Yea I dont know exactly what the process is but there will need to be some clarifications for sure.
Maybe read the Bruen Opinion
“¯\_(ツ)_/¯“
Yea I dont know exactly what the process is but there will need to be some clarifications for sure.
Maybe, but it is vague and the lawmaker that was on the radio was outlining some of this. Somewhere, someone will need to clarify what areas can be sensitive, or else they all will be as they are trying to do now. Actually I should say as they have done now because the law has been passed.Maybe read the Bruen Opinion
“¯\_(ツ)_/¯“
That in NY they are probably illegalWhat do you know about pitchforks and torches?
.
so... the SC said that specific areas were considered "sensitive" back when the 2A was ratified.Maybe, but it is vague and the lawmaker that was on the radio was outlining some of this. Somewhere, someone will need to clarify what areas can be sensitive, or else they all will be as they are trying to do now. Actually I should say as they have done now because the law has been passed.
Pitchforks and torches are completely legal in and of themselves.That in NY they are probably illegal
I'm sure they didn't allow persons that were charged with crimes to carry arms before the magistrate.so... the SC said that specific areas were considered "sensitive" back when the 2A was ratified.
Is there any supporting historical documents that show that courthouses, government buildings, schools, etc., were off limits to guns in the late 1700s?
I find it hard to believe that a governing body, with the intent to resist and eject an occupying force, would willingly disarm themselves to meet up.
Maybe, but it is vague and the lawmaker that was on the radio was outlining some of this. Somewhere, someone will need to clarify what areas can be sensitive, or else they all will be as they are trying to do now. Actually I should say as they have done now because the law has been passed.
Then I guess the law will stand as written. Thank you. I can now sell my pistols as they can not legally be carried virtually anywhere after September 1st, and are sub-par for home protection.Maybe it wasn't and the opinion even stated sensitive places was not the case before the court at this time “¯\_(ツ)_/¯“
Yes, but that is a very specific situation. There are numerous reasons to go before a magistrate that doesn't involve you being arrested and charged with a crime.I'm sure they didn't allow persons that were charged with crimes to carry arms before the magistrate.
Maybe, if so you probably just threw your pistols in a bin out front and retrieved it when you left. I saw something to that effect on a show I watched once. Who knows if its accurate though.Yes, but that is a very specific situation. There are numerous reasons to go before a magistrate that doesn't involve you being arrested and charged with a crime.
Was there a blanket "no arms allowed" in the courtroom other than law enforcement?
Then I guess the law will stand as written. Thank you. I can now sell my pistols as they can not legally be carried virtually anywhere after September 1st, and are sub-par for home protection.
I was being facetious. I think the state legislator that was being interviewed on a radio program probably has a better grasp of the situation than some random guy on the internet that likes to post goof ball stuff when others are trying to have a serious adult conversation.Go for it, doesn't bother me any what you do with your property “¯\_(ツ)_/¯“
Not enforceable by any means.
I was being facetious. I think the state legislator that was being interviewed on a radio program probably has a better grasp of the situation than some random guy on the internet that likes to post goof ball stuff when others are trying to have a serious adult conversation.
Explain. I thought the new law made it a felony to carry in a restricted place.Not enforceable by any means.
Only pitchforks with a prong lenth less than 4.5 inches and torches less than 24 inches with less than 100 lumens are allowed.That in NY they are probably illegal
Oh look, another joke. Who could have seen that coming? Im here to have serious discussion on this specific topic. Not slap stick comedic attempts. Sorry.I wouldn't call your posts "goofball"
Oh look, another joke. Who could have seen that coming? Im here to have serious discussion on this specific topic. Not slap stick comedic attempts. Sorry.
Seems as sensitive areas were indeed discussed in this case, despite what the resident comedian has claimed.
Justice Alito, who posed the following question to petitioners’ counsel at oral argument:
So starting with that, could we analyze the sensitive place question by asking whether this is a place where the state has taken alternative means to safeguard those who frequent that place? If it’s a—if it’s a place like a courthouse, for example, a government building, where everybody has to go through a magnetometer and there are security officials there, that would qualify as a sensitive place. Now that doesn’t provide a mechanical answer to every question, and—but it—would that be a way of analyzing—of beginning to analyze this?
Civil juries? ReallyRead your 7th amendment.
Their immunity isn’t qualified immunity. It’s immunity—no qualifiers involved— from voting on a law.Not if you actually read the "qualified immunity" rules.
By going outside their duties to impose unConstitutional laws they no longer have qualified immunity. They can be sued.
Every "law" that has been ruled unConstitutional by the S.C. is one more chance to financially drain these tyrants.
The answer is yes to those questions. At one time the bailiff could be armed in the courtroom but the sheriff etc could not for example. Armed in church was a no no in some places.so... the SC said that specific areas were considered "sensitive" back when the 2A was ratified.
Is there any supporting historical documents that show that courthouses, government buildings, schools, etc., were off limits to guns in the late 1700s?
I find it hard to believe that a governing body, with the intent to resist and eject an occupying force, would willingly disarm themselves to meet up.
NYSRPA v. Bruen and the Future of the Sensitive Places Doctrine - Boston College Law Review - Boston CollegeThe answer is yes to those questions. At one time the bailiff could be armed in the courtroom but the sheriff etc could not for example. Armed in church was a no no in some places.
Schools? I don’t know of any examples of the top of my head in the 1700s but public education wasn’t common then
While it gives some historical examples, it has a fundamental problem in its analysis. It’s basing it on Alitio rather than Thomas and Kavanaugh’s opinions.NYSRPA v. Bruen and the Future of the Sensitive Places Doctrine - Boston College Law Review - Boston College
This really explains a lot of the historical sensitive places.
While it gives some historical examples, it has a fundamental problem in its analysis. It’s basing it on Alitio rather than Thomas and Kavanaugh’s opinions.
The good news is that the sensitive areas in the new law are “new”, They weren’t and CCW was allowed in some capacity
The problem is how it interacts with Kavanaugh’s concurrent opinion with Alitio’s. . Read Kavanaugh’s.Got to read the whole opinion and understand how little wiggle room Thomas gives... but I guess the opinion isn't some dude on the radio