User Panel
Quoted: Fair enough call me when something actually gets done. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: In their defense and to play Devil's Advocate. Justice Kavanaugh did state that he wants other cases to be thrown at SCOUTS. Fair enough call me when something actually gets done. Monday, 0930 Eastern. All 10+ gun cases before the court are being considered in conference this Friday, orders will be released either Friday afternoon (potentially, if a grant) or Monday (if a grant, or definitively if a denial), or no mention if being relisted for the next conference (a signal of further examination prior to certiorari grant ie dissent from denial). Kharn |
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Quoted: Monday, 0930 Eastern. All 10+ gun cases before the court are being considered in conference this Friday, orders will be released either Friday afternoon (potentially, if a grant) or Monday (if a grant, or definitively if a denial), or no mention if being relisted for the next conference (a signal of further examination prior to certiorari grant ie dissent from denial). Kharn View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: In their defense and to play Devil's Advocate. Justice Kavanaugh did state that he wants other cases to be thrown at SCOUTS. Fair enough call me when something actually gets done. Monday, 0930 Eastern. All 10+ gun cases before the court are being considered in conference this Friday, orders will be released either Friday afternoon (potentially, if a grant) or Monday (if a grant, or definitively if a denial), or no mention if being relisted for the next conference (a signal of further examination prior to certiorari grant ie dissent from denial). Kharn I'm not going to hold my breath. I'm still hopeful though. |
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I hope they get relisted long enough for a vacancy to open up. If that’s wrong of me to say oh well, I’ll see her down there then
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Kavanaugh is a piece of shit, just like Judas Roberts.
He has proved once again that Trump's appointees are not what they pretended to be. |
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Quoted: What if he was right? That the court needs to hear a 2A case but that NYSRPA was moot? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Kavanaugh is a piece of shit, just like Judas Roberts. He has proved once again that Trump's appointees are not what they pretended to be. What if he was right? That the court needs to hear a 2A case but that NYSRPA was moot? A little early to call him right. Pull that card out right after he gives an opinion we can celebrate rather than right after he decides to once again do nothing. |
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Quoted: What if he was right? That the court needs to hear a 2A case but that NYSRPA was moot? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Kavanaugh is a piece of shit, just like Judas Roberts. He has proved once again that Trump's appointees are not what they pretended to be. What if he was right? That the court needs to hear a 2A case but that NYSRPA was moot? He shouldn't have switched sides to go with the liberals. It was somewhat expected that Judas would kill this case, BK didn't have to endorse or encourage him. BK should have been working on Judas to settle this case once & for all instead of letting it languish. |
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Quoted: He shouldn't have switched sides to go with the liberals. It was somewhat expected that Judas would kill this case, BK didn't have to endorse or encourage him. BK should have been working on Judas to settle this case once & for all instead of letting it languish. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Kavanaugh is a piece of shit, just like Judas Roberts. He has proved once again that Trump's appointees are not what they pretended to be. What if he was right? That the court needs to hear a 2A case but that NYSRPA was moot? He shouldn't have switched sides to go with the liberals. It was somewhat expected that Judas would kill this case, BK didn't have to endorse or encourage him. BK should have been working on Judas to settle this case once & for all instead of letting it languish. Judges shouldn’t have sides. It was a 6-3 split decision. He was on the majority side. I wish it had gone the other way. But even with Kav it would have been 5-4 for mootness. |
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Saw this on a news article, about declining to hear this ruling. What does that mean does NY'rs? They can't take their guns outside the city?
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Total chickenshit move. Absolute and total chickenshit.
Fuck NY. |
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Quoted: Saw this on a news article, about declining to hear this ruling. What does that mean does NY'rs? They can't take their guns outside the city? View Quote Well the NYSRPA actually got 99% of what they asked for. What they didn’t get was a broader ruling that we all hoped would expand gun rights nationwide. You should read Alito’s dissent |
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Quoted: Saw this on a news article, about declining to hear this ruling. What does that mean does NY'rs? They can't take their guns outside the city? View Quote |
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Quoted: No, its fucking worse than that. We used to all have "carry" permits with BS administrative restrictions that had no force of criminal law behind the restrictions because they were all afraid that the courts would rip them a new one for issuing us all only the permit that allows us to keep guns in the house. Now they created a permit that allows us to keep it in the house and do a few other things to comply with this case and if we do more than that we fucking go to jail, so we're all getting that now. Stop to take a piss on the way to the the range, you're going to fucking jail. SCOTUS fucked us. View Quote Wtf?.. |
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Quoted: Saw this on a news article, about declining to hear this ruling. What does that mean does NY'rs? They can't take their guns outside the city? View Quote It means NYC/NYS is free to put the same law back on the books again, & it will have to start over again with a new lawsuit - then years form now when it gets back up to SCOTUS they can temporarily repeal the law again to moot the case... |
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Quoted: He shouldn't have switched sides to go with the liberals. It was somewhat expected that Judas would kill this case, BK didn't have to endorse or encourage him. BK should have been working on Judas to settle this case once & for all instead of letting it languish. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Kavanaugh is a piece of shit, just like Judas Roberts. He has proved once again that Trump's appointees are not what they pretended to be. What if he was right? That the court needs to hear a 2A case but that NYSRPA was moot? He shouldn't have switched sides to go with the liberals. It was somewhat expected that Judas would kill this case, BK didn't have to endorse or encourage him. BK should have been working on Judas to settle this case once & for all instead of letting it languish. After NYC changed their law, Clement's brief saying the case wasn't moot was on shakey ground, it could easily have gone either way. Pick a new case and move on, as Kavanaugh says. Kharn |
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Quoted: Since someone has a differing opinion you result to name calling. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: It's very heartwarming to see the Share_Blue Squad show up to defend their favorite mod. Always goes that way when someone has the audacity to point point out the Emperor has no clothes. |
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Quoted: No, its fucking worse than that. We used to all have "carry" permits with BS administrative restrictions that had no force of criminal law behind the restrictions because they were all afraid that the courts would rip them a new one for issuing us all only the permit that allows us to keep guns in the house. Now they created a permit that allows us to keep it in the house and do a few other things to comply with this case and if we do more than that we fucking go to jail, so we're all getting that now. Stop to take a piss on the way to the the range, you're going to fucking jail. SCOTUS fucked us. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Saw this on a news article, about declining to hear this ruling. What does that mean does NY'rs? They can't take their guns outside the city? Wont matter anyway when SCOTUS throws out The Sullivan Act. Permit to merely possess a handgun in NY is a blatant violation of Heller. |
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Quoted: Wont matter anyway when SCOTUS throws out The Sullivan Act. Permit to merely possess a handgun in NY is a blatant violation of Heller. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Saw this on a news article, about declining to hear this ruling. What does that mean does NY'rs? They can't take their guns outside the city? Wont matter anyway when SCOTUS throws out The Sullivan Act. Permit to merely possess a handgun in NY is a blatant violation of Heller. Not quite. Gura very carefully did NOT challenge the requirement to have a license to own a gun in DC, just the fact that licenses were unavailable. This was a very important, strategic move, because presenting too many disputes at once could easily result in a loss (and it was close enough as it was, I'm not sure Kennedy would have signed on to eliminating permits/licenses). The objective was to get a specific ruling on whether the Second Amendment protected an individual right or only some nebulous "right" of the militia to bear arms (which is nonsense, but that's what the courts had been twisting _Miller_ to say, much like they've steadily twisted _Heller_ to avoid fully enforcing it). He got that win. The second win was to get the Second Amendment applied to the states with _McDonald_. He's always been clear that it was going to take a LOT of court cases chipping away at restrictions before we get full recognition of the Second Amendment, and even he's not convinced that we'll manage to get the NFA thrown out no matter how unConstitutional it is. ETA: Seven of the ten Second Amendment cases being reviewed on Friday relate to carry permit issues, I could easily see those being consolidated into one case. While not as good as eliminating carry permits, a decision mandating that carry permits a) must be shall-issue and b) must be recognized by all states would do a LOT to improve the right to carry. Not that I consider permits to exercise a fundamental Constitutional right to be legit, I just don't have confidence the USSC will go so far as to eliminate them at this stage of the game. |
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Quoted: After NYC changed their law, Clement's brief saying the case wasn't moot was on shakey ground, it could easily have gone either way. Pick a new case and move on, as Kavanaugh says. Kharn View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Kavanaugh is a piece of shit, just like Judas Roberts. He has proved once again that Trump's appointees are not what they pretended to be. What if he was right? That the court needs to hear a 2A case but that NYSRPA was moot? He shouldn't have switched sides to go with the liberals. It was somewhat expected that Judas would kill this case, BK didn't have to endorse or encourage him. BK should have been working on Judas to settle this case once & for all instead of letting it languish. After NYC changed their law, Clement's brief saying the case wasn't moot was on shakey ground, it could easily have gone either way. Pick a new case and move on, as Kavanaugh says. Kharn That shouldn't have mooted the case - that should have been an acknowledgment by their side that the law was unconstitutional & it should have resulted in summary judgment for the plaintiffs. They didn't change the law when it was challenged - they waited until it was apparent that SCOTUS was going to take the case & their chances of winning were 0%. Plaintiff's only got part of what they wanted. SCOTUS could have put an end to this entire thing & they could have sent a message to the states that they can no longer violate civil rights... |
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Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973.
Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... |
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Quoted: Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973. Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... View Quote Miller was dead before the decision was made and didn’t even have defense counsel representation. The court plays bogus sides of the road for its political aims. |
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Quoted: Wtf?.. View Quote Because downstate hates freedom and there is a proper cause requirement in the law (ie. "May Issue") but didn't want to get sued perpetually because they knew people would revolt if they couldn't hunt or target shoot, they issued everyone "full carry" but said - "you can only carry this to and from the range, or in connection with hunting, otherwise we'll revoke it." The courts allowed this for years. In comes New York City, which hates freedom more than others and says "shit, we can't issue "full carry" let's do the reverse and issue a "premises permit" but double secret pinky swear that we won't prosecute people for going to the range/hunting, so that if they break our rules they go to jail, not just have their license revoked and guns stolen by the state. Then NYC gets sued for that, etc. etc. and now this gets added to the premises permit law: "Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of state or local law or rule or regulation, the premises limitation set forth in any license to have and possess a pistol or revolver in the licensee's dwelling or place of business pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) of subdivision two of this section shall not prevent the transport of such pistol or revolver directly to or from (i) another dwelling or place of business of the licensee where the licensee is authorized to have and possess such pistol or revolver, (ii) an indoor or outdoor shooting range that is authorized by law to operate as such, (iii) a shooting competition at which the licensee may possess such pistol or revolver consistent with the provisions of subdivision a of section 265.20 of this chapter or consistent with the law applicable at the place of such competition, or (iv) any other location where the licensee is lawfully authorized to have and possess such pistol or revolver; provided however, that during such transport to or from a location specified in clauses (i) through (iv) of this paragraph, the pistol or revolver shall be unloaded and carried in a locked container, and the ammunition therefor shall be carried separately;" So now that our premises permit allows us to do alot more than just keep it in the house, every county previously giving out "full carry" with administrative restrictions that can't be prosecuted could go to this new revamped premises license. |
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Quoted: Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973. Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... View Quote "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn |
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Quoted: "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973. Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn |
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Quoted: That shouldn't have mooted the case - that should have been an acknowledgment by their side that the law was unconstitutional & it should have resulted in summary judgment for the plaintiffs. They didn't change the law when it was challenged - they waited until it was apparent that SCOTUS was going to take the case & their chances of winning were 0%. Plaintiff's only got part of what they wanted. SCOTUS could have put an end to this entire thing & they could have sent a message to the states that they can no longer violate civil rights... View Quote And they god damned should have. |
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Quoted: I'm discussing the many decades prior to the anti-gun hysteria of the 1960s, not the recent 33 years of shall-issue CCW making progress. CA allowed open carry until 1967, and the Black Panthers brought their toys to the state capitol to show they weren't pleased with the bill banning the practice. https://i.redd.it/k15zbfs130921.png Screw'em if they want people carrying M4s and underfolders everywhere. I bet it will be like Ohio when the state supreme court said OC was protected, and people responded with OC walks everywhere, they very quickly switched to allowing CC. Kharn View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973. Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn I'm discussing the many decades prior to the anti-gun hysteria of the 1960s, not the recent 33 years of shall-issue CCW making progress. CA allowed open carry until 1967, and the Black Panthers brought their toys to the state capitol to show they weren't pleased with the bill banning the practice. https://i.redd.it/k15zbfs130921.png Screw'em if they want people carrying M4s and underfolders everywhere. I bet it will be like Ohio when the state supreme court said OC was protected, and people responded with OC walks everywhere, they very quickly switched to allowing CC. Kharn |
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Quoted: Ronald Reagan ended that. NY State had the Sullivan Act enforce starting in 1911. The South had gun control to enforce Jim Crow. The North was May Issue permitted carry. Hell, most places you needed a permit to buy a gun. Look at the laws still on the books in places like NC, NJ, NY and MI. You need to get a permission slip to go buy a gun, let alone carry one. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973. Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn I'm discussing the many decades prior to the anti-gun hysteria of the 1960s, not the recent 33 years of shall-issue CCW making progress. CA allowed open carry until 1967, and the Black Panthers brought their toys to the state capitol to show they weren't pleased with the bill banning the practice. https://i.redd.it/k15zbfs130921.png Screw'em if they want people carrying M4s and underfolders everywhere. I bet it will be like Ohio when the state supreme court said OC was protected, and people responded with OC walks everywhere, they very quickly switched to allowing CC. Kharn And the tradition in the South was those permission slips were not a burden for white people to acquire, while denying the right to blacks. Kharn |
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Quoted: And the tradition in the South was those permission slips were not a burden for white people to acquire, while denying the right to blacks. Kharn View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973. Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn I'm discussing the many decades prior to the anti-gun hysteria of the 1960s, not the recent 33 years of shall-issue CCW making progress. CA allowed open carry until 1967, and the Black Panthers brought their toys to the state capitol to show they weren't pleased with the bill banning the practice. https://i.redd.it/k15zbfs130921.png Screw'em if they want people carrying M4s and underfolders everywhere. I bet it will be like Ohio when the state supreme court said OC was protected, and people responded with OC walks everywhere, they very quickly switched to allowing CC. Kharn And the tradition in the South was those permission slips were not a burden for white people to acquire, while denying the right to blacks. Kharn |
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Quoted: "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn View Quote This is "capable of repetition yet evading review" - the city (or any city) is capable of putting this law right back on the books & making a plaintiff go through another lengthy legal battle to get back to SCOTUS. The city chose not to settle in the initial filing, they chose to drag it out through multiple courts & up to SCOTUS. They only took the law off the books when it became apparent that they were going to lose, now they're just waiting to do it again. This should have been settled by the lazy bastards at SCOTUS now. |
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Quoted: This is "capable of repetition yet evading review" - the city (or any city) is capable of putting this law right back on the books & making a plaintiff go through another lengthy legal battle to get back to SCOTUS. The city chose not to settle in the initial filing, they chose to drag it out through multiple courts & up to SCOTUS. They only took the law off the books when it became apparent that they were going to lose, now they're just waiting to do it again. This should have been settled by the lazy bastards at SCOTUS now. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn This is "capable of repetition yet evading review" - the city (or any city) is capable of putting this law right back on the books & making a plaintiff go through another lengthy legal battle to get back to SCOTUS. The city chose not to settle in the initial filing, they chose to drag it out through multiple courts & up to SCOTUS. They only took the law off the books when it became apparent that they were going to lose, now they're just waiting to do it again. This should have been settled by the lazy bastards at SCOTUS now. The per curiam is two pages long. Read it. There are three points to it: 1. NY changed the law and NYC conceded on traveling, giving NYSRPA exactly what they wanted so the current appeal cannot go forward. 2. If the new situation still infringes on NYSRPA's rights, they can use Lewis v Continental Bank Corp (a Scalia opinion, writing for a unanimous court, which includes several citations and discussion of "capable of repetition, yet evading review" to the parties' conduct) to change their attack against the new law and have it considered by the Court of Appeals. 3. NYSRPA may be able to add a claim for monetary damages for NYC's prior conduct, a matter for the Court of Appeals (or they may kick it down to the district court) to decide. Both points 2 and 3 may come back to the Supreme Court on appeal. For point 2, if further development of the record is required regarding the new law, it goes down to the district court. If not, it can remain at the Court of Appeals and be resolved on briefs de novo. Either way, NYSRPA is now at the back of the line in regards to time to resolve. Instead, expect the SC to grant a new case on 4 May, or 11 May if they relist again to do their now-customary review. Kharn |
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Just finished reading through this; a few observations from my totally non-bar approved, zero days of law school mind:
1. I can see how this would be moot if the rule was changed prior to cert being granted; it seems very suspect that the court would let this slide after cert being granted. I can see now why people get pissy with Roberts. 2. Seems like Kav might be aiming for that swing vote spot in the long run, and wants to get his opinions in the record for being a stickler for process. 3. I think there’s a read on this that will point to Kav voting to moot this to win favor with Roberts to smack a more substantial pro-2A decision on something that can still be just a small shift, but which will be less blatantly ignored by lower courts. Interstate handgun sales was probably where Roberts was headed, so they could do different levels of scrutiny for federal and state laws but Kav joined the concurrence to make it so that it is a decision on scrutiny as it relates to carry, touching at the core of the “bear” part of the RTKABA. Cali Roster might be there in the wings as a chance to spank states and courts which pull bullshit moves once level of scrutiny is decided. 4. I learned a bunch of things that might be useful in my own legal battles of the future, so I got that going for me, which is nice. |
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Quoted: Just finished reading through this; a few observations from my totally non-bar approved, zero days of law school mind: 1. I can see how this would be moot if the rule was changed prior to cert being granted; it seems very suspect that the court would let this slide after cert being granted. I can see now why people get pissy with Roberts. 2. Seems like Kav might be aiming for that swing vote spot in the long run, and wants to get his opinions in the record for being a stickler for process. 3. I think there's a read on this that will point to Kav voting to moot this to win favor with Roberts to smack a more substantial pro-2A decision on something that can still be just a small shift, but which will be less blatantly ignored by lower courts. Interstate handgun sales was probably where Roberts was headed, so they could do different levels of scrutiny for federal and state laws but Kav joined the concurrence to make it so that it is a decision on scrutiny as it relates to carry, touching at the core of the "bear" part of the RTKABA. Cali Roster might be there in the wings as a chance to spank states and courts which pull bullshit moves once level of scrutiny is decided. 4. I learned a bunch of things that might be useful in my own legal battles of the future, so I got that going for me, which is nice. View Quote I think Kavenaugh was looking ahead to all of the cases to be considered on Friday - they can probably have a STRONGER case (if they take it) without any claims regarding mootness. After all, New York issues more carry permits than New Jersey does, about half of the ten cases being considered are from New Jersey... I'm not sure they're QUITE ready to completely throw out licensing (but the more states pass Constitutional Carry, the better on that front), but they can CERTAINLY make it clear that since a Constitutional right is involved, it must be shall-issue, and I could see mandating recognition of other state's permits, since no other Constitutional right is limited by your state of residence. |
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In case anyone is interested, here’s a list of some of the 2A cases being considered for the next conference:
https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/petitions-were-watching/ Scroll down to “Petitions We’re Watching For The Next Conference “ . There appears to be some interesting ones in there. |
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"Judas" , funny but sad at the same time. The stupid robe w/ the stripes is comical to me as well. YMMV...
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Quoted: Ronald Reagan ended that. NY State had the Sullivan Act enforce starting in 1911. The South had gun control to enforce Jim Crow. The North was May Issue permitted carry. Hell, most places you needed a permit to buy a gun. Look at the laws still on the books in places like NC, NJ, NY and MI. You need to get a permission slip to go buy a gun, let alone carry one. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Roe v Wade was also a "moot" case too since she wanted an abortion in 1969 but the case didn't get heard at SCOTUS until 1972 & decided until 1973. Her activist attorney appealed to SCOTUS after she won in the lower court. If that one could go forward, then this one certainly should have gone forward... "Capable of repetition yet evading review" is for cases involving temporary events/ conditions like pregnancy, age restrictions, etc, where the individual's circumstances will be over before a 1-10 year court battle will conclude. Read the court's opinions, the per curiam is citing Scalia's prior ruling that NYSRPA gets a chance to develop the case against the framework of the new law and damages for the old law. Kavanaugh and Alito/Thomas/Gorsuch both cite Kavanaugh's dissent in Heller II where he said DC's AWB failed the text, history, and tradition test laid out in Heller I, and agree NYC's law fails that test as well. "Text, history, and tradition" back to the passage of the 2nd and 14th amendments is a very bad position for the antis to try to defend, when every man was able to to armed at will until the 1960s for most locations in the US (1900s in NYC). Kharn I'm discussing the many decades prior to the anti-gun hysteria of the 1960s, not the recent 33 years of shall-issue CCW making progress. CA allowed open carry until 1967, and the Black Panthers brought their toys to the state capitol to show they weren't pleased with the bill banning the practice. https://i.redd.it/k15zbfs130921.png Screw'em if they want people carrying M4s and underfolders everywhere. I bet it will be like Ohio when the state supreme court said OC was protected, and people responded with OC walks everywhere, they very quickly switched to allowing CC. Kharn Ayup. And a NC supermajority R legislature & R governor shot down a bill TWICE that would have enacted constitutional carry as well as ended the Jim Crow Pistol purchase program. Statist cucks |
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Quoted: Monday, 0930 Eastern. All 10+ gun cases before the court are being considered in conference this Friday, orders will be released either Friday afternoon (potentially, if a grant) or Monday (if a grant, or definitively if a denial), or no mention if being relisted for the next conference (a signal of further examination prior to certiorari grant ie dissent from denial). Kharn View Quote Here is the list:https://www.scotusblog.com/2020/04/after-ruling-in-new-york-gun-rights-case-more-second-amendment-cases-set-for-friday-conference/ Edit, didn't see it above. Woops. |
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Quoted: Ayup. And a NC supermajority R legislature & R governor shot down a bill TWICE that would have enacted constitutional carry as well as ended the Jim Crow Pistol purchase program. Statist cucks View Quote The one thing I will be forever grateful for with Reagan was allowing ammo purchases through the mail. I don't know if you are old enough to remember that but it WAS a game changer. |
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Quoted: Yup, up here all we could do was open carry. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Prediction: You have to have a marching permit to have a march, and have to have a business licence to open a bookstore, and have to have a construction permit to build a church, and have to have a bar licence to practice law to defend someone, and crime is bad mmmkay, so may issue permits to carry are totally cool. 5-4
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Quoted: Prediction: You have to have a marching permit to have a march, and have to have a business licence to open a bookstore, and have to have a construction permit to build a church, and have to have a bar licence to practice law to defend someone, and crime is bad mmmkay, so may issue permits to carry are totally cool. 5-4 View Quote |
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Quoted: I think May Issue might go the way of the dodo bird eventually. But I don't see SCOTUS ruling that permits themselves are unconstitutional and restrictions on their issuance through training requirements, backgrounds, costs, and restricted off limit areas are unconstitutional. So basically like what happened with Illinois and Washington DC. Permits will be Shall Issue, and the government can place limits on where you can carry with them and make them a bitch to get via training requirements and costs. View Quote I hope an enumerated right is afforded a higher standard of scrutiny than that would allow. That sounds like intermediate scrutiny. I'm hoping for a strict scrutiny ruling and that would allow very few obstacles to exercising the right to keep and bear arms. |
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And here's why it should have been heard/decided - the city claimed for 7 years that it was constitutional, then made a slight modification to avoid a decision - that slight modification did not give petitioners 100% of what they asked for.
https://www.heritage.org/firearms/commentary/the-supreme-court-punts-easy-second-amendment-case Under existing precedent, cases are only declared moot when “it is impossible for a court to grant any effectual relief whatever to the prevailing party.” And the dissenters rightly point out that the amended law did not, in fact, give the petitioners in the case everything they sought. While the petitioners asked for “unrestricted access” to out-of-city ranges, competitions, and second homes, the amended law does not clearly grant it, since there is no real indication about where the city now draws the line for “reasonably necessary” travel. The case cannot possibly be moot if “the City still withholds from the petitioners something that they have claimed from the beginning is their constitutional right.” Moreover, the dissenting justices noted that the Supreme Court has been particularly wary of declaring a case moot where—such as here—one party attempts to “manufacture mootness” in order to avoid an adverse court decision. Finally, the dissent moved on to address the merits of the case, which they described as “not a close question.” The law clearly violated the Second Amendment, as outlined in Heller and McDonald. View Quote |
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Originally Posted By BigHunt: I hope an enumerated right is afforded a higher standard of scrutiny than that would allow. That sounds like intermediate scrutiny. I'm hoping for a strict scrutiny ruling and that would allow very few obstacles to exercising the right to keep and bear arms. View Quote A-freaking-men! |
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Doesn't look like any of the pending 2A cases had any mention in today's orders.
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Originally Posted By Miami_JBT: I think May Issue might go the way of the dodo bird eventually. But I don't see SCOTUS ruling that permits themselves are unconstitutional and restrictions on their issuance through training requirements, backgrounds, costs, and restricted off limit areas are unconstitutional. So basically like what happened with Illinois and Washington DC. Permits will be Shall Issue, and the government can place limits on where you can carry with them and make them a bitch to get via training requirements and costs. View Quote That sounds optimistic to me, which is a real shame since that would be a dramatic loss for many of us. |
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