We finally won one in California!!
Either the looters were sleeping at the switch, or the 9th circuit somehow got a bit of common sense! Time to go to the range... and celebrate!!!
While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
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That is the spirit! We know there are some out there that still value Liberty and responsibility.
Respectfully
O.A.
Now if you'll excuse me, I need to go file for a permit that I may or may not ever choose to use, but I'll affirm my right to have it. :)
The difficulty with the application of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights to the Federal government is the authority the Supreme Court granted to itself i 1803, to allow interpretation. The best example to me is with the 4th. It states it's purpose is to prevent unreasonable searches and seizures The SC determined that if there are unreasonable, there also must be reasonable and has applied that argument since sometime in the 20' or 30's as the result of problems in enforcing Prohibition.
The state may not impose more restrictions on rights than the Constitution, but it may impose more restrictions on it's law enforcement.
In the meantime, so happy to see freedom supported in the state of spin.
OK got that. So who defines reasonable - the various state legislatures, the state and/or federal courts or the people? Clearly it is not the people. So it must be the state legislatures or the courts, or both with the courts having the lst say. From this I take it there is no uniform standard as to what Keep and bear arms means. It varies from state to state and court to court. Is that about how it goes?
What the SC has said is that the rights are not absolute and that it is permissible for states to enact "reasonable" restrictions.
But I have another question. Pardon my ignorance but doesn't the constitution and Bill Of rights determine what the federal government can and cannot do. If this is the case, can a state impose restrictions? I have never been able to figure this out. Help?