Bidens Second Amendment Outburst Was a Warning Sign – National Review

Former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a campaign event in Nashua, N.H., February 4, 2020.(Rick Wilking/Reuters)

Joe Biden had a little outburst today, after a construction worker asked him about the Second Amendment:

You are actively trying to end our Second Amendment right and take away our guns, the man told Biden as the candidate greeted workers building a Fiat-Chrysler assembly plant.

Youre full of sh**, Bidenresponded. A Biden aide tried to end the discussion, but the candidate silenced her in order to continue speaking with the worker. I support the Second Amendment from the very beginning. I have a shotgun. I have a 20-gauge, a 12-gauge. My sons hunt, he said.

The two men then argued about whether Biden had said he would try to take away Americans guns.

This is not okay, alright? the worker said, to which Biden responded, Dont tell me that, pal, or Im going to go out and slap you in the face.

Youre working for me, man! the worker responded.

Im not working for you, Biden shot back. Dont be such a horses ass.

If I were a Democrat, this would alarm me. Bidens behavior here is extraordinary, especially given that he is currently previewing the return to normalcy theme that he intends to run on in November. One might think that telling a voter that he is full of s*** and that you will slap them matters less than it usually would given that Donald Trump is in the White House. But, arguably, the opposite is true. Elections are about contrasts. If he is as belligerent and ill-disciplined as the incumbent, what is Bidens case for replacing him?

In this instance, the answer seems to be that, unlike Trump, Biden will usher in stricter gun control. But that, too, should alarm Democrats. If Biden now has a reputation as a champion of gun confiscation and if construction workers in Michigan are asking him about it, it suggests he does he is going to have a hard time winning back the voters that Trump peeled away from the Obama coalition. Barack Obama didnt say much about guns at all until his second term had begun, and, once he did, he presided over the loss of the Senate, the loss of the White House, and a record-breaking period of civilian firearms sales. Judging by their rhetoric, Democrats seem to believe that the center of gravity has changed on this question since then. But the evidence for this is scant. The State of Virginia is run solely by Democrats Democrats who were bankrolled by Michael Bloomberg and who promised to pass restrictive gun control as their first priority. They failed, and sparked a massive backlash in the process. Do we think the playing field looks different in Michigan?

Democrats should also be worried because, whatever the chorus of blue-check journalists who thrilled to the exchange might think, Biden was flatly wrong on the details here. Biden took offense at the idea that he was in favor of confiscation Dont tell me that, pal, he said. But what other conclusion are voters to draw from Bidens having said that he would put Beto hell yes, were coming for your AR-15 ORourke in charge of his gun policy? ORourke is now primarily famous for having taken the most extreme gun position any presidential candidate has taken in three decades, and Biden has willingly tied himself to him. Can he really be surprised that voters have put two and two together?

The rest of his answer was no better. What, I wonder, are Michiganders supposed to make of Bidens commitment to the Second Amendment when, as decades of his rhetoric suggests, he believes that it protects the private ownership of shotguns for hunting? What are they to make of his seriousness on the issue when he talks about the evils of the AR-14; when he does not know which guns are presently banned under federal law and which are not; when he does not know the difference between a machine gun and a semi-automatic carbine; when he believes you dont need 100 rounds! means . . . well, anything comprehensible at all; and when he approvingly cites the appalling (and overturned) decision in Schenck v. United States as if it makes the case for banning the most commonly owned rifle in America?

This was a bad exchange not because it is likely to change much on its own, but because it illustrates some underlying truths about the electorate and about this candidate that do not portend well.

Continued here:

Bidens Second Amendment Outburst Was a Warning Sign - National Review

Cooper’s Eye on the Left: Biden’s amped up Second Amendment response suggests he needs a little more coffee – Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden off the graph, again

A Michigan autoworker wasn't even sure Joe Biden was planning to take questions at a recent appearance, but when he got the opportunity he asked about a concern he had his Second Amendment rights.

"I ... asked him how he wanted to get the vote of the working man when a lot of us, we wield arms," Fiat-Chrysler worker Jerry Wayne said. "We bear arms and we like to do that. And if he wants to give us work and take our guns, I don't see how he is going to get the same vote."

Biden, for some reason, couldn't give him a straight answer.

"You're full of s---," the former vice president said. "I support the Second Amendment." He later said, "I'm gonna slap you in the face."

At the same appearance, Biden referred to an AR-15 as an AR-14.

"I thought I was pretty articulate and respectful," Wayne told "Fox & Friends." "I didn't try to raise any feathers, and he kind of just went off the deep end."

Pass the Kung-Pao Chicken

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Democratic Party's gift to Republicans, weighed in on the coronavirus last week, saying many restaurants "are feeling the pain of racism" because people are avoiding Chinese restaurants out of fear of contracting the illness.

They're not "patroning" Chinese or Asian restaurants, she said.

If she'd checked, the 30-year-old Ocasio-Cortez might have realized those not "patroning" those restaurants are probably not "patroning" Mexican, French or American restaurants, either.

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee captured the continued wonder of Americans at her comments on Twitter.

"This is like an SNL ("Saturday Night Live") parody," he tweeted. "She is like literally like not aware of like literally much of like anything, like not even the fact there's like literally no word 'patroning' and she like is literally clueless as to what like racism literally means. And she is in Congress. Literally!"

A divided household

U.S. Sen. Cory Booker, D-New Jersey, and his girlfriend, singer-actress Rosario Dawson, are going their separate ways. Politically, that is.

Booker, a presidential candidate until dropping out in January, endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden recently, saying in a tweet he "won't only win, he'll show there is more that unites us than divides us."

Dawson wasn't having any of that, though.

"I got to vote for Bernie again and I did," she said on Facebook. " ... Make this election one for the history books. Turn out needs to be historic to drive home the message that we stand for something bigger and better than we have now. ... So please stay in the game, no matter what, and continue the fight our ancestors fought with fewer means and resources ... and make the path that much better, healthier and clearer for the generations to come."

Dawson did support Booker during his abbreviated run.

Couldn't be her math

It's now clear why many people called out New York Times editorial board member Mara Gay after her recent on-air math gaffe with MSNBC "11th Hour" host Brian Williams racism.

At least, that's her story.

Gay and Williams chuckled on air that with the $500 million failed Democratic candidate Michael Bloomberg spent on his campaign, he could have given every American all 327 million of them $1 million. And have some left over.

It was actually more like $1.53, but who's counting?

But Gay said those people who called the pair on the boo-boo, "a trivial math mistake," were a "racist Twitter mob." Her op-ed reply in the New York Times was titled "My People Have Been Through Worse Than a Twitter Mob."

Her people? She is black, and Williams is white. Nevertheless, she persisted.

"When you're a black woman in America with a public voice," she said, "a trivial math error can lead to a deluge of hate."

One Twitter reply to her may have said it best:

"I literally have no recollection of what you look like," it read, "and I would venture to say that if you think that being off by $999,998.48 is a trivial mistake, I can understand why you are a Democrat."

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Cooper's Eye on the Left: Biden's amped up Second Amendment response suggests he needs a little more coffee - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Crowd seeks Crow Wing County support of 2nd Amendment – Brainerd Dispatch

Although the topics did not appear on Tuesdays agenda, the Second Amendment and gun control legislation dominated the first hour and a half of the county board meeting. Thirty-five people some more than once spoke during open forum. Most implored county commissioners to pass a resolution declaring Crow Wing Countys dedication to protecting residents Second Amendment rights, including potential legal action and the appropriation of public funds.

This isnt about guns. This is about due process. I cant rely on the federal system to protect me. I cant rely on the state system to protect me. So Im looking to my county to stand up and defend due process, said Emily resident Michael Starry. ... This is your opportunity to stand with your fellow citizens and tell us that youve got our backs the same way we have yours. Due process matters, the Constitution matters and our right to be free from tyranny, from oppression from any kind of madness that can take place that matters.

Supporters of a bill to make Crow Wing County a Second Amendment sanctuary county spoke to the Crow Wing County Board Tuesday, March 10, during the open forum segment of the meeting. Steve Kohls / Brainerd Dispatch

Starry is one of five administrators of a Facebook group called Patriots for Crow Wing 2nd Amendment Dedicated (Sanctuary) County, which sought to organize residents to attend Tuesdays meeting en force. The grassroots effort is among dozens coalescing across the state and hundreds nationwide, organized in response to gun control legislation many view as too restrictive or outright unconstitutional.

In Minnesota, the target is two bills passed by the state House of Representatives one expanding background checks to online sales and gun shows, and red flag legislation that would allow police officers to seize a persons firearms if a judge determined they were a threat to themselves or others.

Thus far, six Minnesota counties have passed sanctuary resolutions, including nearby Wadena County, indicating county leaders would fight back against these kinds of laws. Starry said he and thousands of others want Crow Wing County to join that list, and the activists got one step closer Tuesday. Midway through the parade of residents approaching the microphone, Board Chairman Paul Koering said the county board would host a public hearing at 6 p.m. March 19 in the Crow Wing County Land Services Building meeting rooms. He added he would also champion the desired resolution, putting it up for a vote at the March 24 county board meeting.

--------------------------------

What: Public hearing on proposed resolution that would make Crow Wing County a Second Amendment-dedicated county.

When: 6 p.m. March 19.

Where: Crow Wing County Land Services Building, meeting rooms 1 and 2, 322 Laurel St., Brainerd.

--------------------------------

Although a show of hands indicated a large majority of those in the room sympathized with a sanctuary resolution, at least four people who spoke said they opposed such action. Barb McColgan of Brainerd questioned the need for such a resolution and expressed concern over the county potentially dedicating public funds collected from all county residents to advance the views of one particular group.

Barb McColgan spoke Tuesday, March 10, about her concerns of just selecting one amendment of the constitution and not placing the emphasis on the whole document at the Crow Wing County Board meeting. Steve Kohls / Brainerd Dispatch

I guess my question is, this is in our Constitution, we are going to have to follow the state laws and federal laws. And so I dont see a purpose for this. It seems to me like were looking at what one special interest group wants, McColgan said. Couldnt we just as well have a resolution to support the First Amendment, freedom of speech or freedom of religion? And, you know, we can go on and on, and why dont we just resolve to support the entire Constitution, instead of breaking it apart? I feel that this resolution is divisive. Its an issue that isnt going to change anything if its passed.

Emotions ran high at times as residents explained the importance of the county boards support of the Second Amendment to them.

Brainerd High School student Boston Hackbart said the issue was a big one to him, most of his classmates and fellow service members in the Army National Guard. While sharing those thoughts, Hackbart appeared to be overcome by emotion. After several seconds of silence while Hackbart collected himself, Starry joined him at the podium.

This young man has never been politically active and something generated that in him, Starry said. ... This movement to try to protect liberty, to try to protect due process, it matters enough that he got up here trying to do this, which in my opinion is fricking amazing.

Pam Johnson, a resident of northeastern Crow Wing County, told commissioners when she was in danger from her abusive husband years earlier, a red flag law would not have protected her. She said he bought a gun not from a store, but from the street corner.

You can say somebodys mentally unstable. You can say, hey, you know, a guy beats his wife. Hes got a restraining order, he said this and that, he cant have a gun. Go down to your corner and buy one. Its that easy, Johnson said.

Several others pointed to the potentially dangerous implications or ineffectiveness of red flag legislation. Arguments included the idea people could lose their guns because of false claims by a vindictive ex-spouse, for example, or fears over how mental health problems may be defined and by whom.

Megan Pence along with her son Caleb and daughter Isabel talks to the Crow Wing County Board Tuesday, March 10, during the open forum segment of the board meeting. Several people gathered at the meeting to talk about their concerns of the recent Red Flag laws that are being proposed about firearm ownership in the state. Steve Kohls / Brainerd Dispatch

Megan Pence, accompanied by two of her five children, said shes concerned she could be a target of red flag legislation, despite her desire to protect her family.

I have three kids with disabilities. Some of those disabilities put me in very vulnerable situations, Pence said. I also have a long background of depression and anxiety. And red flag laws start to make me nervous if were going to start saying who can and cant carry a firearm, who can and cant protect their kids. Then I might be one of the first that cant carry a firearm.

But the county board has no purview over bills in the state Legislature what commissioners do have, however, is the ability to send a message on behalf of Crow Wing County residents, activists said.

Brainerd resident Darin Schadt said hes not the type to get political, but this issue moved him to get involved.

The people in the Cities are not listening to what people got to say up here. Were being left behind because the seven-county metro has all the votes, and it aint right, Schadt said. So thats why were all standing here coming to you people to send a message down to them, This aint right, were not putting up for it. And we don't want it. Its up to you guys to say no, our constituents up here do not want these things.

See original here:

Crowd seeks Crow Wing County support of 2nd Amendment - Brainerd Dispatch

State Bond Commission tangled in 2nd Amendment fight – Daily Comet

The State Bond Commission got ink around the world and praise from right-wingers by proclaiming in August 2018 Louisiana would not do business with two of the nation's largest banks because of their gun policies, which a majority on the panel considered anti-Second Amendment.

A few months later one of the two targeted banks -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- won a bond job from the state.

That happened again March 5 when the other targeted bank -- Citigroup Global -- bid the lowest interest rate of 2.175% to win the handling of the sale of the $264.6 million 2020 issuance of General Obligation Bond. Last year's interest rate was 3.22%. That means Louisiana taxpayers will pay tens of millions of dollars less over the life of the loan.

But the awarding of this lucrative state contract came only two weeks after the Bond Commission went out of its way Feb. 20 to again preclude Citigroup from doing business with Louisiana.

"Hypocrisy" claimed the left in emails and social media posts. "Fake news" claimed the right.

The easy answer, however, is the difference between bonds that require competitive bidding and those that can be negotiated. General obligation bonds are used to fund state construction projects, usually found in the annual capital outlay bill. Legally, that work must go to the lowest bidder.

Bank of America, which handles 18% of the state's general obligation bonds, and Citibank, which administers 5%, are two of the largest players in the bond market, which is how governments leverage taxpayer dollars to finance construction projects.

Bonds also are sold on a negotiated basis, as was the case with last year's GARVEE projects. That bond sale was used to fund another lane, each way, on Interstate 10 in Baton Rouge and a dedicated lane from the I-10 into the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport.

"In a negotiated sale, the state decides who can best represent its interests. Citibank was one of seven banks excluded from the pool," Treasurer John Schroder's office explained.

Though usually noted, it's a distinction lost when proponents focus their arguments on protecting 2nd Amendment rights by excluding banks with policies that fetter their retail and manufacturing clients from selling guns to some consumers.

Attorney General Jeff Landry wouldn't come to the phone, but issued a statement Thursday, through his press office, blaming The Advocate, with which he has been feuding because of reporting about a company he owns that imports foreigners to work on Louisiana projects. "Until they (The Advocate) can comprehend basic financial transactions and representations, the only thing I can say is that I will continue to protect the people of Louisiana's 2nd Amendment rights from liberal interests like this paper," said Landry, a member of the Bond Commission.

Treasurer Schroder, who chairs the Bond Commission, also refused to discuss the issue personally, but his press office sent definitions of competitive and negotiated sales. "By law, anybody can bid and we take the lowest bidder, no matter who the bank is," Schroder was reported in The Advocate as saying prior to the general obligation bond bids arriving on March 5.

Commissioner of Administration Jay Dardenne said in an interview last week that Schroder and Landry have taken an inconsistent position by banning banks from some state business because of political positions while including them for others.

"They gave the state the best deal," said Dardenne, also a member of the Bond Commission. "It stands to reason they would be competitive with other issuances as well. The Bond Commission's job is to get the best rate, to save taxpayers money."

He's more concerned, however, about the use of staffers to grade the proposals in a way that kept Citigroup from qualifying in February for the underwriters' pool to handle negotiated bonds. Bank of America didn't submit a proposal.

Graders for the treasurer, the attorney general and the speaker of the House -- all three of whom voted to not hire Citigroup and Bank of America because of gun policies -- gave Citigroup across the board grades of 0, 1, or 3 for categories such as "relevant experience," "track record" and "previous services to the state," according to the grading sheets. No mention of political policies was included on the grading sheets.

Those scores were added to the relatively high grades awarded by the Division of Administration, Senate president, and Department of Transportation & Development.

When averaged out, Citigroup came in ninth with a total score of 55.00. The number eight proposal was graded at 55.19 total. The majority on the Bond Commission drew the line at eight proposals, leaving Citigroup out of the pool.

"It was a blatant, a clear attempt to use staffers to achieve a political statement," Dardenne said.

Here is the original post:

State Bond Commission tangled in 2nd Amendment fight - Daily Comet

Dishonest Comparisons Between the Second Amendment and Government Funded Education – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

From Twitter, cropped by Dean Weingarten

U.S.A. -(Ammoland.com)- Writing in the Atlantic, Aaron Tang, Professor of law at the University of California, creates a profoundly misleading comparison of the Second Amendment with a fabricated entitlement to an education.

Tang attempts to make the case that Second Amendment supporters and proponents of a theory the Constitution guarantees a right to an equally funded state education are rough equivalents.

There are minimal similarities in the arguments: a basic right implies a level of supporting rights. You cannot have effective Second Amendment rights without access to ammunition and a place to train. You cannot have an effective right of the press without the ability to own and operate media. You cannot have religious freedom without preventing the government from closing down churches and stopping private choices of conscience.

Tang claims the argument that the right to vote implies the entitlement to a state-funded education is equivalent to the argument by Second Amendment supporters that the enumerated right to keep and bear arms implies the right to have access to firing ranges. From the article:

So what do the gun activists argue? Its worth reproducing this argument from their brief verbatim, with emphasis added to a single word: The right to possess firearms for protection implies a corresponding right to acquire and maintain proficiency in their use after all, the core right to keep and bear arms for self-defense wouldnt mean much without the training and practice that make it effective. The Second Amendment may say nothing about the right to practice at a shooting range of ones choosing, in other words, but that right ought to be recognized implicitly because it is important for an express constitutional right to have full meaning.

Now consider the argument advanced by advocates of a constitutional right to basic literacy. Like gun activists and their right to firearms training, educational-equity advocates recognize that the Constitution says nothing explicit about education. But surely a guarantee of basic literacy skills must be implicit in the document in order for its express rights to have meaning. As the Gary B. complaint puts it, without access to basic literacy skills, citizens cannot engage in knowledgeable and informed voting, cannot exercise their right to engage in political speech under the First Amendment, and cannot enjoy their constitutionally protected access to the judicial system including the retention of an attorney and the receipt of notice sufficient to satisfy due process.

In order to reach this plausible-sounding bit of sophistry, Tang overlooks obvious, blatant differences.

The most obvious and fundamental difference, is no one is claiming the State must pay for Second Amendment training, the creation of ranges, or pay the costs of Second Amendment supporters who use those ranges. The Second Amendment arguments are all about stopping the state from preventing the exercise of Second Amendment rights. The Second Amendment arguments are all about limiting the power of the government to interfere with Second Amendment rights.

An equivalent right to education already exists in the First Amendment, with the right to free speech, freedom of the press, and freedom of religion. The government is not allowed to prevent you from becoming educated.

On the other hand, the proponents of education equality are demanding more power for the state. They are demanding the government provide state-run schools. They are demanding the government take from some taxpayers and give money to other taxpayers, to fund what they demand.

They demand an expansion of government power and authority, exactly the opposite of Second Amendment supporters.

You cannot teach students who are unwilling to learn. Access to basic literary skills already exists. If students want to learn, there are numerous, relatively inexpensive means for them to learn. Parental attitudes are far more important than funding. Some low funded schools produce excellent results and well-educated students. Some high funded schools produce horrible results and poorly educated students. Many students are taught at home, with excellent results.

Government-funded and run ranges are not required to exercise Second Amendment rights. They may be desirable. They are likely useful. They are not required.

Government-funded and run schools are not required for people to be literate and vote. People were literate and voted long before government-funded and run schools became the norm.

The arguments both use the word implied. The arguments have almost no similarity after that.

Federal government funding of schools has far more to do with creating a government-funded propaganda arm for the Democrat party, and funds for the Democrat party via teachers unions, than it has with creating literate citizens.

Government-funded schools may be desirable. They are likely useful. They are not required. Federally funded government schools are a recent development.

Professor Tang creates the illusion of equivalency of arguments with the assumption that a right to freedom from government interference is equivalent to an entitlement to government largess.

The Second Amendment is the protection of a fundamental right enumerated in the Bill of Rights. The Supreme Court has ruled the right existed long before the ratification of the Bill of Rights in 1791. The right to become educated was implicitly protected by the First Amendment. Voting was almost entirely left to the states, with the franchise gradually being expanded more and more and moreover the intervening centuries.

It is an enormous stretch to compare a right implied by a foundational, fundamental, enumerated right, such as the implied right to transport firearms to a range which welcomes you, outside the jurisdiction of your domicile; to an implied entitlement of a right to vote, to have the state pay for the education which you desire, by taking money from another jurisdiction to pay for the education in your jurisdiction.

He states Second Amendment supporters admit there is no explicit mention in the Constitution of the implied right to training.

Then he states the argument of an implicit entitlement of public education is equivalent. It isn't. It does not start with an explicit right. It starts with a claim that an entitlement is required to exercise a right. Exercise of Second Amendment rights does not require an entitlement.

An equivalent for the Second Amendment would be claiming the government must provide everyone with firearms.

There has never been a right to a government-funded education in the United States Constitution. (Some state Constitutions have a right to education in the text, Arizona is one)

There has never been a Constitutional right to government-provided food.

There has never been a Constitutional right to government-provided police protection.

There has never been a Constitutional right to government-provided housing.

There has never been a Constitutional right to government-provided firearms.

There can not be a legal right to those things, because Constitutional rights limit government. They protect you from what the government would do to you.

To say there are Constitutional rights to economic products is to say the government must control the economy and make sure everyone has equal outcomes. Otherwise, the right would not be equal under the law.

A right exists, even if you do not exercise it. Everyone has Second Amendment rights, not just gun owners. Everyone already has the right to seek and obtain an education, protected by the First Amendment, even if they do not exercise that right.

This fundamental misapplication of the word right' requires a fundamental transformation of the structure of government. In essence, it requires the economy to be run by the government, with who gets how much determined by bureaucracies or the courts, instead of from a combination of effort, determination, skill, talent, luck, and, yes, government.

Some redistribution has happened, of course. Redistribution has never been a right. It is a combination of charity and forced redistribution of wealth, to use the force of government to take what would not be given.

Constitutional rights limit what government can do to you. They do not define what governments must do for you. Limiting what the government can do to you does not take resources from someone else.

To equate the arguments for implied Second Amendment rights, which limit what the government is allowed to do, with implied requirements for the government to pay for an education is fundamentally dishonest.

After setting up the argument, by ignoring the direct, obvious differences between a foundational right restricting government, and a demand for more government to take from some, and give to others, Professor Tang makes this statement:

The identical logical structure that underpins these otherwise distinctive arguments presents a puzzle for the Supreme Court. How can it in good faith accept a theory of implied constitutional rights for gun owners only to reject the same argument for schoolchildren? Yet the consensus among close followers is that this is the most likely outcome: Gun-rights activists believe the Court is primed to deliver them a victory in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, while educational-equity advocates recognize that the Courts conservative majority is unlikely to rule in their favor.

They should rule differently. The logical structure is not identical. It is fundamentally different.

The information about the difference is well known in legal circles. It is hard to believe Professor Tang does not understand the theory of natural law and the need to limit governmental power, which is foundational to the entire structure of the Constitution. The federal government is granted significant, but limited powers by the Constitution. The power to infringe on the right to keep and bear arms is not one of those powers.

He rejects that structure. He works hard to replace it with the Progressive construct of a living Constitution; a Constitution meaning only what the current justices are pressured to have it mean at any given moment. Attorney General William P. Barr recently gave a superb speech clarifying the differences in the Progressive vision of expansive government versus the founders' vision of limited government.

The Second Amendment has been infringed in various ways over the history of the United States. Those infringements do not change the foundational right. The Supreme Court has ruled the right to keep and bear arms existed long before the Constitution. The Second Amendment is in place to protect the right, not to create it.

Until 1968, citizens could order anti-tank and anti-aircraft cannons and their ammunition in the mail. Most people, in most places, had easy access to modern firearms, ammunition and ranges.

The Supreme Court is coming out of a long period, during which the words of the Constitution were often ignored, exactly because of the Progressive vision of government Professor Tang is promoting.

An important part of the theory of Progressive governance is the necessity of lying to the population, in order to achieve the objectives the governing elite wishes to enact. This is called manufacturing consent.

The United States is in the process of rejecting that theory, and in restoring a Constitutional government of limited powers.

About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

The rest is here:

Dishonest Comparisons Between the Second Amendment and Government Funded Education - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Elected officials preparing to discuss ‘2nd Amendment Sanctuary’ – Allied News

SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP Springfield Township supervisors are looking to touch base with other elected officials on whether Mercer County should be designated a "Second Amendment Sanctuary."

It's definitely an issue that needs to be taken up with the county commissioners, Tim Stiffy, chairman of the board of supervisors, said atlast week's meeting.

Counties and towns across the country have been looking into the "Second Amendment Sanctuary," a designation they say would block enforcement of proposed gun laws that they believe would violate the U.S. Constitution, according to the Associated Press.

Dozens ofmunicipalities in Virginia have passed second amendment sanctuary resolutions.

The resolutions are promoted heavily by the gun rights group Virginia Citizens Defense League, and most of them declare the intention of local officials to oppose any "unconstitutional restrictions" on the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms, the AP has reported.

Supervisors need to engage in dialogue with the county commissioners, said Ray Bogaty, the township's solicitor.

And considering the fact that the township doesn't have its own police department they rely on state police, he added.

Supervisors plan to meet with the county commissioners to discuss the issue, and they're also interested to find out what other municipalities in the county think, Stiffy said.

If a gun owner is doing nothing wrong, then there is no need to take away their Second Amendment rights, he said.

Before the meeting, Stiffy said that if you're legally not allowed to have a gun because of certain charges, like domestic violence, it would stay that way with the "Second Amendment Sanctuary" designation.

Go here to read the rest:

Elected officials preparing to discuss '2nd Amendment Sanctuary' - Allied News

Political Horizons: State Bond Commission tangled in 2nd Amendment fight – The Advocate

The State Bond Commission got ink around the world and praise from right-wingers by proclaiming in August 2018 Louisiana would not do business with two of the nations largest banks because of their gun policies, which a majority on the panel considered anti-Second Amendment.

A few months later one of the two targeted banks Bank of America Merrill Lynch won a bond job from the state.

That happened again March 5 when the other targeted bank Citigroup Global bid the lowest interest rate of 2.175% to win the handling of the sale of the $264.6 million 2020 issuance of General Obligation Bond. Last years interest rate was 3.22%. That means Louisiana taxpayers will pay tens of millions of dollars less over the life of the loan.

Louisiana borrowed $350 million on Thursday to keep money flowing to state-financed construction projects.

But the awarding of this lucrative state contract came only two weeks after the Bond Commission went out of its way Feb. 20 to again preclude Citigroup from doing business with Louisiana.

Hypocrisy claimed the left in emails and social media posts. Fake news claimed the right.

The easy answer, however, is the difference between bonds that require competitive bidding and those that can be negotiated. General obligation bonds are used to fund state construction projects, usually found in the annual capital outlay bill. Legally, that work must go to the lowest bidder.

Bank of America, which handles 18% of the state's general obligation bonds, and Citibank, which administers 5%, are two of the largest players in the bond market, which is how governments leverage taxpayer dollars to finance construction projects.

Bonds also are sold on a negotiated basis, as was the case with last years GARVEE projects. That bond sale was used to fund another lane, each way, on Interstate 10 in Baton Rouge and a dedicated lane from the I-10 into the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport.

The State Bond Commission barred two of the largest banks in the world from participating in efforts to fund some highway projects in Louisian

In a negotiated sale, the state decides who can best represent its interests. Citibank was one of seven banks excluded from the pool, Treasurer John Schroders office explained.

Though usually noted, its a distinction lost when proponents focus their arguments on protecting 2nd Amendment rights by excluding banks with policies that fetter their retail and manufacturing clients from selling guns to some consumers.

Attorney General Jeff Landry wouldnt come to the phone, but issued a statement Thursday, through his press office, blaming The Advocate, with which he has been feuding because of reporting about a company he owns that imports foreigners to work on Louisiana projects. Until they (The Advocate) can comprehend basic financial transactions and representations, the only thing I can say is that I will continue to protect the people of Louisiana's 2nd Amendment rights from liberal interests like this paper, said Landry, a member of the Bond Commission.

Treasurer Schroder, who chairs the Bond Commission, also refused to discuss the issue personally, but his press office sent definitions of competitive and negotiated sales. By law, anybody can bid and we take the lowest bidder, no matter who the bank is, Schroder was reported in The Advocate as saying prior to the general obligation bond bids arriving on March 5.

Commissioner of Administration Jay Dardenne said in an interview last week that Schroder and Landry have taken an inconsistent position by banning banks from some state business because of political positions while including them for others.

They gave the state the best deal, said Dardenne, also a member of the Bond Commission. It stands to reason they would be competitive with other issuances as well. The Bond Commissions job is to get the best rate, to save taxpayers money.

Hes more concerned, however, about the use of staffers to grade the proposals in a way that kept Citigroup from qualifying in February for the underwriters pool to handle negotiated bonds. Bank of America didnt submit a proposal.

In an continuation of last years battle over the state doing business with banks that have gun control policies, the Bond Commission Thursday

Graders for the treasurer, the attorney general and the speaker of the House all three of whom voted to not hire Citigroup and Bank of America because of gun policies gave Citigroup across the board grades of 0, 1, or 3 for categories such as relevant experience, track record and previous services to the state, according to the grading sheets. No mention of political policies was included on the grading sheets.

Those scores were added to the relatively high grades awarded by the Division of Administration, Senate president, and Department of Transportation & Development.

When averaged out, Citigroup came in ninth with a total score of 55.00. The number eight proposal was graded at 55.19 total. The majority on the Bond Commission drew the line at eight proposals, leaving Citigroup out of the pool.

It was a blatant, a clear attempt to use staffers to achieve a political statement, Dardenne said.

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Political Horizons: State Bond Commission tangled in 2nd Amendment fight - The Advocate

Taking time to think | News, Sports, Jobs – Daily Mining Gazette

Garrett Neese/Daily Mining GazetteHoughton County resident Matthew Wright speaks in support of a resolution to declare Houghton County a Second Amendment sanctuary county. The county board voted the resolution down 3-2 Wednesday night.

HOUGHTON By a 3-2 vote, the Houghton County Board of Commissioners voted down a revised resolution on becoming a Second Amendment sanctuary county Tuesday, a month after tabling the original proposal.

Commissioners Glenn Anderson, Roy Britz and Gretchen Janssen voted against the resolution. Chairman Al Koskela and Vice Chairman Tom Tikkanen supported it.

Tikkanen opted for a resolution declaring Houghton County a sanctuary county over others based on resolutions passed in other counties. They stopped short of a sanctuary declaration, but passed resolutions supporting Constitutional rights.

Tikkanen said while the resolution is symbolic, it sends an important message to Lansing about the value Houghton County puts on gun rights.

There are limitations constantly being placed on individual ownership Its a slow cumulative effect that eventually many fear are going to result in our Second Amendment rights being virtually nonexistent, he said.

In an interview Thursday, Britz said he was put off by the usage of sanctuary. Despite it being a non-binding resolution, he said, people could take the resolution as a sign that the county will be a refuge from gun laws.

The word sanctuary may give the thought to certain persons that its a place to come and bring some of their problems with them, he said Thursday. I dont believe in that.

Britz said he would gladly have voted for another resolution given to commissioners modeled on one passed in Huron County. That one asked state and federal legislators to maintain the Constitution as is.

I would absolutely have supported that one, he said Thursday. It didnt say anything about sanctuary. The word sanctuary just didnt fit with me.

The revised resolution removed several provisions commissioners had objected to at the previous meeting. In a list of means the commission would take to protect the right to bear arms, the board removed the power to direct the law enforcement and employees of Houghton County to not enforce any unconstitutional law.

Britz approved of the change, but said a clause directing the county not to use county resources or funds towards laws judged to violate the Second Amendment was effectively a backdoor to accomplish the same thing.

I believe its the responsibility of people to vote into office at the state and federal level people we trust that will support the Constitution and not try to change the amendments, he said. We have other avenues rather than to start doing county-level resolutions that mean nothing.

Three other paragraphs were removed from the resolution introduced in February. Two affirmed the boards support for constitutional carry legislation, which would allow people to carry a gun without a license, and stated no citizens should be arrested or prosecuted for exercising those rights. The other stated the rights in the Second Amendment and Article 1, Section 6 of the Michigan Constitution apply to all arms, including modern sporting rifle.

Wednesdays meeting drew about 60 people, down from the 100 or so who attended Februarys meeting. Most who spoke during public comment supported the resolution.

Houghton County Prosecutor Brittany Bulleit did not speak for or against the resolution, calling it more of a political issue than a legal issue. She did give the board some relevant case law and other legal issues. Under state law, the county board cannot pass ordinances that contravene state laws, she said.

While I understand the proposed document is a resolution, and not an ordinance, I think it is still important to note this distinction because it sets forth a legal limitation in powers, she said. Further, many requests included in the resolution are not included in the powers given in the statute. That idea should be considered in deciding what portions of the resolution, if any, to pass.

Bulleit also referenced MCL 123.1102, which says local units of government shall not impose special taxation on, enact or enforce any ordinance or regulations on guns except as provided by state or federal law.

Thus, many requests in the resolution could potentially go against the above statute and would have no legal backing, unless the state or federal government passed their own laws, Bulleit said.

The longterm legal repercussions of a declaration as a sanctuary county are unknowable, Bulleit said.

In a statement on the amendment introduced in February, the Michigan Attorney Generals office said it views Houghton County and others resolutions as a policy issue. Because the board still has to follow Michigans firearms laws, the resolution would have no actual effect.

We would view Houghtons proposed resolution as a policy/political statement by the Houghton County Board of Commissioners, which we respect as their right to engage in free speech always with the reminder that of course Houghton County remains subject to all enacted firearms legislation, the statement said.

After the vote, Hancock resident Justin Kasieta, who brought the Second Amendment resolution to the board, said he was disappointed.

I think that the community supports this resolution and were going to keep pushing for it, he said. Commissioners may see a response to what they voted for in November.

The investigation into the death of Lisa Kinnunen in December 2018 was closed in July of 2019, according to FBI ...

HOUGHTON The vote to potentially allow a recreational marijuana retailer in Houghton will wait another two ...

HOUGHTON As concerns mount over COVID-19, the City of Houghton has canceled events to slow its spread. ...

HANCOCK The day after Gov. Gretchen Whitmers declaration of a state emergency regarding the COVID-19 virus, ...

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Taking time to think | News, Sports, Jobs - Daily Mining Gazette

County Board meeting still scheduled in spite of coronavirus concerns – newmedia-wi.com

SHAWANO In spite of health concerns over the coronavirus that have spurred numerous closings and cancellations of events, there were no plans as of Sunday to cancel the Shawano County Boards March 25 meeting.

It is anticipated there could be a huge public turnout for that meeting, given that the board will be considering a resolution designating Shawano County a so-called Second Amendment sanctuary.

The resolution would give the sheriff the discretion not to enforce state or federal gun control laws considered to be unconstitutional.

The countys public safety committee has held two meetings on that topic, which turned out crowds of about 50 people for the first and around 30 for the second.

There have been a host of cancellations of meetings and events announced over the last several days due the COVID-19 coronavirus.

The state has ordered that schools be closed starting Wednesday, and some, including the Shawano and Bonduel school districts, have already announced closures starting Monday.

The city of Shawano has closed down City Hall and cancelled public meetings. Many area churches have cancelled Sunday services.

Shawano County is discouraging people from coming to the courthouse building unless they have essential business.

As of Sunday, however, County Board Chairman Jerry Erdmann said the March 25 County Board meeting at the county courthouse is still on.

That is up to me and I have not so far thought of cancelling it, Erdmann said.

I could possibly restrict so many people that would be coming to the courthouse or we could possibly take the names and addresses of everybody that does come, just so we know whos there so we have verification of people, he said.

Erdmann said the county would probably ask anyone who is stick to stay home.

If they definitely want to come, I may limit the number of people that will speak, he said. Thats up to me. But I may also have a health department nurse taking names of everybody that comes in, so if someone would, God forbid, get sick in Shawano County, at least we would know who would be there.

Erdmann said he felt it was important the County Board take up the Second Amendment resolution.

To me its a matter of what the Constitution of the United States says, Erdmann said. This vote is about the Second Amendment, which lies in the Constitution. We have to believe in the Constitution. Every board member basically took that oath when we were elected. So, to me, its more about the Constitution than it is any amendments.

Erdmann said he didnt feel there was any need to postpone the March 25 meeting at this time.

Now, if the situation would change where all of a sudden we are having numerous people sick in the county, I may then postpone it, he said, but right now I havent made the decision. The County Board meeting is still on for the 25th and I will deal with whatever changes happen in the near future.

Erdmann said he has been in contact with the Shawano-Menominee Counties Health Department on the issue and said he has asked department director Vicki Dantoin to update the board at the March 25 meeting regarding the coronavirus.

The rest is here:

County Board meeting still scheduled in spite of coronavirus concerns - newmedia-wi.com

Biden’s Latest Campaign Hire Shows Joey Boy Is Putting The Second Amendment in the Crosshairs – Townhall

Former Vice President Joe Biden and some in the Democratic Party might want to deny it, but the cat is out of the bag now: they want to destroy the Second Amendment. I know, this really isnt news. You, loyal readers, have known this was the Democrats long game for decades. Its the reason why some were quite irked when former Rep. Beto ORourke, his real name is Robert Francis, said: hell yes, were going to take your AR-15s and other firearms that are so-called assault weapons. Thats liberal speak for a gun that looks scary, though owned by millions. To recap, an AR-15 is a rifle owned by millions, it doesnt fire a high-caliber round, and its firing mechanism is no different than a handgun used by millions of civilians and police officers alike. Its semi-automatic, one bullet per trigger pull.

But and I know Im preaching to the choir, you already knew that toothat that liberal media doesnt care about lexicon, knowing the proper terms or the laws because thats not the point. Gun confiscation is the goal. Period. And white guy Bob blew the game and gave us oodles of political ammunition for multiple cycles. Beto endorsed Biden. Biden, in turn, said he was going to follow his lead on gun control, which is straight-up confiscation. Beto as the nations gun czar would be a parade of horrible too terrible to contemplate. And now, Biden has hired his former campaign manager to helm his 2020 bid (via NYT):

Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. is planning to announce this afternoon that he has hired Jennifer OMalley Dillon as his new campaign manager, according to two Democratic officials, elevating a veteran Democratic strategist as he tries to scale up his limited organization and pivot toward President Trump and the general election.

Ms. OMalley Dillon, 43, managed former Representative Beto ORourkes presidential campaign last year and before that was a top aide on former President Barack Obamas re-election team.

Presidential campaigns always expand as they transition from the primary to the fall election, which Mr. Biden is clearly doing after building a near-insurmountable delegate lead against Senator Bernie Sanders.

But by tapping Ms. OMalley Dillon as campaign manager, Mr. Biden is also signaling to Democratic donors and elected officials that he knows he has to broaden an operation that, until his Super Tuesday success, had been underfunded.

[]

By installing Ms. OMalley Dillon now, Mr. Biden is effectively attempting to catch his organization up to his success and status as the Democratic front-runner.

Well, if OMalley was helming the were going to take your guns agenda of Beto, then it looks like Biden is pretty open to it as well. Could there be a stop to the Biden hiccups of the campaign trail? Well see. Probably not because this is Joe Biden and there are many, many aides tasked with keeping Joey Boy more or less from getting into situations where he makes a fool of himself. Granted, Beto made his pitch that only the government should own firearms on the grounds ofKent State. You know, where the government shot and killed a couple of students in 1970. And now, we have Joe Biden telling a Michigan voter that hes full of s**t and threatened to slap him after being pressed on gun rights. The voter thinks Biden wants to do that which is why he asked. Katie has more:

The Detroit union worker who former Vice President Joe Biden said was "full of sh*t" for asking about the Second Amendment during a campaign stop this week is speaking out about his experience with the Democratic presidential candidate.

During an interview with Fox and Friends Wednesday morning, Jerry Wayne explained what went down.

[]

"It was a little bit disturbing to see that a politician wants to take away my right to defend myself," Wayne said. "He doesn't need to touch anybody's weapon at all. What we need to do is we need to concentrate on teaching people how to respect firearms and how to use them, not take them away."

"This is a right we need to protect with our heart and soul and it shouldn't be infringed," he continued.

And now, with Mr. gun grabbers campaign manager now taking over Bidens operationlets say the former VP plans to be like his old boss when it comes to gun rights. He wants to strip them.

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Biden's Latest Campaign Hire Shows Joey Boy Is Putting The Second Amendment in the Crosshairs - Townhall

Bloomberg Gets It Wrong on Guns and Self DefenseHere’s Eleven Examples – The National Interest

Earlier this month, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloombergwas asked how he justifiedhis push for more stringent gun control when he is guarded by an armed security detail.

Bloombergs response? He is a wealthy businessman and politician who faces threats that normal Americans do not, so its just fine for him to pay others to protect him with guns that hed put the rest of us in prison for possessing.

The reality is that Bloomberg, as a wealthy white man living in upper-class neighborhoods, is statistically far less likely to be a victim of violent crime than most other Americans.

But youd never know it from the way he spends hundreds of millions of dollars advocating gun laws that reserve armed protection for the special few.

In these trying times, we must turn to the greatest document in the history of the world to promise freedom and opportunity to its citizens for guidance.Find out more now >>

Every day, many Americans without Bloombergs wealth and power rely on the Second Amendmentnot private securityto defend themselves against threats to their lives and livelihoods. In fact, almost every major study on defensive gun use has found that Americans use their firearms defensively between 500,000 and 3 million times each year.

Last year, The Daily Signal began a monthly series highlighting just some of the countless times that the right to keep and bear arms made all the difference for ordinary Americans whom Michael Bloomberg wants to disarm. (You can read the stories fromJanuary 2020 here.)

February similarly provided ample evidence in favor of an armed citizenry and against Bloombergs claim that only the select few can be trusted with guns.

Michael Bloomberg is more than wealthy enough to afford to pay armed men to protect him. Most Americans are not so fortunate.

We dont have former law enforcement officers on hand when the convenience store were in gets robbed. We cant rely on an armed detail to jump to our defense when were assaulted. We dont live in gated communities with 24/7 security.

We have only our Second Amendment rights. And they are worth insisting upon.

This article by Amy Swearer first appeared at The Daily Signal.

Image: Then-Democratic U.S. presidential candidateMichaelBloombergspeaks at his Super Tuesday night rally in West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., March 3, 2020. REUTERS/Marco Bello

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Bloomberg Gets It Wrong on Guns and Self DefenseHere's Eleven Examples - The National Interest

The Mysterious Meaning of the Second Amendment – The Atlantic

Joshua Feinzig and Joshua Zoffer: A constitutional case for gun control

Was Stevenss linguistic intuition correct? No. The phrase keep and bear arms was a novel term. It does not appear anywhere in COEMEmore than 1 billion words of British English stretching across three centuries. And prior to 1789, when the Second Amendment was introduced, the phrase was used only twice in COFEA: First in the 1780 Massachusetts Declaration of Rights, and then in a proposal for a constitutional amendment by the Virginia Ratifying Convention. In short, keep and bear arms was not a term of art with a fixed meaning. Indeed, the meaning of this phrase was quite unsettled then, as it had barely been used in other governmental documents. Ultimately, a careful study of the Second Amendment would have to treat keep arms and bear arms as two separate linguistic units, and thus two separate rights.

We performed another search in COFEA, about the meaning of keep arms, looking for documents in which keep and arms (and their variants) appear within six words of each other. The results here were somewhat inconclusive. In about 40 percent of the hits, a person would keep arms for a collective, military purpose; these documents support Justice Stevenss reading. And roughly 30 percent of the hits reference a person who keeps arms for individual uses; these documents support Justice Scalias analysis. The remainder of the hits did not support either reading.

We could not find a dominant usage for what keep arms meant at the founding. Thus, even if Scalia was wrong about the most common meaning of bear arms, he may still have been right about keep arms. Based on our findings, an average citizen of the founding era would likely have understood the phrase keep arms to refer to possessing arms for both military and personal uses.

Finally, it is not enough to consider keep and bear arms in a vacuum. The Second Amendments operative clause refers to the right of the people. We conducted another search in COFEA for documents that referenced arms in the context of rights. About 40 percent of the results had a militia sense, about 25 percent used an individual sense, and about 30 percent referred to both militia and individual senses. The remainder were ambiguous. With respect to rights, there was not a dominant sense for keeping and bearing arms. Here, too, an ordinary citizen at the time of the founding likely would have understood that the phrase arms, in the context of rights, referred to both militia-based and individual rights.

Based on these findings, we are more convinced by Scalias majority opinion than Stevenss dissent, even though they both made errors in their analysis. Furthermore, linguistic analysis formed only a small part of Scalias originalist opus. And the bulk of that historical analysis, based on the history of the common-law right to own a firearm, is undisturbed by our new findings. (We hope to publish this research, which also looked at other phrases in the Second Amendment, such as the right of the people, in an academic journal.)

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The Mysterious Meaning of the Second Amendment - The Atlantic

Why another Pa. town passed 2nd Amendment sanctuary rule even though it can’t be enforced – Lebanon Daily News

Nearly all of Kentucky's 120 counties have adopted versions of Second Amendment sanctuary resolutions. Resolutions are not legally binding. Louisville Courier Journal

By unanimous vote, Jackson Twp. supervisors declared, 'No Township Officer shall uphold any law or statute nor expend any Township funds in any effort contrary to this resolution.'

Officials in Jackson Township, Lebanon County,passed a resolution Monday declaring the municipality a "Second Amendment sanctuary," following a growing trend of local governmentstrying to pre-empt future state or federal gun control measures.

The resolution, which passed the board of supervisors unanimously, is mostly symbolic, asit doesnot supersede state orlaw.

But two supervisors said they wanted to send a message about their support of the SecondAmendment anyway.

"Really what itboils down to,is this was ... really justa policy statement saying that we recognize the Second Amendment,wesupport people'srights to bear arms andwe would never do anything to circumvent ortake away from that right," Supervisor Thomas Houtz said.

The resolution was prompted by news of a similar effort in West Manheim Township, York County, Houtz said.

The ordinance passed in West Manheim Township statesthe township will not use its money or personnel "in ways that are inconsistent with the Second Amendment to the constitution of the United States of America."

Jackson Township supervisors have declared the Lebanon County town a Second Amendment sanctuary, calling on officials there to refuse to enforce any laws that might be passed in the future that would infringe upon the rights of gun owners.(Photo: Lisa Marie Pane/AP)

The recent push forSecond Amendment sanctuaries largely began in Virginia, where dozens of municipalities passed similar resolutions in response to gun control efforts in the Virginia General Assembly.

According to The Trace, anews outlet focused on covering gun violence, over 400 municipalities have passedsanctuary ordinances and resolutions nationwide, with many containing language that local law enforcement can not enforce potential gun control measures such as a ban on assault-style weapons.

ChristianSoltysiak, the interim executive director of gun-control advocacy group CeaseFire PA, called the Second Amendment sanctuary movement a "fear-mongering tactic."

"It doesn't make our communities any safer, and that's really what we should be talking about," Soltysiak said.

Other news: Lebanon's opioid crisis: Battle to stem fatal overdoses at a standstill for another year

The resolution states: "the right to keep and bear arms is a fundamental individual right that shall not be infringed.

Therefore, the Township of Jackson, County of Lebanon, Pennsylvania, shall hereby be known as a Second Amendment Sanctuary. No Township Officer shall uphold any law or statute nor expend any Township funds in any effort contrary to this resolution."

Jackson Township does not have its own police department, so this resolution will have few implications on any future gun control measures.

Bob Power, a professor emeritus of lawat Widener University School of Law, said the resolution as written does not limit the criminal justice system's ability to enforce the law.

"It's really just words," Power said. "I suspect that to a police officer or the district attorney it's a message, and the message is: 'We don't want you to come down hard on minor weapons offenses,'" Power said. "But they're not making it legally impossible."

Supervisor Thomas Morrissey said they wanted to make their opinionknown.

"We're just reaffirming our stance and support of the Second Amendment," Morrissey said.

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Why another Pa. town passed 2nd Amendment sanctuary rule even though it can't be enforced - Lebanon Daily News

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Race doesn’t matter to Second Amendment – Martinsville Bulletin

In her recent My Word ("Letter misrepresents people and guns, Feb. 26), Katina Vipperman in the second paragraph says that Lonnie Reynolds and Jermain Penn Jr. should not be labeled "thugs," as I had done in a prior letter. Webster's Dictionary defines thugs as, "a violent person or criminal." These young men are being charged with second degree murder that took place at drug deal gone bad. They certainly fit the definition of a "thug."

Vipperman letter asks if I am a "white supremacist or just plain racist?" Why would she even ask that? In none of my letters to the editor did I ever mention anyone's skin color. I used names, ages, locations and the fact that an AR-15 was NOT used in the alleged crime. Every Sunday I worship with the Church of Christ, where the membership is 50% black.

Vipperman is not the first person to play the race card in this Second Amendment discussion. Pamela Chisholm said in her letter ("What's in the heart does matter," Feb. 23), "Referencing the Constitution, I can safely state that they all believed in white supremacy." You know Ms. Chisholm, the Second Amendment is not for white folks only? Every law-abiding citizen who is "non-Caucasian" should have a gun in their home for self defense against criminals of any skin color.

Ms. Chisholm goes on to say that "only the police and military should have a weapon as powerful as an AR-15."... That's what the Gestapo Nazis said in the 1930s. Will we repeat history in Virginia? I hope not.

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LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Race doesn't matter to Second Amendment - Martinsville Bulletin

Debate is Over Concerning This Part of the Second Amendment? – Townhall

The Left has long lost this debate, but they keep trying to relitigate it on the campaign stump. The Second Amendment grants the individual right to keep and bear arms. That was the landmark D.C. vs. Hellerdecision, though it applied only to federal enclaves. The McDonald v. Chicago decision extended this right to the states proper. But the Left is obsessed with the militia portion of the amendment: 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

The Atlantic has a good piece about this whole debate, including an analysis of the opinions from the late Justices Antonin Scalia and John Paul Stevens on Heller. The publication explained that they used two databases Corpus of the Founding Era American English (COFEA) which has 140 million words from documents between 1760-1799 and Corpus of Early Modern English, a massive text bank based on one-billion words British English from 1475 and 1800, to analyze their opinions. To no ones surprise, Scalias majority opinion was more grounded in historical fact than Stevens, though both had inaccuracies. Still, even in the afterlife, Scalia is still right for the most part (via The Atlantic):

Scalia concluded that the phrase bear arms unequivocally carried a military meaning only when followed by the preposition against. The Second Amendment does not use the word against. Therefore, Scalia reasoned, the phrase bear arms, by itself, referred to an individual right. To test this claim, we combed through COFEA for a specific pattern, locating documents in which bear and arms (and their variants) appear within six words of each other. Doing so, we were able to find documents with grammatical constructions such as the arms were borne. In roughly 90 percent of our data set, the phrase bear arms had a militia-related meaning, which strongly implies that bear arms was generally used to refer to collective military activity, not individual use. (Whether these results show that the Second Amendment language precludes an individual right is a more complicated question.)

Further, we found that bear arms often took on a military meaning without being followed by against. Thus, the word against was sufficient, but not necessary, to give the phrase bear arms a militia-related meaning. Scalia was wrong on this particular claim.

Next, we turn to Justice Stevenss dissent. He wrote that the Second Amendment protected a right to have and use firearms only in the context of serving in a state militia. Stevens appears to have determinedthough his exact conclusion is somewhat unclearthat the phrase keep and bear arms was a unitary term of art. Such single linguistic units, called binomials or multinomials, are common in legal writing. Think of cease and desist or lock, stock, and barrel. As a result, Stevens concluded, there was no need to consider whether keep arms had a different meaning from bear arms. Therefore, he had no reason to determine whether keep arms, by itself, could refer to an individual right.

Was Stevenss linguistic intuition correct? No.

[]

Based on these findings, we are more convinced by Scalias majority opinion than Stevenss dissent, even though they both made errors in their analysis. Furthermore, linguistic analysis formed only a small part of Scalias originalist opus. And the bulk of that historical analysis, based on the history of the common-law right to own a firearm, is undisturbed by our new findings.

Oh, and as for the militia aspect of all of this, well, it looks like the Second Amendment was written in a way to show that gun ownership was applicable to the military, or militia at the time, and individual use. The Washington Free Beacons Stephen Gutowski noted this part of the article as well:

So, yeahthis really hasnt been a debate since 2008, when Heller was decided, but keep hitting against that wall, liberal America.

Read more:

Debate is Over Concerning This Part of the Second Amendment? - Townhall

Moss to face Brewer in House race – Richmond County Daily Journal

CORRECTION: This article mistakenly quoted Ben Moss as saying he was 10% devoted to his county commissioner seat. Moss said he was 100% devoted. The article has been updated to correct this.

ROCKINGHAM Richmond County Commissioner Ben Moss has won the Republican primary for North Carolina House District 66, and will move on to face Democrat Scott Brewer in November.

Moss garnered 56.7% of the vote (3,582) against Republican Joey Davis who finished with 43.3% of the vote (2,735). The district includes Richmond, Scotland an part of Montgomery counties.

When reached after the unofficial results came in Tuesday, Moss was still in shock at moving on to the next phase in reaching state office.

Its humbling, Moss said. Im still sort of shell-shocked.

Moss, who works for CSX, has been an outspoken supporter of the second amendment, pushing for the county to become a 2nd Amendment Sanctuary in recent months. He also was the high vote-getter in his last campaign for re-election.

Im very blessed in my mind, Moss said on his political success while still in his 30s. Ive prayed a lot during this election and I feel like Im trying my hardest to prove myself to the county and district, and I feel like theyre seeing my efforts.

On his November opponent, Moss said that he likes Brewer as a person, but they are just on different ends of the spectrum when it comes to governance.

Moss thanked Davis, who he said he has spoken to frequently throughout the race, for running a good, clean campaign.

Weve never had any hard feelings among each other, we just put it out there and let the voters choose, Moss said.

Moss will remain in his county commissioner seat unless he wins in November, he said, adding that he is still 100% devoted to his role at the county level.

Reach Gavin Stone at 910-817-2673 or [emailprotected]

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Moss to face Brewer in House race - Richmond County Daily Journal

Nebraska Governor Ricketts Openly Supports Second Amendment and Open Carry – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

From twitter, cropped and scaled by Dean Weingarten

U.S.A. -(Ammoland.com)- Governor Pete Ricketts has come out strongly in support of people exercising their First and Second Amendment rights at the Nebraska State Capitol.

President Trump's use of social media outlets such as Twitter is serving as a template for other politicians to go directly to the people and around the coverage of the legacy media.

On 21 February, at the Nebraska Capitol, hundreds of Second Amendment supporters showed up to the Judiciary Committee hearing to oppose further restrictions of the right to keep and bear arms, particularly LB 816.

The Second Amendment supporters exercised their intertwined First and Second Amendment rights. Those rights are reinforced with protections in the Nebraska Constitution.

LB 816 would place severe restrictions on the sale of most semi-automatic rifles and shotguns.

Governor Pete Ricketts, (R) Nebraska, refused to follow the Democrat script that proclaimed the exercise of rights as a problem. He straightforwardly supported those who exercised their rights. From ketv.com:

The men with guns do have the support of Gov. Pete Ricketts.

I support our Second Amendment rights and I support our folks who are going to take advantage of that with our right to open carry, he said. That's what we have in the state of Nebraska and this is the people's house.

This is noteworthy. Most politicians claim to support the right to keep and bear arms, with caveats and cutouts. The word but is prominently displayed at the end of their sentences. Governor Rickets did not qualify his support. The number of governors who support open carry in their capitols is small. Governor Ricketts is displaying political courage. He risks castigation by the media. He is refusing to be politically correct.

Just a few days before, on 18 February, Governor Ricketts issued this statement. From governor.net:

The United States Constitution guarantees the right to keep and bear arms. The first sentence of Article I of the Nebraska Constitution reasserts this right: The right to keep and bear arms for security or defense of self, family, home, and others, and for lawful common defense, hunting, recreational use, and all other lawful purposesshall not be denied or infringed by the state or any subdivision thereof.

Over the past few years, my team has worked to safeguard your rights. For example, we have created an online process to renew, update, or replace a handgun permit, saving gun owners across the state valuable time. In 2018, I signed LB 902, a bill brought by Sen. Bruce Bostelman of Brainard, which protects the identities of gun owners with concealed carry permits. And when the National Rifle Association (NRA) was under attack, we invited them to Nebraska because the people of our state understand the importance of the Second Amendment.

There is more to the statement. Governor Ricketts comes out in favor of protecting the right to keep and bear arms to defend property from pests and predators, to hunt, and to use them for recreation, as well as for self-defense.

All of those actions are protected under the Second Amendment and the Nebraska Constitution.

Most politicians have been unwilling to point out the obvious. Constitutionally protected rights can and should be exercised; peaceful practitioners should be praised for their upholding of the Constitutional order. This is how the rule of law is promulgated and passed from one generation to the next.

Governor Ricketts deserves kudos for his straightforward support and defense of Constitutional rights, in the face of heavy disapproval by those who do not believe in limits on government power. Those who do not approve seem to include most of the legacy media.

So many Second Amendment supporters showed up at the hearing the vast majority were unable to get into the hearing room. The committee cut the allotted time to speak from three minutes to a minute and a half per person. About 50 people spoke against the bill, while 5 spoke for it. Hundreds more waited in the halls outside.

The bill was touted in the media as an anti-suicide bill.

Second Amendment supporters have been learning it is important to show up and make their voices heard. The efforts of many years of organizing and building communication networks are paying off.

About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

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Nebraska Governor Ricketts Openly Supports Second Amendment and Open Carry - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Billionaire 2nd Amendment Hater Bloomberg, Spends Whatever It Takes To Win Presidency – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

OpinionBillionaire Michael Bloomberg, globalist elite, will spend whatever it takes to win the U.S. Presidency and, if successful, would then proceed with his goal to destroy the second amendment.Part two

New York -(AmmoLand.com)-Were Michael Bloomberg to win the Democrat party's nomination for U.S. President and to prevail in the 2020 general election, he would, as his first order of business, undermine the second amendment, paving the way for the destruction of the nations free constitutional republic

There are two strains of Collectivism in evidence in the modern Democrat Party: one, the Universal Socialist stateless world union governed by labor, as envisioned by Karl Marx, and, two, the Universal stateless Corporatist world, governed by an elite ruling Class: a central banking oligarchy. Either governmental construct is anathema to those nation-states that function as Constitutional Republics. And, only one true and free Constitutional Republic presently exists: The United States. The Blueprint and governing principles of this free Constitutional Republic is the U.S. Constitution.

The Constitution is grounded on one, a federal government of specific, limited powers provided to and spread out among three co-equal Branches, and, two, a recognized body of elemental, primordial, fundamental, unalienable, unfettered, immutable and boundless natural rights and liberties that reside only in the American people, beyond the lawful power of the federal governments to delimit, abrogate, modify, or ignore. Political and Social Conservatives recognize the importance of the Nations Bill of Rights to a true functioning Constitutional Republic, where the citizens are sovereign. Radical Leftist and Progressive Marxist Globalists, along with Centrist Corporatist Globalist elites (the world banking community), do not. The latter two groups are presently battling for control over the Democrat Party.

But, on two matters, the respective Transnational Collectivist ideologies converge. Both groups would implement extraordinarily expansive and highly restrictive gun measures, with the aim to contain, constrain, and eventually curtail, an armed citizenry; for neither group accepts as a presumptive absolute: the fundamental, immutable, unalienable right of the American people to own and possess firearms, and, in fact, are adamantly opposed to the very existence of an armed citizenry because the presence of an armed citizenry poses an inherent and existential threat to governmental authority, and to the implicit idea of a centralized governmentthe idea that government is presumptively sovereign, not the people. But that idea turns the U.S. Constitution on its head.

But what is the explanation for the flurry of recent anti-Second Amendment bills coming out of State Legislatures? We certainly do not see Anti-Second Amendment Collectivist zealots, of late, falling back on their usual pretext for further firearms restrictions, namely, mass shootings, when pushing for more restrictive firearms legislation targeting the average, rational, responsible, law-abiding firearms' owner, as they have previously done. But, then, there has been a paucity of mass shootings of late. And, given the paucity of mass shootings, the anti-Second Amendment zealot Collectivists have been unable to rely on their usual pretext for a new wave of expansive firearms restrictions; and they simply do not wish to wait for the next pretextual exigency to occur. Perhaps this explains the recent push by anti-Second Amendment zealots and Collectivists for a new round of restrictive firearms measures.

Or perhaps these anti-Second Amendment zealot Collectivists believe they now have sufficient backing from the polity and feel that they longer require a pretext to attack the Second Amendment with renewed vigor.

Or, perhaps given the fact, in 2019, of Democrat Party majorities in some State Governments, such asand most prominentlyVirginia and New York, there no longer exists reliance on the heretofore necessary pretext for the enactment of more restrictive anti-Second Amendment measures, which we now see rolling out in record numbers.

Previously, when Republicans were in the ascendant, it would not have been possible or propitious for these Collectivists to ram through such restrictive anti-Second Amendment measures. They seem to be making up for lost time, for we see, today, a deluge of extraordinarily harsh, overbearing, and outlandish measures being tossed about with careless abandon.

Whatever the reason for dispensing with the usual pretext, the recent spate of anti-Second Amendment bills coming out of State Legislatures, principally New York and Virginia, cannot be attributed to the occurrence of a specific tragedya knee-jerk reaction to the latest mass shooting which had previously been relied on as the obligatory rationale for instituting further restrictive firearms' measures, directed, as they generally were and still are, to the average, rational, law-abiding, responsible American firearms' owner, rather than to such societal luminaries, as your garden-variety career criminal, psychopathic gang member, religious Allahu Akbar fanatic, and occasional lunatic.

And, so, the anti-Second Amendment zealots, advocates, and adherents of the tenets of Collectivism heavily financed by Globalist billionaires, intent on creating a one-world political, social, economic, legal, and cultural construct, that they alone controlproceed on their merry way, drafting ever more restrictive firearms measures, targeting the average civilian citizen as they were ever wont to do.

Most prominent and visible among the Globalist billionaires involved in heavily financing, orchestrating, and implementing expansive, precision attacks on the Second Amendment, in States across the Country, is Michael Bloomberg. He is the recent addition to the group of Democrat Party U.S. Presidential hopefuls. He has already plowed hundreds of millions of dollars of his own extraordinary wealth into his campaign, and he is prepared to invest hundreds of millions of dollars more.

Was it Bloombergs personal wish to enter the Democrat Party contest, or did the Globalist elites encourage Bloomberg, as one of their own, the Apotheosis of the neoliberal Globalist elite to enter the fray? Whatever the truth about Bloombergs sudden entry into the Democrat Party race, he intends to see it through, and the DNC is bending over backward to push his candidacy forward.

Said one source, as reported by Taegan Goddards Political Wire: Mike will spend whatever it takes to defeat Donald Trump. The nation is about to see a very different campaign than weve ever seen before. But, what is a promise to the establishment Democrat Party Globalist elites, is a threat to Americans who wish to preserve a free Constitutional Republic and their fundamental rights and liberties.

Bloomberg is a darling child, the public face and great hope of the centrist, establishment Globalist Corporatist power elites. These power elites are banking on Bloombergtheir proxyto wrest control from Donald Trump, over the reins of Government, in 2020.

The centrist establishment Corporatist neoliberal Globalists are adamant that the U.S. must return to the path that they had set for the Country, decades agomoving inexorably, ever more quickly, since the early 1990s, toward its transformationone bespeaking the demise of our Country as an independent sovereign nation, and its inclusion into a one-world system of governance.

The Globalist elites agenda was rudely interrupted with the election of Donald Trump to the U.S. Presidency. But, with implosion of Bidens campaign, and fear over the ascendancy of the avowed Marxist Socialist, Bernie Sanders, and with dawning awareness of deficiencies inherent in the so-called moderates, it is now clear the Globalist elites are impatient, frustrated, and furious over the probability that Trump will indeed be elected to a second term in Office. Such a happenstance is abhorrent to them and absolutely intolerable.

But, will the Transnational Corporatist Globalist Bloomberg become the Democrat Partys Nominee for U.S. President to take on Trump? Or, will it be the Internationalist Marxist Socialist, Sanders?

Whomever it is, the Nation will face complete ruin. For, in either event, the existence of a free Constitutional Republic is incompatible with the ideology of either faction of Collectivism. The framework of the Nation the founders created and fought so hard to foster cannot exist under any world governmental scheme. The Nation will falter and fall.

About The Arbalest Quarrel:

Arbalest Group created `The Arbalest Quarrel' website for a special purpose. That purpose is to educate the American public about recent Federal and State firearms control legislation. No other website, to our knowledge, provides as deep an analysis or as thorough an analysis. Arbalest Group offers this information free.

For more information, visit: http://www.arbalestquarrel.com.

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Billionaire 2nd Amendment Hater Bloomberg, Spends Whatever It Takes To Win Presidency - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Guzi: Of God and guns and sanctuaries – Roanoke Times

Guzi is a small business owner in Roanoke.

Our Creator gave us this Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Kill.

The original purpose of a gun: To Kill.

(On another matter,) Jesus said: For you ignore Gods law and substitute your own tradition. (Mark 7:8)

With our love of guns, and near-idol-worship of the Second Amendment In America, so richly blessed by Him, have we ignored Gods law, and substituted our own tradition? (To the detriment killing, injury, heartbreak of COUNTLESS children, women, men?) Have we created a culture that is in violation of His Commandment, His law?

We Virginians have seen gun violence that plagues America, and Virginia: Virginia Tech, Columbine, Sandy Hook, Parkland, Smith Mountain Lake, Virginia Beach. MANY more.

When any shooting happens, it affects the victims and many others. Each, breaking hearts.

Its worse than it used to be. How in the world did we get here?

Our gun culture of hunting, home protection, and target shooting somehow insidiously morphed into something much different. Something harmful, deadly, destructive, costly.

Some blame mental illness, video games, or Godlessness. These are deflections. Other developed countries have these. But they dont have the gun violence, killings, and injuries America has.

So, what is it? I respectfully suggest that our once-normal responsible gun ownership and use has been co-opted and firestorm-fanned by greed, fear, selfishness, and power politics.

Greed of gun manufacturers, dealers, sellers, lobbyists. Similar to Big Tobacco, and Big Pharma, who knew their products harm, injure, even kill, Americans, the gun industry knows. They ignore. They substitute their own self-serving reasoning.

Fear of others, of being outgunned, of tyranny, of having my guns taken away. Fear sells.

Selfishness MY rights. To all the guns, and firepower I want, wherever I want. To heck with others ... their rights, their life, their liberty, their pursuit of happiness. Their safety. (And no, more guns dont save lives. More guns, more gun violence.)

Power Politics Those profiting from gun sales and their special-interest lobbies fund and lobby to get their way. Congressional, state legislators, even citizens argue, debate, protest to get their way, their political win. Then like American Russian Roulette carnage comes. Again. The political victors offer thoughts and prayers. Only. Again.

We absolutely have the right to defend ourselves, our families, our homes, but that right is not absolute.

What about the Second Amendment? From 1791, until 2008, it referred largely to militia.

Even when this interpretation changed, including individual home gun ownership (U.S. Supreme Court, Heller case, 2008), that (5-4) case ruling included:

Like most rights, the Second Amendment right is not unlimited. It is not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose: For example, concealed weapons prohibitions have been upheld under the Amendment or state analogues. The Courts opinion should not be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.

In The Atlantic (May 14, 2019) Justice John Paul Stevens said of the Heller case: The Supreme Courts Worst Decision of My Tenure.

District of Columbia v. Heller, which recognized an individual right to possess a firearm under the Constitution, is unquestionably the most clearly incorrect decision that the Supreme Court announced during my tenure on the bench.

So well settled was the issue that, speaking on the PBS NewsHour in 1991, the retired Chief Justice Warren Burger described the National Rifle Associations lobbying in support of an expansive interpretation of the Second Amendment in these terms: One of the greatest pieces of fraud, I repeat the word fraud, on the American public by special-interest groups that I have ever seen in my lifetime.

I now realize that I failed to emphasize sufficiently the human aspects of the issue ..

Most importantly, all of us working together, providing common-sense .. knowledge of guns, gun violence, gun laws, gun safety programs that stem gun violence in Virginia, and the U.S.

God is of His commands, Word, covenants, life.

We dont need false idols.

We dont need sanctuaries for tools of killing.

Of freedom from gun violence.

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Guzi: Of God and guns and sanctuaries - Roanoke Times

Commissioners to repeal 19-year-old ‘dangerous weapons’ ban on St. Clair County property – The Times Herald

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People in attendance of a St. Clair County Board of Commissioners meeting hold signs in support of the Second Amendment Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020, in the St. Clair County Admin Building. A crowd had gathered at the meeting to voice their opinions on a Second Amendment resolution passed by the county.(Photo: Brian Wells/Times Herald)

A ban of weapons, including firearms, on St. Clair County property thats been on the books for nearly two decades is slated to be repealed by officials later this month.

St. Clair County Board Chairman Jeff Bohm said the countys dangerous weapons ordinance came up in talks while county commissioners were doing their due diligence on a Second Amendment resolution before it was passed in early February.

The ban, in place since late 2001, addresses the possession of a slew of weapons on land owned, leased or contracted by the county. On paper, the penalty for violating the law included forfeiture of the weapon, a fine up to $1,000, or up to six months in jail.

However, Gary Fletcher, the countys corporate counsel, said the way it was written, the ordinance conflicts with open carry and concealed carry laws in Michigan.

It was an old ordinance, number one, and it was never enforced not in the parks, not anywhere, Fletcher said. He called the ordinance overly broad, adding that outside of certain parts of the county where for obvious reasons people couldnt carry a gun like the courthouse or county jail, its unenforceable.

Repealing the ordinance is on the agenda during the county board meeting Thursday. Typically, commissioners discuss agenda items in committee before sending them on to the regular board meeting later in the month.

Bohm credited Casey Armitage, a representative for Michigan Open Carry who works with St. Clair County Republicans, with bringing the conflict with the county weapons ban to the attention of officials.Armitage did not return multiplemessages requesting comment and could not be reached over the phone as of Tuesday.

The next meeting is set for 6 p.m. Thursday on the second floor of thecounty administration, 200 Grand River Ave., in downtown Port Huron.

Places people may not be able to possess a concealed firearm already under state law include churches or places of worship, school properties, licensed bars or taverns, sports arenas, and hospitals, among others.

The county property is not included in the types of buildings where you cant carry a weapon, Fletcher said. So, that ordinance is unenforceable and needs to go.

James Empey, of Marine City, carries his AK-47 as he joins others in gathering in the parking lot of the St. Clair County Admin Building before a Board of Commissioners meeting Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020.(Photo: Brian Wells/Times Herald)

The county board had a change of heart Feb. 6, approving a resolution supporting Second Amendment rights that'd been originally pulled from an agenda in January. The resolution, proposed by state Rep. Gary Eisen, R-St. Clair Township, is part of a statewide sanctuary movement in response to gun control measures pursued in other states.

On Feb. 20, protesters crowded the county board meeting room, largely in upset that the county resolution didnt do enough to protect local gun rights. The group thatd spearheaded a related rally had also come with a list of demands that included repealing the county weapons ban.

Bohm said he understands that movement may take credit for its repeal. But he saidthat they met with Armitage several days before that meeting, asking Fletcher to come back with a recommendation.

When asked why officials didnt address that at the Feb. 20 meeting, he said, It wasnt on the agenda. I didnt have a review back from Gary (Fletcher) yet.

The original 2001 weapons ordinance, which was amended several years later, predates both Bohm, whos been on the board for 15 years, and Fletcher.

There could be other ordinances for different stuff on the books that (became obsolete) over the years, Bohm said. When things are brought to our attention, we fix them.

Jackie Smith is the local government reporter for the Times Herald. Have questions or a story idea? Contact her at (810) 989-6270 or jssmith@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter @Jackie20Smith.

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Commissioners to repeal 19-year-old 'dangerous weapons' ban on St. Clair County property - The Times Herald