You? Wrong....?
Tbf I also called a last min audible and said today for Thomas's birthday.
So actually no I wasn't wrong.. persay
You? Wrong....?
Unless the state jumps in and requires a reapplication that is not necessary. Judges can remove restrictions like any other amendment. Plenty of upstate counties issue hunting and target and then remove restrictions later if you ask. So they can and should remove them now based on this opinion and do it promptly. But antigun judges may drag their heels, and worst case scenario legislature could try to take away judges ability to grant amendments and require an enhanced application and BG check for carry. That would be a major change to the permit scheme as it exists but we can't put anything past the current regime.Agreed - If you currently have a "hunting/sportsman" type license Now deemed Unconstitutional) and now have to reapply for a CCW.................then guaranteed, you will wait years for that amendment
If the hunting/sportsman license automatically rolls over to CCW...............happy days!
MaKe it $4,000 to get one.Now the question...
What will NY State do to hinder on a different level??
This ruling has a much bigger impact on a no-issue state like NJ. For friendlier upstate counties it's only likely to prompt the state to make our lives worse.This ruling does wipe out the "need cause" requirements in 6-8 different states/cities, so it does go beyond NY.
Of course it does, prambo nailed it above.Hochul is calling an emergency legislative session. It will get worse before it gets better
MaKe it $4,000 to get one.
The question is - will that hold up in lower courtsRequire;
a psychologist report
require XXXXXX hours of training
require XXXXX hours of live fire training
require personal liability insurance
CCW permit $extreme cost
Off the top of my head
So not preventing it, just making life impossible, extremely costly and extremely time consuming to obtain
Also: Only allowed 1 bullet purchase per year.Require;
a psychologist report
require XXXXXX hours of training
require XXXXX hours of live fire training
require personal liability insurance
CCW permit $extreme cost
Off the top of my head
So not preventing it, just making life impossible, extremely costly and extremely time consuming to obtain
"In sum, the historical evidence from antebellum America does demonstrate that the manner of public carry was subject to reasonable regulation, but none of these limitations on the right to bear arms operated to prevent law-abiding citizens with ordinary self-defense needs from carrying arms in public for that purpose. Pp. 42–51."
"The constitutional right to bear arms in public for self-defense is not “a second-class right, subject to an entirely different body of rules than the other Bill of Rights guarantees.” McDonald, 561 U. S., at 780 (plurality opinion). The exercise of other constitutional rights does not require individuals to demonstrate to government officers some special
need. The Second Amendment right to carry arms in public for self-defense is no different. New York’s proper-cause requirement violates the Fourteenth Amendment by preventing law-abiding citizens with
ordinary self-defense needs from exercising their right to keep and bear arms in public. Pp. 62–63."
Well, great ideas but they fail...Require;
a psychologist report
require XXXXXX hours of training
require XXXXX hours of live fire training
require personal liability insurance
CCW permit $extreme cost
Off the top of my head
So not preventing it, just making life impossible, extremely costly and extremely time consuming to obtain
I think based on the opinion out NYS license will grant state wide access.Anyone having issues with going to https://licensing.nypdonline.org/? Time to apply again. But the website keeps crashing on me.
That about sums it up....So what does this change? Sounds like we still have to go through the normal NY BS to get the permit. Only thing that changes is we don't have to explain why we should have restrictions removed?
At minimum, it removes the "proper cause" requirement that NYC and other states have for their permits. It also rejects the 2-step approach when ruling on 2nd amendment cases. Beyond that, the devil is in the details of the decision, details that I'm not smart enough to understand on my own.So what does this change? Sounds like we still have to go through the normal NY BS to get the permit. Only thing that changes is we don't have to explain why we should have restrictions removed?
It changes a lot...So what does this change? Sounds like we still have to go through the normal NY BS to get the permit. Only thing that changes is we don't have to explain why we should have restrictions removed?