The
draconian part ( harsh, severe, strict, extreme, drastic, stringent, tough,
cruel, oppressive, ruthless, relentless, punitive, authoritarian, despotic,
tyrannical, and repressive) is the fact that it is being considered by the
United States Supreme Court…take another look at those synonyms, a group of
people went to war over less…and they won!
That was back in 1776 or there about.
~ Norman E. Hooben
Source for the following: JPFO
Whatever Supreme Court decides in gun carry case, infringements will continue
By David Codrea
Gun owners who
monitor such things are on pins and needles after the Supreme Court apparently
(temporarily?) kicked the can down the road in Drake v.
Jerejian, a New Jersey case considering "Whether the Second
Amendment secures a right to carry handguns outside the home for self-defense;
and ... whether state officials violate the Second Amendment by requiring that
individuals wishing to exercise their right to carry a handgun for self-defense
first prove a 'justifiable need' for doing so."
"The U.S.
Supreme Court has pushed its consideration of a case challenging New Jersey's
mandate ... to April 25," The Washington Times
reported, further explaining plaintiff "Drake applied for a
handgun permit from New Jersey in 2010 but was rejected ..."
The Counsel of
record for the case is Alan Gura, of Hellerand McDonald fame.
Gura has argued
that four federal district courts, along with several state supreme courts,
have ruled that the Second Amendment extends the right to carry handguns to
outside of the home for self-defense, while several other federal courts have
disagreed," the National Constitution Center explained. Such conflicts
among the lower courts would seem to make the case a natural for SCOTUS
consideration, and seasoned pro-RKBA court watchers are as cautiously hopeful
as they can be.
"[T]he case
has been relisted for next Friday," New Jersey gun law expert, attorney
and author Evan Nappen told his
Facebook followers about the delay. "This is a potentially
positive sign. It got past round one."
"Conferences
are entirely private, so we can't know what went on," author and attorney
David T. Hardy weighed in on his Arms and the Law
blog. "I can think of several possibilities. Most obviously,
perhaps some Justices wanted longer to think it over. A good sign. Or perhaps
they wanted to see what would happen in the Ninth Circuit -- will California be
allowed to intervene, which might mean a petition for cert.? There really is no
way to say, although either of these possibilities mean the Court is giving it
serious consideration."
Will the court have
enough judges lined up to grant certiorari?
"Each year the Justices and their law clerks review
anywhere between 8 to 10 thousand petitions that come to Court – each one of
them hoping that the Court will agree to hear their case at oral
argument," C-SPAN advises in an introduction to a video explaining the
process. "Of these thousands, only 80-100 get heard during a term."
And if they do hear
the case, how will they decide?
Can we count on
"conservative" Chief Justice John Roberts, who inexplicably found the
approval of the
Framers in Obamacare?
Will
"conservative" Justice Antonin Scalia once again give aid and comfort
to "progressive" gun-grabbers, as he did in Heller? What
prompted him to volunteer the unnecessary (not to mention subversive) opinion
"We think that limitation is fairly supported by the historical tradition
of prohibiting the carrying of 'dangerous and unusual weapons.'"?
Will
"conservative" Justice Clarence Thomas let all gun owners down, the way
he did Thomas Lamar Bean, when he decided it was totally OK for the fedgov to create a
prohibited person out of a good citizen who inadvertently had some
ammunition in his car when he visited Mexico after attending a gun show?
While different
legal minds and "informed" court-watchers are nattering on about
judicial review, and whether intermediate or strict scrutiny should apply (and
perhaps even contesting how many angels can dance on the head of a pin), what
the High Court will not address, should they elect to hear the case, are the
clear words those of us, without robes and law degrees and political
connections with attendant obligations, understand instinctively:
"... shall not
be infringed."
"[I]f they
accept either Seegars or Parker, I believe the court will not
dare say there is no individual rkba," I noted back in
2005. "But if they find there is one, it will be so heavily
burdened with 'reasonable restrictions' as to ensure the status quo. They'll
never admit the truth unless someone, that would be us, has enough power to
compel them."
They won't because
there's no "or else" attached to a demand.
Perhaps the Court
will hear Drake. Perhaps it will even decide in favor of "shall
issue" permits, and the gun groups can all tell us what a great victory it
is for "gun rights," and inarguably, it will be a definite
incremental advance in the direction of more people going about while armed.
Still, it's hard to
square government permissions to bear arms with the express proscription that
they really have no legitimate authority, legal, moral or otherwise, to have
any say in the matter, that is, until such time as someone abuses the right and
victimizes another by threat or action. And no matter what the Black Robes say,
you can bet it will be a far cry from an admission that no permits should be
needed because no one in government has the delegated power to require them,
and those who say they do are frauds and usurpers.
Somehow, a quote
from Thomas Pynchon's "Gravity's Rainbow" comes to mind:
"If they can
get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about
answers."
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