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Category Archives: Second Amendment
SWINDLE: Future of the Second Amendment – LaGrange Daily News – LaGrange Daily News
Posted: April 21, 2021 at 9:31 am
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. Author Unknown, but many attribute this quote to Albert Einstein.
Someone recently asked me, Will Washington ever do anything about semi-automatic assault weapons?
I asked him what his definition of a semi-automatic assault weapon was. The polite man admitted that he did not know. But, he was quick to point out that people get killed when a person has a firearm and unleashes the weapon against defenseless children and adults.
He was correct. Gun Free Zones (GFZ) are almost always the target of predatory killers because these areas alleviate the fear of the predator being shot himself. Predators always focus on the weak, old, young, and defenseless.
What is a semiautomatic assault weapon?
To answer this, the first step is to look back to the time when Washington tried to do something about assault weapons. The Federal Assault Weapons Ban (AWB) of 1994 was their answer.
Congress passed the law at a time when several mass shootings had raised public concern. Politicians were pressured to act in some manner. In order to relieve their pressure, Congress responded by passing a law restricting firearms defined as semiautomatic assault weapons and magazines that met the criteria for large capacity ammunition feeding devices.
AWB defined semiautomatic guns as those that fire once for each trigger pull. This includes hunting rifles and pistols. The term assault was never clearly defined.
As with most laws that are passed because of intense, emotional political pressure, rather than logic and reality, the law was unsuccessful.
Thankfully, AWB ended in 2004.
Despite the statistics that show mass killings almost always happen in GFZs, the ineffectiveness of gun control legislation for decades, and his own personal views regarding the 2nd Amendment, Joe Biden, one of the main proponents of the ban when he was in the Senate, claimed recently that it brought down these mass killings.
He failed to provide a single piece of credible evidence to support his statement.
However, Biden continues to push for a new assault weapons bans, along with restrictions on magazine size. He explained his reasoning by saying that he intends to apply lessons learned from the previous ban to a new one.
For example, the ban on assault weapons will be designed to prevent manufacturers from circumventing the law by making minor changes that dont limit the weapons lethality, Bidens campaign website stated.
Gun manufacturers are legal businesses that pay taxes, provide employment and should never be lectured to by a person who cannot even load a shotgun safely.
The fear of citizens owning guns has quickly spread throughout Congress. The House recently passed two gun-control measures to strengthen background checks. On March 23, Biden called for the Senate to immediately pass them and also called for Congress to take up a new assault-weapons ban.
While success is possible in the Democratic-controlled House, the chances in the Senate are a long shot because of that bodys cloture rule. This rule requires 60 votes to end debate on a topic and move to a vote. The challenge of convincing 10 Republicans to vote for any kind of gun control is probably impossible.
Does it end with the Senate? Perhaps not. On March 26, 2021, the White House announced that Biden is preparing to circumvent Congress by issuing executive orders on gun regulation. Ordering a full assault weapons ban is beyond the presidents power, but he can use regulatory authority to restrict guns. For instance, he could limit imports or expand the background-check system by redefining who is in the business of selling guns.
However, getting action on a broader range of assault weapons remains a challenge. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-New York, has vowed to push gun-control legislation, saying, Make no mistake: Under the Democratic majority, the Senate will debate and address the epidemic of gun violence in this country.
This can be translated into, We are fully dedicated to taking your Constitutional right to own a firearm away.
For now, he will need 10 Republicans to agree.
Unless legal gun owner take a large and widespread stand, Biden and Schumer will eventually reach their goals.
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: If they wanted your guns, they’d have them by now – Bemidji Pioneer
Posted: at 9:31 am
I would like to take a moment to clarify some facts that Karl Kaufman got wrong in his letter published on April 17. First off, there are not 300,000 concealed carry holders, that number is the total number of permits issued since 2003.
Since these permits are required to be renewed this number includes the renewed permits. The number of active permits in Minnesota is about 96,000, less than a third of what Kaufman asserts.
The same is true of his hunting figures. Pew Research shows roughly 70,000 Minnesota residents hunt, this number aligns with numbers seen by Minnesota DNR reports. The reality is that there are roughly 100,000 legally obtained guns in Minn., a far cry from his numbers.
Why does that matter? Truth. His numbers are incorrect and so is his assertion that your Second Amendment rights are under siege.
Both the federal and supreme courts have ruled a number of times that for a gun to be protected it must have a legal use, and have ruled that weapons of war and assault weapons are not protected under the Second Amendment.
RELATED: Read more letters to the editor
The only laws under consideration for gun control are common sense background checks and assault weapon bans. All the rest of this is just right-wing hype.
Truth matters and the hype about the Second Amendment is to drive up donations to the NRA and sell guns. If you want to talk about reality, the reality is that the NRA is under investigation for fraud, embezzlement and misappropriation of funds all the while attempting to declare bankruptcy.
Wayne Lapierre has been forced to return more than 300,000 dollars or face charges and has been forced to take shelter on a 108-foot yacht after the number of shootings this year. The Irony is that it makes it obvious that Lapierre doesnt buy the gun for the protection line he sells.
If you are afraid the government is going to take your guns, you have probably been duped by a group of millionaires looking to get their hands on your money.
The truth is that if anyone had wanted to take your guns they would be gone by now. Meanwhile, people are dying in the street because some rich guys want to line their pockets. It is time to come out of the right-wing delusions and stop substituting someone elses brain for your own, start thinking critically about the world around you.
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: If they wanted your guns, they'd have them by now - Bemidji Pioneer
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Letter: Biden’s attack on the second amendment ignores Constitution – The Independent
Posted: at 9:31 am
While announcing his half-dozen executive orders on April 8 to combat what he described as an epidemic of gun violence, President Biden proclaimed that the rights enumerated in the Constitution are not absolute. He was, of course, referring the Second Amendment in the Bill of Rights.
I wonder if his words also apply to the right to an abortion which he supports in contravention of the teachings of the church to which he professes to belong. This right is nowhere in the Constitution but seven men in black robes found it in the penumbra of the document.
Does Bidens interpretation extend to the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution that address the rights of former slaves or are they too subject to modification by executive action?
The president also seems to think the right to vote is plenary and absolute and not to be tampered with by state law. Democrats want to pass HR1 which would essentially supersede state control of elections as if the fifteenth, nineteenth, twenty-fourth and twenty-sixth articles are not enough.
If the Second Amendment is so onerous why doesnt Biden proposed an amendment rescinding it?
Just asking.
Richard J. August
North Kingstown
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Letter: Biden's attack on the second amendment ignores Constitution - The Independent
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Racial equality and the Second Amendment – The Nevada Independent
Posted: April 11, 2021 at 5:58 am
Just a day after President Joe Biden announced he would take executive action on gun control, the Assembly Judiciary Committee moved forward firearm reforms of its own in the Legislature.
Assembly Bill 286which passed out of committee on a party line votewould ban homemade firearms that lack serial numbers and expand the locations where concealed carry permit holders are legally prohibited from carrying guns.
Debate over these measuresas well as those yet to comewill undoubtedly be an amalgamation of tried-and-tired soundbites from both sides. Conservatives will declare, with righteous indignation, that the only thing capable of stopping a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun. Meanwhile, gun control advocates will promote statistics about gun violence as irrefutable evidence that something must be done to start taking dangerous firearms off the streets.
And yet, theres a crucial aspect of the gun control debate that remains conspicuously and tragically under-discussed by both sides: The racial, historical and civic relevance of Second Amendment rights.
The last several years of racial and cultural tension have had a predictable effect on firearm ownership that is certain to complicate progressives political calculus regarding gun control: More Americans are buying more firearms than ever, and minorities are increasingly joining the ranks of first-time gun buyers.
The explosion of firearm ownership among Black Americans, especially, is something that would make some of the civil rights activists of decades-past beam with prideand, with good reason: Historically, gun control has negatively affected disadvantaged communities to a greater extent than white middle-America, and gun rights were once integral to the expansion of civil rights.
In fact, at one point, racial inequities were actually the purpose of gun control laws.
The Black Codes in the post-Civil War South were, in part, aimed at disarming freed Black slaves. Gun licensing laws, registration schemes and even prohibitions on certain models of weapons were used as legal tools to strip African Americans in the deep south of the ability to defend themselves against the terrorist tactics of organizations like the Ku Klux Klan. In the early 20th Century, northern states began adopting similar regulatory frameworks as a means of disenfranchising marginalized Italian and German communities.
Obviously, gun control activists today arent advocating for a return to the racist and prejudiced policies of the Jim Crow South or the anti-Italian sentiments of New Yorks Sullivan Act. However, better intentions dont magically erase the disparate impact such laws generate. Like any number of bureaucratic burdens on individual rights, its not unreasonable to think firearm regulations would disproportionately affect communities that suffer from institutional or social prejudice.
However, the inequitable impact of gun control among racial and socioeconomic demographics arent blind spots only for progressives. After all, the most powerful gun-rights organization in the nation, the National Rifle Association, often appears less interested in defending the principles of firearm ownership among certain social groups than it is in pandering to political factions within the conservative movement.
Sure, the NRA likes to boast about the massive numbers of female and minority gun owners from time to time, but it has proven radically unwilling to stand up for those same demographics when doing so might upset its predominantly Republican, blue-lives-matter, conservative base.
The organization, for example, was deafeningly quiet when Breonna Taylors boyfriend followed the advice of virtually every NRA instructor teaching home defense, by confronting unknown intruders in the middle of the night with his firearm. Regrettably, the intruders werent home invaders, they were plain-clothes police officersand Breonna lost her life as a consequence.
In another high-profile example of police misconduct, Philando Castilea Black man pulled over for a broken taillightwas fatally shot in 2016 by a police officer in Minnesota after he calmly informed officers he was a concealed carry permit holder with a firearm on his person. (Warning: This video of the incident is distressing.) Just as in Breonnas case, and many others, the NRA was conspicuously MIA'' during the national conversation that followed.
And thats what many conservative gun groupssuch as the NRAget so very wrong about the debate over gun rights: Defending the Second Amendment is about more than constitutional concerns regarding proposed gun laws. Morally and ethically, there are significantly more important reasons for defending Second Amendment rights than a run-on sentence authored by admittedly flawed men in the late 1700s.
Firearm rights have historically been minority rights. Theyre civil rights. Throughout our nations history, gun rights have been directly and indirectly married to the progress of racial and social justice. For communities and individuals treated as second-class citizens, these rights have literally been a lifeline during times of unrest, social change and racial tension.
As Malcom X rightfully pointed out at the height of the civil rights movement, the Second Amendment isnt just about weaponry Its about equality.
Michael Schaus began his professional career in the financial sector, where he became deeply interested in economic theory and the concept of free markets. Over a decade ago, that interest led him to a career in policy and public commentaryworking as a columnist, a political humorist and a radio talk show host. Today, Michael is director of communications for the Nevada Policy Research Institute and lives with his wife and daughter in Las Vegas.
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Racial equality and the Second Amendment - The Nevada Independent
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What is a ‘Second Amendment Sanctuary’ State, and what would happen if Texas became one? – El Paso Times
Posted: at 5:58 am
Chad Lyle Published 7:01 a.m. MT April 9, 2021
President Joe Biden announced executive actions aimed at curbing gun violence. USA TODAY
Texas could soon join the ranks of a small, but growing, club of states that have passed laws that designate them as second amendment sanctuaries.
On Tuesday, the State Affairs Committee in the Texas House approved House Bill 2622, which would prevent state resources to enforce any new federal restrictions on firearms and ammunition. The bill, titled the Second Amendment Sanctuary State Act, would prevent state officials from enforcing new federal gun ownership rules, such as firearm registries, licensing requirements and confiscation programs.
It mirrors legislation that previously passed in Alaska, Kansas, Idaho, Wyoming, and, most recently, Arizona.
Basically, were freezing Texas state law and federal laws in place that have to do with guns, said the bills author, Rep. Justin Holland, R-Rockwall. And (were) not recognizing, at the state level, any federal changes.
Holland said he hadworked closely with Gov. Greg Abbotts office to write the legislation. Abbott had expressed his desire to make Texas a second amendment Sanctuary State during his 2021 State of the State address. Both officials have said they want to pass the legislation this session to counter a push by the Biden Administration to enact new gun control measures.
Current impending federal legislation and potentially forthcoming presidential executive orders from Washington D.C. are threatening to infringe on the constitutional rights of Texans, Holland said. Particularly the right to self-defense and to keep and bear arms.
On Thursday, Biden announced he would be taking executive action aimed at preventing gun violence, which he referred to as an epidemic. The Justice Department is poised to lead many of these efforts, including creatingnew rules to prevent people from building guns at home without serial numbers also known as ghost guns.
The Biden executive actions will also include a template that states can use to craft their own red flag laws, which generally allow family members and police officers to request that a court temporarily remove firearms from an individual who might be dangerous.
More: Biden looks to stem ghost guns,' unveils other steps to curb gun violence 'epidemic'
Biden also called for the Senate to take up gun control bills that the House passed in March. That legislation would require every gun buyer to receive a background check and give the FBI more time to vet prospective gun buyers.
The federal bills would extend the FBIs time window to deny firearm sales to citizens without failing a background check, Holland said. The Democrats in control in Congress, in the Senate, and in the White House have introduced and passed legislation, as well as talked about executive orders that would directly impact the Second Amendment, Constitutional rights of Texans.
While Holland was joined by almost 50 mostly Republican co-authors, not every Texas Democrat plans to welcome new federal firearm restrictions. Rep. Terry Canales, D-Edinburg, is a joint author of Hollands HB 2622. Although Canales could not be reached for comment by the El Paso Times by deadline, he has previously said he owns a large collection of assault rifles and roughly 580 guns.
Even without bipartisan support, however, HB 2622s path to becoming state law appears assured. The bill has a Senate companion, Senate Bill 541, by Sen. Drew Springer, R-Muenster, and Abbott has promoted the legislation on multiple occasions.
This is what Im seeking for Texas a law to defy any new federal gun control laws, Abbott said in a tweet Wednesday about Arizonas new Sanctuary State law. I look forward to signing it.
Holland said he anticipates that a sanctuary state bill signed by the governor would withstand a legal challenge if Congress subsequently passed new gun control laws. Similar to states that have legalized recreational marijuana use which is still a controlled substance at the federal level Texas would decline to use its own law enforcement agencies and resources to enforce the federal law, he said.
Were not precluding the federal government from coming and enforcing their laws, Holland said. Were just not gonna do it for them.
Read or Share this story: https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/2021/04/09/what-would-happen-if-texas-became-second-amendment-sanctuary-state/7146515002/
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Area lawmaker working on Second Amendment sanctuary bill – WAOW
Posted: at 5:58 am
Wisconsin (WAOW) -- State Senator Mary Felzkowski, a Republican lawmaker out of Tomahawk, is authoring legislation that would make Wisconsin a Second Amendment sanctuary state.
According to a release, the bill would prevent the federal government from confiscating firearms or ammunition which are legally owned and made in Wisconsin.
This comes on the same day President Joe Biden announced executive action on gun reform.
Today, we witnessed a blatant overreach and attack on our second amendment rights. The sitting president of the United States of America signed six executive orders aimed at stripping millions of legal gun owners across the country of their sacred, unalienable rights," said Felzkowski.
The bill would also keep state public fundsand state employees from helping confiscate legally owned firearms protected by the Second Amendment.
Its been said time and again our Second Amendment right to bear arms is the only thing protecting the American people from an overreaching government. Our Constitution is set in stone. You dont get to pick and choose which sections you adhere to and respect based off of a political agenda, and this bill makes that crystal clear," said Felzkowski.
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Area lawmaker working on Second Amendment sanctuary bill - WAOW
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Voice of the People: Justice Barrett’s Second Amendment dilemma – Kankakee Daily Journal
Posted: at 5:58 am
In some 229 years neither law professors, academic scholars, teachers, students or congressional legislators after much debate have not been able to satisfactorily explain or demonstrate the framers' intended purpose of Second Amendment of the Constitution. I had taken up that challenge allowing Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barretts dilemma to understand the true intent of the Second Amendment.
I will relate further by demonstration, my understanding of the intent of the framers using the associated wording to explain. The Second Amendment states, A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
Merriam Webster defines militia as "a body of citizens organized for military service; a whole body of able-bodied citizens declared by law as being subject to call to military service.
If, as some may argue, the Second Amendments militia meaning is that every person has a right to keep and bear arms, the only way to describe one's right as a private individual is not as a militia but as a person. (The individual personality of a human being: self)
The Article of Confederation lists 11 references to person/s. The Constitution lists person or persons 49 times to explicitly describe, clarify and mandate a constitutional legal standing as to a person his or her constitutional duty and rights, what he or she can do or not do.
Whereas, in the Second Amendment any reference to person is not to be found. Was there a reason? Which leaves the obvious question, why did the Framers use the noun person/s as liberally as they did throughout the Constitution 49 times and not apply this understanding to explicitly convey the same legal standard in defining an individual persons right to bear arms as a person?
Justice Amy Coney Barrett dissent in Barr v Kanter (2019) Second Amendment argument acquiesced to 42 references to person/s, of which 13 characterize either a gun or firearm. Her Second Amendment, textualism approach having zero reference to person/s. Justice Barretts view only recognizes person/s in Barr, as well in her many other 7th circuit rulings. It is her refusal to acknowledge, recognize or connect the U.S. Constitution benchmark legislative interpretive precept language of person/s, mandated in our Constitution 49 times, to the Second Amendment.
Leaving Supreme Court Justice Barretts judgment in question.
In the entire U.S. Constitution militia is mentioned five times. In these references there is no mention of person or persons. One reference to people in the Second Amendment. People, meaning not a person but persons in describing militia.
Now comes the word shall mentioned in the Constitution 100 times. Merriam Webster. Shall as ought to, must .. will have to; MUST; will be able to; used in laws; regulates or directives to express what is inevitable or seems likely to happen in the near future.
And interestingly, the word shall appears in the Second Amendment. A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, and shall not be infringed.
[S]hall not be infringed. Adding another word infringed to clarify any misunderstanding as to the intent of the Second Amendment. Merriam Webster. Infringe. To encroach upon in a way that violates law or the rights of another; defeat, frustrate, encroach.
The condition Infringe has put a stop as to any counter thoughts regarding the Second Amendment, as you shall not infringe or encroach on beliefs other to what is evident as to the subject Militia.
Finally, clarifying ..the right of the people to keep and bear arms"
Merriam Webster. People. Human beings making up a group or assembly or linked by common interest. 2. human beings, persons.
In closing, I am not against guns, everybody has them. Im against using the Second Amendment illogically as a crutch. If it makes those feel better so be it. Just what it deserves, use it with a wink.
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Voice of the People: Justice Barrett's Second Amendment dilemma - Kankakee Daily Journal
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David Carlson: A Constitutionalist’s interpretation of the Second Amendment – Daily Journal
Posted: at 5:58 am
If our country isnt going to face up to the fact that we have a gun out-of-control problem, maybe we should just leave the flag flying at half-mast from now on.
Men, most of them white, some mentally ill, and all with easy access to assault rifles, seem to be lining up for their 15 minutes of fame. Their targets? Innocent men, women, grandparents and children shopping at the grocery store, going to school or working in the small business down the street.
Many Americans realize there is something terribly wrong, both socially and spiritually, with a country that has more guns than people. We watch the news, wondering if the latest attack on the innocent will be the tipping point, the moment when the nation rises up and says, enough is enough. But if the killing of children in their own school, the spraying bullets from a hotel room window down on a crowd of people at a concert and the killing of Bible study attendees isnt enough, what is?
Several years ago, I was a guest speaker on religious diversity at an Indiana high school. The day happened to be soon after another mass shooting at a school elsewhere in the country. Before I could start my talk, we had to listen to a message over the intercom from the principal.
The principal reminded students of the schools policy in the event of an armed intruder at the school. I watched the faces of the students as the guidelines were presented. Most of the students looked down as they were instructed, if such a crisis occurred, to turn off the lights in the room, barricade the door and hide under their desks. I will never know how the students absorbed the principals last piece of advice because what he said chilled me to the bone. He told the students that if all else failed, they were to fight for their lives.
No parent or grandparent should accept that this is the best we can offer our children. And every parent knows that children, in order to learn, must feel safe. The majority of Americans, when polled, know that its insane to have assault weapons as easy to buy as French fries. The majority of Americans want some logical gun control legislation.
Yes, we all know about the Second Amendment. Of course, most of us recognize that the Founding Fathers didnt have assault weapons or bazookas in mind when they passed that amendment. So, I want to go on record as being a Strict Constitutionalist. Lets keep the Second Amendment but interpret it as the Founding Fathers did every man has the right to own a musket. You know, that cumbersome weapon that took minutes to load, fire and reload.
A musket, at least, would give our children a fighting chance. Can anyone say that about assault weapons?
David Carlson of Franklin is a professor emeritus of philosophy and religion. Send comments to letters@dailyjournal.net.
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Second Amendment Sanctuary Bill Approved by Texas House Committee – The Texan
Posted: at 5:58 am
Austin, TX, April 6, 2021 After then-presidential candidate Beto ORourke proclaimed in 2019, Hell, yes, were going to take your AR-15, dozens of counties across the State of Texas passed resolutions pledging to refuse the enforcement of any unconstitutional firearm restrictions.
With the increased likelihood of stricter federal gun regulations coming into fruition under the Biden administration and a Democrat-controlled Congress, the idea of a Second Amendment sanctuary has been brought to the limelight in Texas again, this time at the state level.
During a keynote discussion at a Texas Public Policy Foundation conference in January, Governor Greg Abbott said that he wanted to see Texas become a Second Amendment sanctuary so that no government at any level can come and take your gun away from you.
At that point, several bills had already been filed in the mold of the Texas Firearm Protection Act, which Abbott helped draft in 2013 when it passed in the state House with 100 votes.
That legislation was never considered in the Senate, but Rep. Steve Toth (R-The Woodlands) introduced the bill again this year along with a few more variations by other lawmakers.
Though Toths bill has not been heard in a House committee yet, the Senate companion in the form of Senate Bill (SB) 513 from Sen. Bob Hall (R-Edgewood) will be heard in the Senate State Affairs Committee on Thursday.
But the pro-gun bill in the vein of a Second Amendment sanctuary that has gotten the most traction is House Bill (HB) 2622 from Rep. Justin Holland (R-Rockwall).
Abbott lent his apparent support to the bill sharing an article about it on Twitter and noting that it would forbid Texas state agencies & local governments from enforcing new federal gun laws or rules.
Hollands bill is nearly identical to an earlier one filed by Rep. Matt Krause (R-Fort Worth), HB 635, as well as one filed by Sen. Drew Springer (R-Muenster), SB 541.
In total, 46 of the 150 members in the lower chamber have signed onto Hollands bill, including over half of the Republican members and Rep. Terry Canales (D-Edinburg).
Four GOP members on the State Affairs Committee, where HB 2622 was referred, have put their names down on the bill including Chairman Chris Paddie (R-Marshall) and Reps. Will Metcalf (R-Conroe), Matt Shaheen (R-Plano), and Shelby Slawson (R-Stephenville).
On Tuesday, the State Affairs Committee reported the bill favorably in an 11 to 2 vote.
Next, the bill will go through the Calendars Committee chaired by another one of the bills coauthors, Rep. Dustin Burrows (R-Lubbock) which will determine if or when the legislation is brought before the entire chamber.
If passed, the bill would prohibit state agencies and subdivisions of the state from enforcing any new federal firearm regulations that are not expressly permitted under state code.
As Holland noted during the layout of his bill in the committee hearing last week, HB 2622 does not and cannot prevent federal government from enforcing their new laws, regulations, and restrictions.
We just wont enforce or allow their policies, or direct state resources to any federal efforts in Texas, said Holland.
During the committee hearing, the bill met some pushback from Rep. Donna Howard (D-Austin), who questioned the legality of such a proposal.
Im having a hard time understanding how we can ask law enforcement not to enforce a federal requirement, said Howard.
In 2017, Howard supported the sanctuary cities that refused to enforce federal immigration law and voted in opposition to legislation that targeted such cities.
During the hearing last Thursday, Howard also asked if the bill would have any consequences related to federal funding, to which Holland replied that in the four other states to pass similar legislation, none have had their funding cut as a result.
Current and pending legislation, and potentially forthcoming presidential executive orders from Washington, D.C., have threatened and aim to infringe upon the constitutional rights of Texans, said Holland.
House Bill 2622 is intended to protect the current rights of law abiding gun owners in the state of Texas.
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Second Amendment Sanctuary Bill Approved by Texas House Committee - The Texan
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Second Amendment isn’t absolute – The Republic
Posted: at 5:58 am
After a second mass shooting in the space of a week, a friend noted that only one amendment in the Bill of Rights began with the words Congress shall make no law.
Its not the Second Amendment, he said.
Of course, that doesnt deter gun rights advocates like Sen. Cynthia Lummis, a Republican from Wyoming.
Every time that theres an incident like this, the people who dont want to protect the Second Amendment use it as an excuse to further erode Second Amendment rights, she said.
Shes not wrong, I guess. Many Americans see mass shootings like those in Georgia and Colorado, and they cry out for their leaders to do something, anything, to make the carnage stop.
Vice President Kamala Harris accused folks like Lummis of setting up a false choice.
This is not about getting rid of the Second Amendment, Harris said during an appearance on CBS This Morning. Its simply about saying we need reasonable gun safety laws.
Both she and President Joe Biden have spoken out in support of such reform.
The point here is Congress needs to act, Harris said during that CBS interview. On the House side, they did. There are two bills which the president is prepared to sign, and so we need the Senate to act.
Biden also urged Congress to reinstate a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines that had been in effect for 10 years in the 1990s and early 2000s.
There is no reason why we have assault weapons on the streets of a civil society, Harris said. They are weapons of war.
Reform advocates have public opinion on their side.
A Gallup survey last fall found that 57% of respondents thought gun regulations should be more strict. That number has been as high as 78% in the early 1990s and as low as 44% in 2010. It was 67% in 2018.
A survey taken this year found 56% of respondents were at least somewhat dissatisfied with the nations gun regulations. It found 33% to be very dissatisfied.
Among those wanting a change in the regulations, those wanting stricter rules outnumbered those wanting to ease regulations by a margin of 5 to 1.
Heres another statistic driving public opinion. A Gallup survey in 2019 found that nearly half of respondents were at least somewhat worried about falling victim to a mass shooting. Roughly one in five admitted to being very worried.
And yet guys like Republican U.S. Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana suggest that tightening restrictions to fight gun violence would be like banning sober drivers to fight drunk driving.
This issue hasnt always been one pitting conservatives against liberals.
Take the example of Warren Burger, former chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Burger was in all respects a conservative, but he was no fan of the Second Amendment.
During a 1991 appearance on PBS, the retired chief justice observed that if he had been writing the Bill of Rights in the 1990s, he wouldnt have included the right to bear arms.
The gun lobbys interpretation of the Second Amendment is one of the greatest pieces of fraud I repeat the word fraud on the American people by special interest groups that I have ever seen in my lifetime, he said. The real purpose of the Second Amendment was to ensure that state armies the militia would be maintained for the defense of the state. The very language of the Second Amendment refutes any argument that it was intended to guarantee every citizen an unfettered right to any kind of weapon he or she desires.
Sounds like maybe he would have been on the side of the reformers.
Kelly Hawes is a columnist for CNHI newspapers in Indiana. Send comments to editorial@therepublic.com.
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