Monday, May 5, 2025

‘Study’ on School Shooters Really an Innuendo-Based Hit Piece on Gun Owners

How "Safe" Are You? The House of Cards That is Gun Free Zones, iStock-490657417
We can take steps to discourage and stop school shooters or we can listen to junk “science” that blames the people who can. iStock-490657417

“Most school shooters grew up with guns as key part of social life, study suggests,” Phys.org claimed on MSN. “A new analysis of school shootings in the U.S. suggests that most shooters had a social background in which guns were a key leisure item, with attached meanings of bonding and affection, which also translated into easy access to firearms.”

That certainly sounds like the study’s author, sociologist Anne Nassauer of the University of Erfurt, believes she’s exploring a new area of inquiry that can yield valuable insights in understanding school shootings, which will be necessary knowledge if society ever hopes to effectively deter them.

Too bad she starts her “Abstract” with a false assertion that absolves us of any responsibility to take the rest of what she says seriously:

“Firearms are the leading cause of death for minors in the United States and US gun culture is often discussed as a reason behind the prevalence of school shootings.”

“The first question is: What is a child?” economist, author, and president of the Crime Prevention Research Center,  John Lott writes, noting:

Guns Are Not the Leading Cause of Children’s Deaths…The bottom line is that about a third of the firearm deaths for those under 20 involve homicide, where the victims are 18 and 19 years old. Approximately 20% involve homicides for 15, 16, and 17-year-olds. These deaths are largely gang-related, and even banning guns is unlikely to stop drug gangs from obtaining guns to protect their extremely valuable drugs.

It’s not just “What is a child?” As the National Association for Gun Rights demonstrates, it’s also appropriate to ask, “What is a school shooting?

“Not only are they fluffing up those numbers, but they also use NDs to make the claim that there were 349 school shootings in 2023. Friend of NAGR Brandon Herrera did a great job dismantling this argument when he testified alongside us against the Colorado ‘assault weapons’ ban and was asked why ‘the United States has had 57 times as many school shootings as every other G7 country,’ answering  ‘Because of the way you track your statistics. That statistic is a sham. I’ve seen it a negligent discharge in a parking lot that injures nobody is counted as a school shooting.’”

As for Nassauer’s assertion that “US gun culture is often discussed as a reason behind the prevalence of school shootings,” left unaddressed is who is “often discussing it,” and the answer, of course, is those with vested interests in poisoning the well, the gun prohibitionist lobby, Democrat politicians, and the anti-gun media.

Look at how far into this review we are, and we’re just getting done addressing her opening sentence. What about the rest of this “study”?

I’ll stipulate that I’m going to keep things at surface level and let qualified statistical analysts address her methodologies and conclusions, except to note that she really presents none of the latter. You’ll note after it’s all said and done, the strongest statement of validation those promulgating this paper can make is “study suggests…”

Nassauer can suggest a lot of things, and does, with the hyperbolic title to her exercise in innuendo, “The only friend I had was my gun.” That worked—it was, if nothing else, brilliant SEO, as a quick look at Google search results shows that’s the talking point everybody is parroting.

“For some shooters, firearms were their ‘only friend’, the ‘love of [their] life’, or their ‘whole life’,” she writes, cherry-picking a handful of damning anecdotes to apply to the whole. “For others they were ‘therapeutic’, or the only topic that got an otherwise quiet and asocial shooter to passionately engage in a conversation.”

Who talks like that except confused and angry nutcases?

This just feeds another narrative being put forth by such “studies.” See for yourself with some titles designed to “inform” the debate that are being promoted over at Academia.edu:

  • Mass Shootings and Misogyny: Broken Males are Pulling the Trigger
  • A Conversation between Jackson Katz and Douglas Kellner on Guns, Masculinities, and School Shootings
  • Mass Shootings and Masculinity
  • GOOD GUYS WITH GUNS: Hegemonic Masculinity and Concealed Handguns
  • Sexed Pistols: The Gendered Impacts of Prolific Small Arms

Need I go on? Because I could.

These are fodder allowing leftist  trolls (that is, narcissists, psychopaths and sadists) to perpetuate  agitator Saul Alinsky’s Rule 5 ridicule  with ad hominem logical fallacies like calling gun owners “ammosexuals,” and repeating inadequate “penis” insults (whjile believing themselves to be both witty and original).

We’re supposed be influenced by a statistically insignificant sample of losers and apply that judgment to young people, such as those involved in NRA Youth Interests programs, who are as “law-abiding” as their member parents, arguably the most heavily-armed and peaceable population on the planet…?

News flash: Americans own guns. A lot of guns. And that includes people from all backgrounds (even ones who vote stupidly). Most of us have “a social background” dealing with guns and, aside from some violent criminal outliers that no amount of citizen disarmament will ever contain, we’re not the ones who need to be controlled.

Tarring all with that brush ignores what  the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, had to say back in 1994 about boys who lawfully own guns with the approval of responsible parents:

“Boys who own legal firearms, however, have much lower rates of delinquency and drug use and are even slightly less delinquent than nonowners of guns… The socialization into gun ownership is also vastly different for legal and illegal gunowners. Those who own legal guns have fathers who own guns for sport and hunting. On the other hand, those who own illegal guns have friends who own illegal guns and are far more likely to be gang members. For legal gunowners, socialization appears to take place in the family; for illegal gunowners, it appears to take place “on the street.””

Conspicuously absent from the “gun cuilture” finger-pointing is what other factors might have more of an effect, such as effects of psychotropic drugs, or gender dysphoria, and the all-around K-12 mind f–ng by Democrat teachers and administrators bullying collectivist nonsense, hoplophobia, and racial/sexual self-loathing into young, vulnerable minds. Also absent from the discussion is the observable phenomenon that school shootings take place in “gun-free zones,” where armed authorities don‘t show up until after the body count has started racking up, and then all too often hesitate and delay before engaging and stopping the attacker. And it’s an inconvenient truth for those who ridicule arming teachers that there have been no mass shootings at schools where politicians have gotten out of the way and Faculty/Administrator Safety Training & Emergency Response (FASTER) programs are in effect.

Instead, we see “More insights are needed whether those who contemplate committing a shooting but do not have easy access to firearms decide against a shooting, or if easy access gives shooters the idea to commit a shooting.”

Right. Because without being able to come right out and prove it, with the right amount of innuendo masked as research and with media complicity masked as “news,” the low-information segment of the public can be led to a conclusion the “scientists” can’t back up, even though it’s their central thesis: It’s the guns.

Here’s another news flash, one that shouldn’t have to be pointed out to “researchers” about yet another logical fallacy: Correlation is not causation.


About David Codrea:

David Codrea is the winner of multiple journalist awards for investigating/defending the RKBA and a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament. He blogs at “The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance,” is a regularly featured contributor to Firearms News, and posts on Twitter: @dcodrea and Facebook.

David Codrea



from https://ift.tt/f0ulzdb
via IFTTT

Congress Moves to Protect Veterans’ Gun Rights from VA’s Automatic Gun Bans

Soldier Celebrating Victory Armed Forces American Flag AdobeStock_Tomasz Zajda 111122294
Soldier Celebrating Victory Armed Forces American Flag AdobeStock_Tomasz Zajda 111122294

A decades-old United States Department of Veterans Affairs policy is under fire for stripping veterans of their right to own firearms without due process, sparking a bipartisan legislative response.

The VA fiduciary program was established to assist veterans who, due to physical or mental health conditions, are deemed unable to manage their VA benefits independently. 

A fiduciary — often a family member or trusted individual— is appointed to oversee the veteran’s finances, ensuring bills are paid and benefits are used appropriately. However, since 1993, the VA has interpreted federal law to require reporting these veterans to NICS under the category of “adjudicated as a mental defective,” a classification that triggers an automatic firearm prohibition.  

Critics argue that this practice violates veterans’ due process and Second Amendment rights. Unlike civilians, who typically lose firearm privileges only after a judicial determination of danger to themselves or others, veterans lose these rights administratively, without a court hearing or medical evaluation. Jim Whaley, CEO of Mission Roll Call, emphasizes that this creates a “stigma” that discourages veterans from seeking mental health care or financial assistance, fearing loss of their constitutional rights.  

In response to this VA policy, lawmakers in both chambers of Congress have introduced bills to protect the civil liberties of veterans. The Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act has a bill in the House (H.R. 1041) and a companion bill in the Senate (S. 478). The bill is sponsored by Rep. Mike Bost (R-IL) and Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA), respectively. 

The legislation aims to do the following: 

  1. Prohibit Automatic NICS Reporting: Bars the VA from sending veterans’ names to NICS solely due to fiduciary assignment.  
  2. Require Judicial Determination: Mandate that firearm restrictions apply only if a court or judicial authority finds the veteran dangerous.  

H.R. 1041, introduced on February 6, 2025, has garnered over 60 Republican co-sponsors, including House Veterans’ Affairs Committee members Morgan Luttrell (R-TX) and Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-IA). Its Senate counterpart, S. 478, introduced shortly thereafter, has 18 co-sponsors, with Sen. Jerry Moran (R-KS), chairman of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, among its key supporters. 

Both bills were introduced following a February 25 hearing where Chairman Bost highlighted the need to codify due process protections: “Veterans should never be forced to choose between receiving VA assistance and their fundamental rights.” 

By linking firearm restrictions to judicial findings as opposed to administrative decisions, the bills aim to harmonize veterans’ rights with those of civilians. Rep. Bost underscored that this adjustment is not about expanding gun access but correcting a procedural injustice. 

No compromise gun organizations have largely celebrated the introduction of this legislation. 

“The National Association for Gun Rights fully supports the Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act because no bureaucrat should have the power to strip a veteran of their gun rights without due process. The VA has no business sending names to the NICS list without a court ruling, and this bill stops that blatant infringement. Our veterans fought for our freedoms—it’s disgraceful that they must fight their own government to keep theirs. We commend Senators Kennedy and Moran, along with Chairman Bost, for taking action to end this unconstitutional abuse,” declared Hunter King, the Director of Political Affairs for The National Association for Gun Rights.

“Gun Owners of America is thankful to the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs for its focus on the lost gun rights of a quarter of a million veterans. GOA proudly supported the provision in Public Law 118-42 blocking the VA from disarming veterans and we hope to see this provision made permanent law through H.R. 472, the Veterans’ 2nd Amendment Protection Act, and to have all veterans’ lost gun rights restored in full,” said Aidan Johnston, Director of Federal Affairs, Gun Owners of America (GOA). “Veterans who have risked life and limb and now suffer from the psychological consequences related to their service should receive the best mental health care our nation has to offer. But VA gun control measures, such as this “fiduciary rule” to arbitrarily report veterans to the NICS database, pose major barriers to care for gun owning veterans who may need life-saving mental health treatment.”

As lawmakers move toward reform, the hope is that no veteran will ever again be stripped of their rights for simply asking for a helping hand.


About José Niño

José Niño is a freelance writer based in Austin, Texas. You can contact him via Facebook and X/Twitter. Subscribe to his Substack newsletter by visiting “Jose Nino Unfiltered” on Substack.com.

José Niño



from https://ift.tt/x3y6WQY
via IFTTT

Colorado: Gov. Jared Polis & Democrats’ Newest Gun Law is a Constitutional Disaster

Opinion

AR15 Semi Automatic Rifle 9mm handgun iStock-MariuszBlach 831433616
iStock-MariuszBlach

Colorado’s controversial new law, Assault Weapons Ban SB25-003, is sparking significant concern among pro-Second Amendment advocates. Signed into law by Governor Jared Polis in April and set to take effect on August 1, 2026, the legislation imposes extensive new restrictions on the purchase, sale, and ownership of various semiautomatic firearms.

SB25-003 prohibits commercial sales of semiautomatic rifles and shotguns equipped with detachable magazines and gas-operated handguns that accept detachable magazines. Firearms exempted include .22 caliber rimfire rifles with tubular magazines and bolt—or lever-action rifles, which are seen as posing lower safety risks.

Under the law, individuals who wish to purchase these restricted firearms must navigate a complex new “permission” process.

Requirements include completing a state-approved firearm safety course [which doesn’t exist yet], passing an extensive background check, and receiving approval from local sheriffs. Sheriffs can deny permits based on totally subjective assessments of applicants, though denied individuals have the option to appeal.

Jon Kelly, chairman of the Pitkin County Republicans, strongly opposes the law. “It’s insane,” Kelly stated. “This essentially bans almost all semiautomatic firearms, putting heavy burdens on responsible gun owners who now face recurring training mandates and increased government oversight.”

Jonathan Melnick, owner of Basalt Firearms, questioned the bill’s effectiveness, criticizing it as an emotional rather than logical response to tragedies such as the Aurora theater shooting. “Would banning SUVs stop incidents of drivers attacking pedestrians?” he remarked, emphasizing the failure of the bill to address the root causes of violence.

Additionally, concerning to gun owners, is the creation of a government-controlled registry via the permitting system, raising fears of future misuse or confiscation efforts.

Paying To Ban Yourself

Funding for this restrictive program controversially comes from Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Outdoor Parks and Recreation Fund, supported by hunting licenses, fishing permits, and state park fees. Critics highlight this as an irony, stating that Colorado sportsmen’s own contributions will finance their disarmament.

State Rep. Elizabeth Velasco (D-Glenwood Springs) defended the bill, framing it as necessary for public safety, but emphasized that it does not apply retroactively. Individuals who currently own restricted firearms are permitted to retain them, but future sales or transfers face stringent limitations.

Despite assurances, Second Amendment supporters argue this law infringes on constitutional rights established in landmark Supreme Court rulings such as District of Columbia v. Heller (2008). Advocacy groups are preparing for legal battles to challenge the law’s constitutionality, and political repercussions are expected to surface in upcoming elections.

“The passage of this bill won’t prevent mass shootings,” noted Lesley Hollywood, a gun rights advocate. It merely burdens law-abiding citizens without addressing real problems.

With significant pushback from Colorado’s rural communities and responsible gun owners, SB25-003’s future remains uncertain, pending legal challenges and potential voter backlash in 2026.

Colorado’s Assault Weapons Ban: Controversial SB25-003 Heads to Governor’s Desk

c



from https://ift.tt/XByALIm
via IFTTT

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Democrat Arrested in Child Sex Sting Who Called for Trump to Be Shot Was a ‘Gun Sense Voter’ Candidate

Use the Second Amendment to assasinate Trump? That’s quite the “gun sense” Democrat! (Muscogee County Sheriff’s Office)

“Georgia Former Democrat … Candidate Who Called for Trump’s Assassination ARRESTED in Multi-State Child Sex Trafficking Sting,” Gateway Pundit reported Thursday. “Carl Sprayberry — a former Democrat candidate for Georgia’s 139th House District … called for the assassination of President Donald Trump in a social media post…”

What’s curious is how he justified his call for lethal insurrectionary violence.

“Donald Trump has committed an act of High Treason. Should Congress refuse to take action, he will be killed by the people, as per the Second Amendment’s existence,” he advocated in a post on X. “It’s time to kill him. This moment is why the Second Amendment exist,” he declared in another.”

A search for more quotes produced scant results because his Facebook shows “content isn’t available” and his Twitter/X account shows “Account suspended – X suspends accounts which violate the X Rules.” Exploring for more yielded a (relevant to this discussion) reply to a Canadian leftist:

“Bomb Mar-a-Lago”

Keep in mind that Donald Trump is an avatar for his supporters, and the level of hateful savagery some display is ISIS-level. Such people don’t want our guns for “public safety,” but for their own, so they can do whatever they want.

So, what we have is a wannabe politician caught up in a child sex trafficking scheme who ardently advocates for politically motivated murder and uses the Second Amendment to justify bloodthirsty lawlessness. That he’s a Democrat, the party with citizen disarmament baked into its platform, makes his homicidal rantings insanely hypocritical enough.

But wait, as the infomercial urges, there’s more!

From “Meet Carl Sprayberry”  on his (not yet deleted) campaign website:

Carl is the only candidate in the State House 139 race recognized by Moms Demand Action, an organization dedicated to reducing gun violence founded following the tragic mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School that left 20 children (ages six to seven) and six adult school staff dead

And he’s featured on BlueVoterGuide.org’s “Gun Sense Voter Geortgia Endorsements” page, which notes:

Campaign of Everytown for Gun Safety Action Fund and Everytown for Gun Safety Victory Fund, along with the volunteer grassroots networks Moms Demand Action and Students Demand Action. We’re a non-partisan grassroots movement of people organizing to elect candidates who support common-sense gun safety laws at every level of government.

Never mind that every one of Carl’s “non-partisan” Everytown colleagues appears to be a Democrat—since when has telling things like they really are been a gun-grabber priority? And why is it so many Democrat “gun sense” candidates turn out to be criminal hypocrites, and sexual exploiters of the young (archive link may load slowly)?  What’s that line about being known by the company they keep?

Why is it so many of these ambition-obsessed creatures who can’t – or more likely won’t – control themselves, are fixated on controlling you and me?


About David Codrea:

David Codrea is the winner of multiple journalist awards for investigating/defending the RKBA and a long-time gun owner rights advocate who defiantly challenges the folly of citizen disarmament. He blogs at “The War on Guns: Notes from the Resistance,” is a regularly featured contributor to Firearms News, and posts on Twitter: @dcodrea and Facebook.

David Codrea



from https://ift.tt/N5m40ut
via IFTTT

Oregon: James Manning & His Anti Militia Bill ~ Are Both Just Plain Stupid

Opinion

Oregon Democrat James Manning IMG Official Headshot votejamesmanningcom
James Manning & His Anti Militia Bill ~ Are Both Just Plain Stupid – Oregon Democrat James Manning IMG Official Headshot votejamesmanningcom

Oregon – Last week in the “House Committee On Emergency Management, General Government and Veterans” held a public hearing on SB 947A. This 34-page absurdity is the fever dream of the dumbest and most openly racist member of the Oregon Senate, James Manning.

We told you about this bill here. If you missed it, here is a short recap;

“Senator James Manning’s attempt to erase the term “unorganized militia” from state law as a pointless, delusional crusade. The bill, branded as a tribute to the National Guard, is exposed as a wasteful distraction built on unfounded racial paranoia, with zero public or military support and unanimous opposition from those who’ve weighed in. While Manning’s incoherent justifications border on satire, the real disgrace lies in Republican senators letting this absurdity pass the Senate unchallenged.”

The purpose of the bill is to remove any mention of the “unorganized militia” from Oregon’s statute.

“Why?” you might ask. Well, don’t ask Manning unless you are prepared for an utterly incoherent, rambling, and nonsensical response.

While Manning insists his bill is about granting the proper respect to the National Guard (we are unaware of any systemic disrespect they are facing) what it actually is, is a very expensive and time wasting manifestation of Manning’s weird delusion that hordes of white “militiamen” are roaming the state attacking black people.

This would be humorous if it were happening in some tiny Caribbean dictatorship. But it’s happening here and it’s costing Oregon taxpayers a pant load in lawyers, legislators, and staff time. And of course, that’s your money going straight down the crapper.

When the bill passed on the Senate floor, Manning’s explanations for its purpose bordered on the surreal. The man is incapable of forming complete sentences. Today’s hearing was no different. (Oddly, Manning said the bill passed the Senate and was “bipartisan”. Apparently, Manning is unfamiliar with the word. There was not a single Republican vote for this bill.)

We defy anyone to listen to Manning and leave saying, “Sure. I understand that.”

While he continues to slip up and reveal his real intentions, Manning insists this is only about respect for our men and women in uniform.

So it’s interesting to note that not a single member of the military or any agency representing any branch of the military has submitted a single word in support of Manning’s buffoonery. In fact, no one has offered a word of support.

Manning has managed to draft a bill that has exactly NO support from anyone except imbecile Democrat legislators. 100% of submitted testimony is in opposition to this nonsense. That’s quite an accomplishment.

Manning is an idiot. That is beyond dispute. However, there is a real lesson here.

The Oregon Republicans have been repeatedly reminding us that we “need to make our voices heard” and we need to “flood the Democrats’ inboxes with email.”

Of course, politicians on both sides of the aisle commonly set up filters so your emails are never seen, let alone read. But the point is, here we have a bill that is epically moronic and has received no shortage of responses from the public, all opposed. Yet the Oregon Republican Senators allowed it to pass the Senate, and now it is being considered in the House.

Maybe the Republicans should stop shifting the blame to the voters and step up for a change.

The bill has not yet been scheduled for a “work session,” but we assume that anything this stupid will move ahead. No point wasting time on the real issues Oregon faces.

You can support the work of the Oregon Firearms Federation here.

The Heritage of American Militias

Rediscovering the Second Amendment: A Call to Arms for Common Defense ~ DEEP DIVE

 


About Oregon Firearms Federation:

The Oregon Firearms Federation has proven itself to be Oregon’s only no-compromise lobbying group; OFF takes the same tough stands and serves as a vehicle for educating gun owners, promoting their rights, and, when necessary, fighting the freedom haters in court. Visit: www.oregonfirearms.org

Oregon Firearms Federation



from https://ift.tt/mBKaM6w
via IFTTT

Friday, May 2, 2025

Trump DOJ Stuns Nation: Sides with Gun Owners in Supreme Court 2A Showdown

Opinion

Strategy Chess Tactics Surprise Moves Blocking
Istock

Gun rights attorneys are calling it “monumental” and “a huge deal,” and at least one national gun rights organization is hailing the Trump administration for turning the U.S. government’s position on the Second Amendment a full 180 degrees by submitting an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court supporting petitioners in a case challenging the constitutionality of a state gun control law.

It appears to be the first time in history the government—in this case the Department of Justice—has taken the side of gun owners. The case, known as Wolford v. Lopez, challenges Hawaii’s Act 52, an extremely restrictive gun law adopted in response to the Supreme Court’s 2022 Bruen ruling, which struck down New York’s unconstitutional concealed carry law.

Civil rights Attorney Mark W. Smith, host of the Four Boxes Diner on YouTube, declared, “This is a huge deal, a sea change in the way the Supreme Court will be functioning in the way the Department of Justice will be interacting with the United States Supreme Court when it comes to our Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms. This is a big deal.”

He was referring to the government’s declaration in the amicus brief that, “The United States has a substantial interest in the preservation of the right to keep and bear arms and in the proper interpretation of the Second Amendment.”

Likewise, fellow civil rights attorney William Kirk, president of Washington Gun Law and host of his own YouTube broadcast, asks his viewers, “Did you ever believe, especially during the last four years, that you would ever hear the Department of Justice have this as their official statement?”

Kirk referred to the DOJ’s Thursday brief filing as “a monumental day.”

The 29-page amicus bears some significant signatures: Solicitor General D. John Sauer, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, Deputy Solicitor General Sarah M. Harris and Vivek Suri, assistant to the Solicitor General. Dhillon is also making headlines for expanding the mission of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division to include a sharp focus on protecting and enforcing the Second Amendment.

As reported previously by AmmoLand News, the establishment media is attacking Dhillon on the contention that she is decimating the Civil Rights Division staff at the risk of abandoning the division’s traditional job of protecting voting rights and pursuing discrimination against minorities. By taking this approach, the media is literally—perhaps intentionally—ignoring the division’s expanded role of defending the Second Amendment.

The brief is a gold mine of quotable quotes.

“Hawaii’s novel default rule defies—indeed, effectively nullifies—the “general right to publicly carry arms” that Bruen recognized…” the brief states. “That is no accident. The structure and operation of Hawaii’s law reveal that the law serves no legitimate purpose and instead seeks only to inhibit the exercise of the right to bear arms.”

In another paragraph, the brief recalls, “Until NYSRPA v. Bruen…Hawaii maintained a may-issue regime for licenses to carry firearms. Individuals could apply for carry licenses only in narrow circumstances, and police chiefs retained broad discretion to deny applications. In practice, that may-issue regime operated more like a no-issue regime. In 2018, the Ninth Circuit noted that Hawaii had issued ‘only four concealed carry licenses’ to private citizens ‘in the past eighteen years’ and that, in one county, ‘not a single concealed carry license ha[d] ever been granted.’”

Later, the brief notes, “Under traditional property law, a person who enters private property open to the public does not need specific permission from the owner to carry a gun—or, for that matter, to carry anything else, or to engage in any other constitutionally protected con duct, such as prayer or speech…Hawaii’s singling out of firearms confirms that the default rule has nothing to do with protecting property rights. For everything but firearms, Hawaii presumes that owners welcome it on their property unless they affirmatively object.”

And then there is this: “The scope and operation of Hawaii’s default rule thus establish that the rule serves no legitimate objective and that it instead seeks simply to impede the carrying of firearms. That is plainly unconstitutional.”

Into this unprecedented legal drama steps the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, which notes in a Friday statement that Hawaii is one of the 12 states it named in an online petition to Attorney General Pamela Bondi, calling on her Second Amendment Task Force to investigate for patterns of 2A infringements and impairments.

“We’re hoping the submission of this important amicus brief signals the beginning of the administration’s promised effort to defend the Second Amendment from infringements enacted over the years by various states,” said CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb. “It is time to end these blatant and deliberate constitutional violations, and we finally have an administration willing to accomplish that task.”

The DOJ amicus brief identifies five states, including Hawaii, which “reacted to Bruen by enacting the type of default rule at issue here.”

By no small coincidence, all five states—Hawaii, California, Maryland, New Jersey, and New York—are on the“Dirty Dozen” list specified in the CCRKBA online petition, which is still gathering signatures.

As attorney Kirk acknowledges in his YouTube presentation, it’s always possible the high court may not take the Hawaii case. But at least now, for what appears to be the first time ever, the Justice Department has jumped into a legal battle on the side of individuals fighting to protect their Second Amendment rights.

While it would be conjecture to suggest this is really what the political left fears and finds so offensive about a second Trump administration, the notion also cannot simply be dismissed because of the political earthquake which would almost certainly result from an aggressive DOJ campaign to right what Second Amendment advocates contend have been decades of wrongs against a cornerstone of the Bill of Rights.

Media Bashes Dhillon, Ignores Her Civil Rights Div. 2A Focus

CCRKBA Launches Petition to Bondi for ‘Dirty Dozen’ Investigations


About Dave Workman

Dave Workman is a senior editor at TheGunMag.com and Liberty Park Press, author of multiple books on the Right to Keep & Bear Arms, and formerly an NRA-certified firearms instructor.

Dave Workman

 



from https://ift.tt/OeFsmNU
via IFTTT

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Arresting a Judge? About Time Or a Mistake by the FED ~ VIDEO

Opinion Judge Andrew P. Napolitano

Last week the FBI arrested a Wisconsin state judge as she was walking into the courthouse where she works. The feds had alerted the media — but not the judge — to this event, and they arrived and recorded the arrest.

The standard and preferred practice when arresting a nonviolent person who is a public official with deep roots in the community is to invite the person to surrender with counsel.

Instead, without notice, this judge was stopped on a public street, handcuffed behind her back — a technique reserved for the most dangerous or threatening individuals — and within minutes, the FBI Director himself had posted still photos of this event on his X account.

The feds were unhappy at the manner in which a criminal defendant before this judge was permitted to leave her courtroom. By leaving through a nonpublic exit, instead of through the doors where the feds were awaiting him, his departure frustrated the feds who apparently expected the judge to accommodate them. The technical charge against the judge is obstructing the administration of justice. The true charge was failing to aid the feds.

Here is the backstory.

The feds have grown accustomed to commandeering the states to provide assistance when needed — and many states routinely complied. They did so either out of a sense of common purpose or because the feds had bailed them out financially.

Two Supreme Court cases, with largely compatible results, tested this relationship. The first, South Dakota v. Dole (1987), addressed the strings attached to the grants of federal funds to the states. Congress wanted to lower speed limits on highways and decided to bribe the states in order to achieve that goal. It offered huge amounts of cash for paving state and federal highways in return for reducing speed limits to 55 miles per hour.

When South Dakota told the feds that it would take the cash but not the lower speed limits, the Supreme Court ruled that so long as the strings attached to the financial grants are rationally related to the purpose of the grants, the strings are lawful and enforceable. So, South Dakota then took the cash and reluctantly lowered its speed limits.

Ten years later, Congress enacted gun regulations and ordered the states to enforce them.

In a case called Printz v. United States (1997), the late Justice Antonin Scalia wrote for the Supreme Court that the states are still sovereign, they can reject federal cash and federal strings, and the feds cannot commandeer their officials. The federal government, the court held, is one of limited constitutional powers, and the power to commandeer state officials is not among them.

Both of these rulings unambiguously recognized the sovereignty of the states. The South Dakota case led to vastly more congressional bribery — the states today simply do not refuse federal cash. The Printz case led to federal frustration. That frustration boiled over outside a Wisconsin courthouse last week when the feds did what was surely unthinkable to Justice Scalia — arresting a sitting state judge who refused to be commandeered by the feds.

Judge Hannah Dugan was presiding over an arraignment for a non-incarcerated defendant when her court officers told her that the feds were in the courthouse hallway seeking to arrest the defendant in her courtroom, and the feds were growing impatient. When she asked to see their arrest warrant, they had none. Instead of an arrest warrant issued by a judge, as the Fourth Amendment requires, they presented an administrative warrant in which one federal agent authorizes another to arrest a person in a public place.

Judge Dugan shares the view of your author that the Fourth Amendment means what it says and thus administrative warrants are blatantly unconstitutional, and she would not recognize it. The purpose of the amendment is to ensure that only judges order arrests. When her business with the defendant in her courtroom was completed, she asked him to leave through the exit used by jurors, which was not accessible to the feds.

She did not inform the defendant that the feds were looking for him, but he apparently sensed that something was up; and when he left the courthouse and was met by feds who were waiting for him, he ran. A brief chase ensued, but the six feds captured the one defendant.

A week later, Judge Dugan was arrested for obstruction of justice.

Her arrest implicates not only the Supreme Court cases above — Wisconsin never agreed to have its officials assist the feds in immigration enforcement in return for federal cash, and the feds cannot commandeer state officials, judges or police, to assist them — as well as the recent Supreme Court decision on immunity. Though that case addresses presidential immunity, it is instructive on the nature of government in America. It teaches that government officials cannot be criminally prosecuted for the exercise of their core functions.

So, if the Secretary of Defense directs Air Force jets to attack a structure in a foreign country he mistakenly identifies as military but which turns out to be civilian, he cannot be prosecuted for homicide. If FBI agents raid and destroy the wrong house, they cannot be arrested for breaking and entering. And if a judge tells a defendant to leave her courtroom through door A and not door B, because behind B are folks with a phony warrant, she cannot be prosecuted.

This is bigger than Judge Dugan. We are witnessing an unprecedented assault on the separation of powers and the concept of federalism by a White House impatient with the constitutional process and largely indifferent to the role and function of the judiciary. The role of the judiciary is to be anti-democratic — to protect lives, liberties and properties from the other two branches.

If the feds succeed in intimidating judges and bending them to the presidential will, our liberties will have no protection.

What do you think about this case? Let us know in the comments below.

Federal District Judge Wimes Creates Novel Excuses to Rule 2A Protection Act Unconstitutional

Outrageous: Judge VanDyke Calls Out 9th Circuit’s Devious Maneuvers Against 2nd Amendment ~ VIDEO


To learn more about Judge Andrew Napolitano, visit www.JudgeNap.com.



from https://ift.tt/BtmNqYw
via IFTTT