Acer-m14
20×102mm Vulcan
were permits needed in 1791
No ...
case closed
No ...
case closed
The Supreme Court held oral arguments for Bruen in November 2021, with plaintiffs challenging the 100-year-old New York state handgun licensing law requiring individuals to show proper cause before they can be licensed to carry a concealed weapon in public.They said permits were permissible in Bruen. Don’t get mad at me and I agree they don’t follow history.
It still a permit and go read what I said I thought they would do and it very much aligns with your thinking. It’s post 28 of this thread.The Supreme Court held oral arguments for Bruen in November 2021, with plaintiffs challenging the 100-year-old New York state handgun licensing law requiring individuals to show proper cause before they can be licensed to carry a concealed weapon in public.
The key words to carry a concealed weapon in public they were talking about concealed not to own like in Pa and many other states you don't need a permit to buy or carry open but do concealed
Although Kavanaugh indicated that he would have struck down the ban on semi-automatic rifles and the registration requirements, his discussion of the proper test to use to review gun laws suggests that he might be willing to uphold some gun laws, such as those requiring a license to carry a concealed weapon, as long as they are consistent with the history and tradition of regulating guns. He contended that a test that assesses “gun bans and regulations based on text, history, and tradition” will often give governments “more flexibility and power” than a balancing test, because “history and tradition show that a variety of gun regulations have co-existed with the Second Amendment right.”
license to carry a concealed weapon not permit to own.
Permit required to own not cover at all.
NOTE he also said. The registration requirements, he continued, are unconstitutional because gun owners have traditionally not been required to register all guns that they own legally
In NY you need to register. But unfortunately here in NY you need a permit and register as far as I know there has not been a SCOTUS case on either of these.
Did they say "permits" or "Licenses"? There IS a difference in the historical and contextual definitions of the word despite being used interchangeably.They said permits were permissible in Bruen. Don’t get mad at me and I agree they don’t follow history.
Correct. The Spirit is the permit and process ensures no Prohibited Person is allowed to have a fire arm. Now, we all know the criminals don't do this anyway. The more invasive the process is where the SCOTUS needs to be more clear. It is also why many of the current NYS processes need immediate SCOTUS intervention. Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U.S. 105 "No state shall convert a liberty into a license, and charge a fee therefore". Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U.S. 105 (1943). The reason NYS HAD permits serial numbers at County Level (Penal Law, Article 400.00, Section 5 (3) says County and City; NOT State https://newyorklegaldefense.com/res...ng-and-other-provisions-relating-to-firearms/ ) was to not violate the FOPA (https://www.congress.gov/bill/99th-congress/senate-bill/49) by collecting data on people who proved to NOT be Prohibited at Federal or State level.I’m not sure why anyone thinks this will happen. SCOTUS already said permits are fine but they can’t be overly burdensome in time or money. Maybe they will get rid of long gun permits or handgun permits in general but CCW permits will stay. I think handgun permits as a whole will be allowed. I’d like to see them get rid of ammo cards and stuff like that and I think that’s possible.
The Spirit is the permit and process ensures no Prohibited Person is allowed to have a fire arm.
Wasn't "open carry" considered protected by the 2nd A?That being said, the early period of our nation did have a distinction between open and concealed carry,
I am in agreement with you that neither the States nor the Feds can prohibit open carry, nor can they demand permits for open carry (which would include NICS, since its both defacto Proior Restraint, fails on Equal Protection, is prohibited by the 2A, and serves as both a "permission slip" and a backdoor database of gun owners) , or allow concealed but not allow open carry,. I thought I was clear on that.Wasn't "open carry" considered protected by the 2nd A?
So how can States get away with banning open carry at all?
The rub that "we will allow concealed carry instead" is bull. That's no different than saying "you can't have semi-auto pistols because we allow revolvers", something SCOTUS has already shot down.
So if States want to license concealed carry, which SCOTUS has said is permissible, then these States also cannot ban open carry via the 2nd. AND cannot require permitting/licensing for open carry.
Nice meme. Now to get that applied with legal precedent and allow us law abiders to stay that way.
Why would SCOTUS overturn their own ruling in Heller? Scalia made it clear that open carry is the Right that is protected