to the city’s interests in public safety and crime prevention. See New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. New York, 883 F. 3d 45, 62–64 (2018). But after we agreed to review that decision, the city repealed the law and admitted that it did not actually have any beneficial effect on public safety. See N. Y. Penal Law Ann. §400.00(6) (West Cum. Supp. 2022); Suggestion of Mootness in New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. City of New York, O. T. 2019, No. 18–280, pp. 5–7.

Hold on, can you simplify it for the clowns dissenting?

Like that dissent in Heller, the real thrust of today’s dissent is that guns are bad and that States and local jurisdictions should be free to restrict them essentially as they see fit.3 That argument was rejected in Heller, and while the dissent protests that it is not rearguing Heller, it proceeds to do just that. See post, at 25–28.
 
Thanks to your favored party and their idiotic policies hundreds of millions of people are exposed daily to criminals who should be behind bars but have been allowed to roam the streets fearing little from law enforcement regardless of the severity of their crimes. Maybe those people will step a little straighter now.
Affix bayonets! Tally ho, lads!

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Bitch you are not negotiating you lost and you are going to lose again when someone takes your recent infringements of constitutional rights to court.

Also there were semi-automatic weapons back then(though they were not common) not just muzzle loaded muskets ya stupid bitch. Learn some history.
 
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