State joins effort on Second Amendment – Rapid City Journal

Attorney General Marty Jackley has joined a brief filed in the United States Supreme Court by 26 Attorneys General seeking to protect Second Amendment rights.

The Second Amendment gives law-abiding citizens the fundamental right to bear arms for the defense of themselves, their families and their homes. As Attorney General, I have a strong interest in protecting and defending our law-abiding citizens right to keep and bear arms, stated Jackley in a release.

The brief was filed in the case of Edward Peruta v. State of California.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that there was no right to concealed carry of a firearm.

The brief argues that requirements imposed to carry a gun in San Diego violate the Second Amendment. Those requirements are being interpreted to prevent ordinary citizens from qualifying for a permit.

The states contend that the requirements effectively ban the core right to bear arms for ordinary law-abiding citizens.

The Attorneys General argue that Both the text and history of the Second Amendment demonstrate that the right to keep and bear arms does not stop at the front door of the home.

Go here to read the rest:

State joins effort on Second Amendment - Rapid City Journal

Second Amendment champions check out stylish options at concealed carry fashion show – Akron Beacon Journal

PCEtLVBTVFlMRT1QRFRMX0hlZC0tPg==

PHA+SU5ERVBFTkRFTkNFOiBBdCB0aGUgSG9saWRheSBJbm4gb24gUm9ja3NpZGUgUm9hZCwgbW9k ZWxzIHN0cnV0dGVkIGRvd24gYSBtYWtlc2hpZnQgcnVud2F5IGluIG9uZSBvZiB0aGUgaG90ZWwm IzgyMTc7cyBiYWxscm9vbXMuIEF0IHRoZSBlbmQgb2YgdGhlIHJ1bndheSwgdGhleSBnYXZlIGEg dHdpcmwgYW5kIGEgc21pbGUgYXMgdGhleSBsaWZ0ZWQgdGhlaXIgc2hpcnQgb3IgcmVhY2hlZCBp biB0aGVpciBiYWcgdG8gcmV2ZWFsIGEgcGlzdG9sLCB0dWNrZWQgYXdheSBzYWZlbHkgb3V0IG9m IHZpZXcuPC9wPjxwPiYjODIyMDtXZSB3YW50ZWQgdG8gc2hvdyBwZW9wbGUgaXQmIzgyMTc7cyBu b3Qgc28gb2J2aW91cywmIzgyMjE7IHNhaWQgQW1hbmRhIFN1ZmZlY29vbCwgdGhlIGhvc3Qgb2Yg dGhlIGZhc2hpb24gc2hvdy4gJiM4MjIwO0FzIHRoZXkgd2FsayBkb3duIHRoZSBydW53YXksIHlv dSYjODIxNztyZSBnb2luZyB0byBiZSBsb29raW5nIGZvciBhIGd1bi4mIzgyMjE7PC9wPjxwPk1v ZGVscyBzaG93ZWQgb2ZmIDUwIGNvbmNlYWxlZCBjYXJyeSBhY2Nlc3NvcmllcyBhbmQgY2xvdGhp bmcgaXRlbXMgYXQgUkVBTElaRSBGaXJlYXJtcyBBd2FyZW5lc3MgQ29hbGl0aW9uJiM4MjE3O3Mg c2Vjb25kIGNvbmNlYWxlZCBjYXJyeSBmYXNoaW9uIHNob3cgU3VuZGF5LjwvcD48cD5TdWZmZWNv b2wgaXMgdGhlIGRpcmVjdG9yIGFuZCBmb3VuZGVyIG9mIFJFQUxJWkUsIGEgZ3VuIGFkdm9jYWN5 IGdyb3VwIHRoYXQgZWR1Y2F0ZXMgYWJvdXQgZmlyZWFybSBzYWZldHkgYW5kIHdvcmtzIHRvIGRl ZmVuZCB0aGUgU2Vjb25kIEFtZW5kbWVudC4gPC9wPjxwPlNoZSBzYWlkIHRoZSBncm91cCYjODIx NztzIGZpcnN0IGZhc2hpb24gc2hvdyB3YXMgaW4gMjAxNCwgYnV0IGl0IG9ubHkgc2hvd2VkIHdv bWVuJiM4MjE3O3MgZmFzaGlvbi4gQWZ0ZXIgdGhhdCBnb29kIHJlY2VwdGlvbiwgc2hlIGRlY2lk ZWQgdG8gaGF2ZSBhIHVuaXNleCBzaG93IHRoaXMgeWVhciAmIzgyMTI7IHJpZ2h0IGJlZm9yZSB0 aGUgR3JlYXRlciBDbGV2ZWxhbmQgRnJpZW5kcyBvZiB0aGUgTmF0aW9uYWwgUmlmbGUgQXNzb2Np YXRpb24gYmFucXVldCBhdCB0aGUgc2FtZSBwbGFjZSwgc28gYXR0ZW5kZWVzIGNvdWxkIGhvcCBm cm9tIG9uZSB0byB0aGUgb3RoZXIuPC9wPjxwPlRoZSBzaG93IGZlYXR1cmVkIGEgcmFuZ2Ugb2Yg cHJvZHVjdHMgZm9yIGJvdGggbWVuIGFuZCB3b21lbiwgZnJvbSBzaGlydHMgYW5kIGNvcnNldHMg d2l0aCBzcGVjaWFsbHkgbWFkZSBwb2NrZXRzIHRvIGJhZ3MgYW5kIGhvbHN0ZXJzIGZvciBhIHJl bW92YWJsZSBvcHRpb24uPC9wPjxwPiYjODIyMDtUaGVzZSBhcmUgZXZlcnlkYXkgcGVvcGxlIHdo byBsaXZlIGV2ZXJ5ZGF5IGxpdmVzIHdpdGggY29uY2VhbGVkIGNhcnJ5LCYjODIyMTsgU3VmZmVj b29sIHNhaWQgb2YgdGhlIG1vZGVscy48L3A+PHA+U3VmZmVjb29sIGhvc3RlZCB0aGUgZmFzaGlv biBzaG93IGFsb25nc2lkZSBDaGFybGllIENvb2ssIGFsc28ga25vd24gYXMgdGhlIGd1eSB3aXRo IHRoZSBHbG9jayBhbmQgdGhlIHRydW1wZXQuPC9wPjxwPkNvb2sgaXMgYSBmaXJlYXJtIGluc3Ry dWN0b3IgZnJvbSBNYXNzYWNodXNldHRzLCBidXQgaGUgbWFkZSBhIG5hbWUgZm9yIGhpbXNlbGYg b24gWW91VHViZSBieSBwbGF5aW5nIHBvcHVsYXIgc29uZ3Mgb24gdGhlIHRydW1wZXQgd2l0aCBv bmUgaGFuZCB3aGlsZSBzaG9vdGluZyBhIHBpc3RvbCB3aXRoIHRoZSBvdGhlci4gSGlzIHZpZGVv cywgY2FsbGVkIEd1bkdyYW1zLCBoYXZlIG1vcmUgdGhhbiAxMCBtaWxsaW9uIHZpZXdzIGNvbWJp bmVkIG9uIFlvdVR1YmUuPC9wPjxwPlNldmVyYWwgb3RoZXIgcGVvcGxlIGtub3duIHRvIHRoZSBh cmVhIHRvb2sgcGFydCBpbiB0aGUgZmFzaGlvbiBzaG93LCBsaWtlIGZvcm1lciBDbGV2ZWxhbmQg QnJvd25zIHBsYXllciBCb2IgR29saWMgYW5kIGhpcyB3aWZlLCBLYXJlbiwgd2hvIGJvdGggdG9v ayB0dXJucyBvbiB0aGUgY2F0d2Fsay4gPC9wPjxwPk1hbnkgb2YgdGhlIGRlc2lnbmVycyBmZWF0 dXJlZCBpbiB0aGUgc2hvdyBzcGVjaWFsaXplIGluIGNvbmNlYWxlZCBjYXJyeSBhY2Nlc3Nvcmll cy4gPC9wPjxwPktyaXN0YSBEYXZpcywgdGhlIGRlc2lnbmVyIGFuZCBvd25lciBvZiBVcmJhbiBN b3h5IChMb2FkZWQgd2l0aCBTdHlsZSksIHNhaWQgc2hlIGRpZG4mIzgyMTc7dCByZWFsaXplIGhv dyBpcnJlc3BvbnNpYmx5IHNoZSB3YXMgY2FycnlpbmcgaGVyIGd1biB1bnRpbCBzaGUgaGFkIHRv IHB1bGwgaXQgb24gc29tZW9uZSB0cnlpbmcgdG8gYnJlYWsgaW50byBoZXIgY2FyLiBTaWNrIG9m IGxlYXZpbmcgaXQgYnVyaWVkIGluIGhlciBwdXJzZSwgc2hlIHN0YXJ0ZWQgZGVzaWduaW5nIHdo ZW4gc2hlIGZvdW5kIHRoZXJlIHdhcyBhIGxhY2sgb2YgYWNjZXNzb3JpZXMgdGhhdCB3ZXJlIHNh ZmUsIGFmZm9yZGFibGUgYW5kIHN0eWxpc2guPC9wPjxwPiYjODIyMDtObyBtYXR0ZXIgaG93IHN0 cm9uZyB3b21lbiBtaWdodCB0aGluayB3ZSBhcmUsIEkmIzgyMTc7bSBhbHdheXMgZ29ubmEgYmUg b3ZlcnBvd2VyZWQgYnkgYSBtYW4sJiM4MjIxOyBEYXZpcyBzYWlkLiAmIzgyMjA7W0EgZ3VuIGlz XSBhIG5lY2Vzc2l0eS4gSSBmZWVsIG5ha2VkIHdpdGhvdXQgaXQgJiM4MjMwOyBVbmZvcnR1bmF0 ZWx5LCB3ZSBsaXZlIGluIGEgcHJldHR5IHZpb2xlbnQgd29ybGQuIEl0JiM4MjE3O3MgdGhlIGJl c3QgZmVlbGluZyBpbiB0aGUgd29ybGQga25vd2luZyBJJiM4MjE3O20gcHJlcGFyZWQuJiM4MjIx OzwvcD48cD5HaW5hIFNwYWxsZXIsIHRoZSBkZXNpZ25lciBmb3IgU3BhcnRhZ29zLCBzYWlkIHNo ZSBqdXN0IHJlY2VudGx5IGJlZ2FuIGRlc2lnbmluZyBhY2Nlc3NvcmllcyBmb3IgdGhlIHNhbWUg cmVhc29uOiBTaGUgd2FudGVkIHRvIGNhcnJ5IGEgZ3VuIGZvciBzYWZldHksIGJ1dCB0aGUgb3B0 aW9ucyBzaGUgZm91bmQgd2VyZSBsaW1pdGVkIGFuZCB1bnN0eWxpc2guPC9wPjxwPiYjODIyMDtJ IGRvbiYjODIxNzt0IHJlbHkgb24gbXkgZ3VuIGFzIGEgZmlyc3QgcHJpb3JpdHkgJiM4MjMwOyBC dXQgYSBndW4mIzgyMTc7cyBhIHNob3dzdG9wcGVyLiBBIGxvdCBvZiB0aGUgdGltZXMsIHlvdSBk b24mIzgyMTc7dCBldmVuIG5lZWQgdG8gcHVsbCB0aGUgdHJpZ2dlciwmIzgyMjE7IFNwYWxsZXIg c2FpZC4gPC9wPjxwPk1vc3Qgb2YgdGhlIGNyb3dkIG9mIDEwMCBjaGFtcGlvbmVkIHRoZWlyIFNl Y29uZCBBbWVuZG1lbnQgcmlnaHRzIGZvciBwZXJzb25hbCBzYWZldHkgYXMgd2VsbCwgbGlrZSBK b2huIFNjaG1pdHQgb2YgU3VtbWl0IENvdW50eSwgd2hvIHdvcmUgYSBiYXNlYmFsbCBoYXQgdGhh dCBwcm9jbGFpbWVkICYjODIyMDtQcm90ZWN0ZWQgYnkgMm5kIEFtZW5kbWVudCBSaWdodHMuJiM4 MjIxOzwvcD48cD4mIzgyMjA7SSB0aGluayBldmVyeWJvZHkgc2hvdWxkIGhhdmUgY29uY2VhbGVk IGNhcnJ5LiBJdCYjODIxNztzIGEgcmlnaHQgZ2l2ZW4gdG8gdGhlIHBlb3BsZSwmIzgyMjE7IHNh aWQgU2NobWl0dCwgd2hvIGRpZG4mIzgyMTc7dCB3YW50IHRvIHNheSB3aGVyZSBoZSBsaXZlZCBm b3IgcHJpdmFjeSByZWFzb25zLiAmIzgyMjA7Q3JpbWluYWxzIHdpbGwgZ2V0IHRoZW0gd2hldGhl ciB3ZSB3YW50IHRoZW0gdG8gaGF2ZSB0aGVtIG9yIG5vdC4gV2UgZG9uJiM4MjE3O3QgbmVlZCB0 byB0cnkgdG8gc3RvcCBjcmltaW5hbHMgYW55bW9yZS4gV2UgbmVlZCB0byBlZHVjYXRlIHRoZSBy ZXN0IG9mIHNvY2lldHkgb24gd2hhdCB0byBkby4mIzgyMjE7IDwvcD48cD5TY2htaXR0IHNhaWQg Z3VuIHNhZmV0eSBpcyBhIE5vLiAxIHByaW9yaXR5IGZvciBoaW0gd2hlbiBkZWFsaW5nIHdpdGgg ZmlyZWFybXMuIEhlIGNvbXBhcmVkIGhhbmRsaW5nIGEgZ3VuIHRvIGRyaXZpbmcgYSBjYXIuPC9w PjxwPiYjODIyMDtJdCYjODIxNztzIHNvIGVhc3kgZm9yIHlvdSB0byBzdG9wIHRoaW5raW5nIGFi b3V0IHNhZmV0eSwmIzgyMjE7IFNjaG1pdHQgc2FpZC4gJiM4MjIwO1RoaXMgaXMgbm8gZGlmZmVy ZW50IHRoYW4gdGhhdC4gQ2FycyBraWxsIG1vcmUgcGVvcGxlIHRoYW4gZ3VucyBkby4mIzgyMjE7 PC9wPjxwPk9uIHRvcCBvZiBwZXJzb25hbCBzYWZldHksIHNvbWUgZm9sa3MgYXQgdGhlIGZhc2hp b24gc2hvdyBwcmVmZXJyZWQgdG8gY2FycnkgZ3VucyBzbyB0aGV5IGNvdWxkIHByb3RlY3Qgb3Ro ZXJzIGluIG5lZWQsIHRvbywgaWYgdGhlIHNpdHVhdGlvbiBhcm9zZS48L3A+PHA+JiM4MjIwO1Ro ZSBiYWQgZ3V5cyBoYXZlIGd1bnMsIHNvIEkgdGhpbmsgaXQmIzgyMTc7cyBpbXBvcnRhbnQgc29t ZSBnb29kIGd1eXMgaGF2ZSBndW5zIHRvbywmIzgyMjE7IHNhaWQgS2VsbGllIFJpdGNoZXkgb2Yg TWFuc2ZpZWxkLjwvcD48cD4mIzgyMjA7WW91JiM4MjE3O3JlIGFkZGluZyBzb21ldGhpbmcgYmVz aWRlcyBldmFkZSBhbmQgZWx1ZGUsJiM4MjIxOyBhZGRlZCBoZXIgaHVzYmFuZCBKb2huIFJpdGNo ZXkuICYjODIyMDtZb3UgY2FuIGFjdHVhbGx5IHByb3RlY3QgcGVvcGxlLiYjODIyMTs8L3A+PHA+ QSZhbXA7RSYjODIxNztzIENoYW5uZWwgVmljZWxhbmQgd2FzIGFsc28gYXQgdGhlIGZhc2hpb24g c2hvdyBmaWxtaW5nIGZvciBpdHMgZG9jdW1lbnRhcnkgc2VyaWVzIGNhbGxlZCA8ZW0+U3RhdGVz IG9mIFVuZHJlc3MsIDwvZW0+d2hpY2ggdHJhdmVscyBhcm91bmQgdGhlIHdvcmxkIHRvIGNvdmVy IGZlbWFsZSBlbXBvd2VybWVudCB0aHJvdWdoIHRoZSB3b3JsZCBvZiBmYXNoaW9uLjwvcD48cD4m IzgyMjA7SXQmIzgyMTc7cyBvdXIgU2Vjb25kIEFtZW5kbWVudCByaWdodCBbdG8gY2FycnldLCYj ODIyMTsgc2FpZCBTcGFsbGVyLiAmIzgyMjA7SXQmIzgyMTc7cyBlbXBvd2VyaW5nLCBhbmQgaXQm IzgyMTc7cyBmdW4uJiM4MjIxOzwvcD48cD5UaGVyZXNhIENvdHRvbSBjYW4gYmUgcmVhY2hlZCBh dCAzMzAtOTk2LTMyMTYgb3IgPGEgaHJlZj0ibWFpbHRvOnRjb3R0b21AdGhlYmVhY29uam91cm5h bC5jb20iPnRjb3R0b21AdGhlYmVhY29uam91cm5hbC5jb208L2E+LiBGb2xsb3cgaGVyIG9uIFR3 aXR0ZXI8YSBocmVmPSJodHRwczovL3R3aXR0ZXIuY29tL1RoZXJlc2FfQ290dG9tIiB0YXJnZXQ9 Il9ibGFuayI+Jm5ic3A7JiM2NDtUaGVyZXNhX0NvdHRvbSZuYnNwOzwvYT4uPC9wPg==

Excerpt from:

Second Amendment champions check out stylish options at concealed carry fashion show - Akron Beacon Journal

Gorsuch Could Save the Second Amendment | LifeZette – LifeZette

When Justice Antonin Scalia passed away suddenly last year, the Supreme Court lost its premier conservative voice and defender of the Second Amendment.

Justice Scalia was a champion of individual freedoms, and adhered to a strong originalistphilosophy of interpreting the Constitution. With little room for the personal politics that many judges try to inject into court rulings, Scalia relied on the text of the document to decide cases.

After eight years of anti-gun policies from the Obama Administration an open seat on the Court is a welcome opportunity to return to the principles of the Constitution.

That is also why its good news President Trump chose Neil Gorsuch, a current federal appellate judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, as his nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court. Gorsuch is someone who can fill this critical void left by Justice Scalia.

Gorsuch has also followed an originalist interpretation of the Constitution during his legal career, having been appointed to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals by President George W. Bush, and before that, serving in the Department of Justice.

A firm belief in adhering to the freedoms spelled out in the Constitution by our Founding Fathers has given Judge Gorsuch a steady hand, and made him a popular and approachable member of the 10th Circuit. Though he has only ruled on a few Second Amendment related cases, Gorsuch has proved himself to be a defender of gun rights.

He made his stance very clear when he wrote in one legal opinion that "the Second Amendment protects an individuals right to own firearms and may not be infringed lightly."

With the current Court almost deadlocked on gun issues, any potential cases that come before the Supreme Court this year could have a make-or-break impact on Second Amendment rights in this country. If the Court decides to hear any gun related cases this year, it is critical that there be a majority of justices on the bench who believe in the Constitutional right to bear arms.

One potential case that could come before the Supreme Court this year challenges an individuals right to carry a gun for self-defense, and requiring them to prove to the government that they have a legitimate reason for doing so.

In 2014, Peruta v. California was decided by three judges on the 9th Circuit, who ruled that San Diego Countys policy of a gun owner needing a documented "good cause" in order to obtain a concealed carry permit was in violation of the Second Amendment.

However, the victory for the Constitution was short-lived, and the ruling was appealed. All 11 judges on the 9th Circuit were called in to rehear the case, and the ruling was overturned in 2016. The California Rifle and Pistol Association has petitioned the Supreme Court to review this case, and if their request is granted, Gorsuch will be a crucial vote. No citizen should need a government approved "reason" to carry a firearm it is already expressly stated in the Constitution.

An appeal has also been filed to ask the Supreme Court to hear a challenge to District of Columbia v. Heller, which in 2008 affirmed that it is a constitutional right to keep a gun in the home for self-defense. Justice Scalia wrote the opinion for that case, which was decided in a close 5-4 decision.

If the case is accepted by the Court, the justices will be asked to rule on a persons right to carry a gun outside their home for self-defense. With the decision in Heller being so close, it is critical that the Second Amendment have another advocate on the Court.

After eight years of anti-gun policies from the Obama administration, which sought to chip away at the right to bear arms, an open seat on the Court is a welcome opportunity to return to the principles of the Constitution. Instead of special interests and judges who attempt to shape public policy through court cases, Gorsuchs originalist and textualist viewpoint provides clear guidance uninfluenced by politics.

In the statement he gave following the announcement of his nomination, Gorsuch said, "Standing here, in a house of history, and acutely aware of my own imperfections, I pledge that if I am confirmed, I will do all my powers permit to be a faithful servant to the Constitution and laws of this great country."

With all of the potential challenges to the Constitution in the coming years, Gorsuch provides a foothold on what could be a rocky path.

Tim Schmidt is the president and founder of the U.S. Concealed Carry Association,and may be contacted at Press@USCCA.com.

Read the rest here:

Gorsuch Could Save the Second Amendment | LifeZette - LifeZette

Rep. Eddie Lumsden says Second Amendment rights should not be treated as privileges – Rome News-Tribune

Campus carry legislation is back, with several bills up for consideration in the House Public Safety & Homeland Security Committee this week.

Gov. Nathan Deal vetoed a measure last year that would have allowed guns on college campuses, but state Rep. Eddie Lumsden, R-Rome, said he expects these to be more acceptable.

These are some modified bills, after having conversations with the governor, he said.

Lumsden, a retired Georgia State patrol trooper, sits on the committee that will consider House Bill 280 today. He quoted the Second Amendment in explaining his support of campus carry rights.

And a lot of urban campuses are very porous, so to speak,, he added. Just because you have a gun-free zone doesnt mean its gun-free.

HB 280 would allow people with permits to carry concealed firearms on all property owned or leased by a public institution of post-secondary education. The only exemptions would be at sports facilities, student housing to include fraternity and sorority houses and on-campus preschools.

An omnibus gun permit measure, HB 292, also is on the committees agenda. It contains a number of additions and revisions to the state law, including applications for airports, schools and courthouses. Other provisions address legalities for newcomers with permits from other states and people who have been involuntarily committed.

A subcommittee Lumsden sits on also will hold hearings on two gun bills today. HB 406 deals with reciprocal permit agreements between states. HB 232, requiring gun safety training to renew a permit, appears problematic to Lumsden.

Most conservatives dont believe its wise of government to require training because this is a right, not a privilege, he said. We all believe it would be a good thing, if youre going to carry a weapon, you be trained in its use. But this gets into constitutional questions.

The Georgia General Assembly officially reconvenes Tuesday for the 21st day of its 40-day session, which is slated to run through March 31.

Lumsdens election cleanup bill, HB 42, has already passed the House and is expected to come up for a full Senate vote Wednesday. It allows elections supervisors to correct mistakes on a ballot and lets communities use federal, rather than state, run-off dates to save money on elections.

Im told the lieutenant governor wants it to move. There are applications for some upcoming run-off elections, Lumsden said.

There are 18 candidates in an April 18 special election for the 6th Congressional District, vacated when Tom Price was tapped as President Donald Trumps secretary of health and human services.

Additionally, qualifying opens Wednesday for the election to replace state Sen. Judson Hill, R-Marietta, who is among those seeking Prices seat.

Lumsden also has two insurance housekeeping bills slated to move this week. HB 174 updates the law to acknowledge claims may be paid by check or other modern methods.

Right now, it uses legal tender, which means cash money, he said. Ive never seen a claim settled with cash.

HB 262 adds stand-alone dental insurance plans to the list of insurers that may use online, rather than printed, provider directories.

View post:

Rep. Eddie Lumsden says Second Amendment rights should not be treated as privileges - Rome News-Tribune

Governor Bevin joins amicus brief over California Second Amendment case – WKYT

FRANKFORT, Ky. (WKYT) - Governor Matt Bevin has joined in filing an amicus brief over a California Second Amendment case.

The governor's office announced on Monday that Governor Bevin has joined 25 other states in the brief over Peruta v. San Diego County. The second amendment case is challenging if a California law restricting citizens' rights to carry handguns outside their homes for self-defense is constitutional.

An amicus brief is a legal document filed in court cases by non-litigants with a strong interest in the subject matter.

The 26 states in the brief say that, when it comes to regulating gun rights, California thinks that the State can do things that would be unthinkable in other areas of constitutional law.

The other states included in the brief are Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

View post:

Governor Bevin joins amicus brief over California Second Amendment case - WKYT

Space a champion of 2nd Amendment – New Jersey Herald

Posted: Feb. 20, 2017 1:14 pm

Editor:

I read with some skepticism the Feb. 10 New Jersey Herald story about two young neophytes seeking to challenge incumbent Assemblyman Parker Space and his announced running mate, Hal Wirths, in the June Republican primary.

Of particular interest was the claim that Assemblyman Space is not fighting for Second Amendment rights -- an allegation I know firsthand to be incorrect.

As executive director of New Jersey's official state rifle and pistol association, I can state unequivocally that Assemblyman Space is one of the Garden State's true Second Amendment champions. Not only has he has consistently and reliably opposed every piece of gun control and anti-hunting legislation to cross his desk, but he has also sponsored major pro-gun initiatives including right-to-carry.

Anyone can pay lip service to the Second Amendment, but few can back that up with a proven record of action like Assemblyman Space.

To be sure, there are incumbents who should be challenged in the primaries on Second Amendment grounds, but Assemblyman Space is not one of them.

Scott L. Bach

Executive Director, Association of New Jersey Rifle & Pistol Clubs

Newfoundland

See the original post here:

Space a champion of 2nd Amendment - New Jersey Herald

Rubio and his Resurrection of The Second Amendment … – Bearing Arms

Senator Marco Rubios resurrectedSecond Amendment Enforcement Actwill ensure that law-abiding citizens in Washington, D.C. can exercise their Second Amendment right to carry a firearm, should it pass.

Emotionally charged anti-gunners are doing their best to keep the current stringent D.C. gun laws in place. Unfortunately, they dont understand that federal laws, already in place, are more than sufficient to keep firearms out of the hands of criminals.

It is essential for all to remember that criminals, by the very definition of the word, are law breakers. Boundaries are disregarded, and they act upon their own volition; without concern of consequence. Law-abiding citizens are consistently punished by having their rights infringed upon with layers and layers of laws that are in place to detour the criminal. The oxymoron here is that law-abiding citizens will obey the laws, and criminals wont.

How will enacting layers of laws over and above federal laws change the demeanor of someone who disregards the law, because they act with moral turpitude? Simply put, it wont.

Anti-gunners with their flair for the dramatic and with no foundationin fact spread misinformation. For those of us who know and understand the laws, it is nothing less than frustrating. For those of you who dont, become familiar with federal, state, and your local guns laws. Put them in context of criminal behavior.

Allowing D.C.s excessive gun laws to stand as is only benefits criminals. They already know that they likely wontface life threatening resistance when committing a crime.

The Second Amendment Enforcement Act will put guns in the hands of the good guys. So, when the criminals hear their targetsmay be armed in order to protect themselves, it could be the game-changer that helps to deter crime in D.C.

Author's Bio: Pamela Jablonski

See the rest here:

Rubio and his Resurrection of The Second Amendment ... - Bearing Arms

Space a champion on 2nd Amendment – New Jersey Herald

Posted: Feb. 20, 2017 12:01 am

Editor:

I read with some skepticism the Feb. 10 New Jersey Herald story about two young neophytes seeking to challenge incumbent Assemblyman Parker Space and his announced running mate Hal Wirths in the June Republican primary.

Of particular interest was the claim that Assemblyman Space is not fighting for Second Amendment rights an allegation I know first-hand to be incorrect.

As Executive Director of New Jersey's official state rifle and pistol association, I can state unequivocally that Assemblyman Space is one of the Garden State's true Second Amendment champions. Not only has he has consistently and reliably opposed every piece of gun control and anti-hunting legislation to cross his desk, but he has also sponsored major pro-gun initiatives including right-to-carry.

Anyone can pay lip service to the Second Amendment, but few can back that up with a proven record of action like Assemblyman Space.

To be sure, there are incumbents who should be challenged in the primaries on Second Amendment grounds, but Assemblyman Space is not one of them.

Scott L. Bach, Executive Director, Association of New Jersey Rifle & Pistol Clubs

Newfoundland

Read more from the original source:

Space a champion on 2nd Amendment - New Jersey Herald

Second Amendment – Conservapedia

See also gun control.

The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution states:[1]

For several decades, the lower federal courts had interpreted the Second Amendment as protecting merely a collective right of state militias.[2] However, the U.S Supreme Court has always called it an individual right. The 2008 Supreme Court decision of District of Columbia v. Heller ruled 5-4 that the Second Amendment protects an individual right.

See also Debate:Is the right to bear arms unalienable?

In 1786, the United States existed as a loose national government under the Articles of Confederation. This confederation was perceived to have several weaknesses, among which was the inability to mount a Federal military response to an armed uprising in western Massachusetts known as Shays' Rebellion.

In 1787, to address these weaknesses, the Constitutional Convention was held with the idea of amending the Articles. When the convention ended with a proposed Constitution, those who debated the ratification of the Constitution divided into two camps; the Federalists (who supported ratification of the Constitution) and the Anti-Federalists (who opposed it).

Among their objections to the Constitution, anti-Federalists feared a standing army that could eventually endanger democracy and civil liberties. Although the anti-Federalists were unsuccessful at blocking ratification of the Constitution, through the Massachusetts Compromise they insured that a Bill of Rights would be made, which would provide constitutional guarantees against taking away certain rights.

One of those rights was the right to bear arms. This was intended to prevent the Federal Government from taking away the ability of the states to raise an army and defend itself and arguably to prevent them from taking away from individuals the ability to bear arms.

The meaning of this amendment is controversial with respect to gun control and what type of weapons are covered.

The National Rifle Association, which supports gun rights, has a stone plaque in front of its headquarters bearing the words "The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." By dropping the "militia" phrase, the slogan advocates that the Second Amendment should mean that individual citizens have the right to own and use guns.

American law has always said that the militia includes ordinary private citizens, and gun rights advocates say that the amendment means individuals have the right to own and use guns. Gun control advocates began in the late 20th century to say it means only that there is only some sort of collective or state-controlled right.

Supreme Court opinions have all been consistent with the individual rights interpretation of the Second Amendment, but the lower court opinions are mixed.

As of 2007, people argue about the meaning of the Second Amendment, but there is no definitive answer. The latest ruling is Parker v District of Columbia, in which the DC Circuit court of appeals ruled on March 9, 2007 that the DC gun ban violated individual rights under the Second Amendment.

A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.'''''

Quoted from: http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a39388c210c1b.htm

Down to the Last Second (Amendment)

Participants in the various debates on firearms, crime, and constitutional law may have noticed that the Second Amendment is often quoted differently by those involved. The two main variations differ in punctuation specifically, in the number of commas used to separate those twenty-seven words. But which is the correct one? The answer to this question must be found in official records from the early days of the republic when the Bill of Rights was sent by the First Congress to the states for ratification. Therefore, a look into the progression of this declaratory and restrictive clause from its inception to its final form is in order.

Before beginning, one must note that common nouns, like "state" and "people," were often capitalized in official and unofficial documents of the era. Also, an obsolete formation of the letter s used to indicate the long s sound was in common usage. The long 's' is subject to confusion with the lower case 'f', therefore, Congress" is sometimes spelled as "Congrefs," as is the case in the parchment copy of the Bill of Rights displayed by the National Archives. The quotations listed here are accurate. With the exception of the omission of quotations marks, versions of what is now known as the Second Amendment in boldface appear with the exact spelling, capitalization, and punctuation as the cited originals.

During ratification debates on the Constitution in the state conventions, several states proposed amendments to that charter. Anti-Federalist opposition to ratification was particularly strong in the key states of New York and Virginia, and one of their main grievances was that the Constitution lacked a declaration of rights. During the ratification process, Federalist James Madison became a champion of such a declaration, and so it fell to him, as a member of the 1st Congress, to write one. On June 8, 1789, Madison introduced his declaration of rights on the floor of the House. One of its articles read:

On July 21, John Vining of Delaware was appointed to chair a select committee of eleven to review, and make a report on, the subject of amendments to the Constitution. Each committeeman represented one of the eleven states (Rhode Island and North Carolina had not ratified the Constitution at that time), with James Madison representing Virginia. Unfortunately, no record of the committee's proceedings is known to exist. Seven days later, Vining duly issued the report, one of the amendments reading:

In debates on the House floor, some congressmen, notably Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts and Thomas Scott of Pennsylvania, objected to the conscientious objector clause in the fifth article. They expressed concerns that a future Congress might declare the people "religiously scrupulous" in a bid to disarm them, and that such persons could not be called up for military duty. However, motions to strike the clause were not carried. On August 21, the House enumerated the Amendments as modified, with the fifth article listed as follows:

Finally, on August 24, the House of Representatives passed its proposals for amendments to the Constitution and sent them to the Senate for their consideration. The next day, the Senate entered the document into their official journal. The Senate Journal shows Article the Fifth as:

On September 4, the Senate debated the amendments proposed by the House, and the conscientious objector clause was quickly stricken. Sadly, these debates were held in secret, so records of them do not exist. The Senators agreed to accept Article the Fifth in this form:

In further debates on September 9, the Senate agreed to strike the words, "the best," and replace them with, "necessary to the." Since the third and fourth articles had been combined, the Senators also agreed to rename the amendment as Article the Fourth. The Senate Journal that day carried the article without the word, "best," but also without the replacements, "necessary to." Note that the extraneous commas have been omitted:

With two-thirds of the Senate concurring on the proposed amendments, they were sent back to the House for the Representatives' perusal. On September 21, the House notified the Senate that it agreed to some of their amendments, but not all of them. However, they agreed to Article the Fourth in its entirety:

By September 25, the Congress had resolved all differences pertaining to the proposed amendments to the Constitution. On that day, a Clerk of the House, William Lambert, put what is now known as the Bill of Rights to parchment. Three days later, it was signed by the Speaker of the House, Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg, and the President of the Senate, Vice President John Adams. This parchment copy is held by the National Archives and Records Administration, and shows the following version of the fourth article:

The above version is used almost exclusively today, but aside from the parchment copy, the author was unable to find any other official documents from that era which carry the amendment with the extra commas. In fact, in the appendix of the Senate Journal, Article the Fourth is entered as reading:

Also, the Annals of Congress, formally called The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States, show the proposed amendment as follows:

Further, once two-thirds of both chambers of the Congress agreed to the proposed amendments, the House passed a resolve to request that the President send copies of them to the governors of the eleven states in the Union, and to those of Rhode Island and North Carolina. The Senate concurred on September 26, as recorded in their journal:

Fortunately, an original copy of the amendments proposed by the Congress, and sent to the State of Rhode Island and the Providence Plantations, does survive. Certified as a true copy by Assembly Secretary Henry Ward, it reads in part:

And so, the proposed amendments to the Constitution were sent to the states for ratification. When notifying the President that their legislatures or conventions had ratified some or all of the proposed amendments, some states attached certified copies of them. New York, Maryland, South Carolina, and Rhode Island notified the general government that they had ratified the fourth amendment in this form:

Article the Fourth. 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.[15]

Articles the First and Second were not ratified by the required three-fourths of the states, but by December 15, 1791, the last ten articles were. These, of course, are now known as the Bill of Rights. Renumbering the amendments was required since the first two had not been ratified. The 1796 revision of The Federalist on the New Constitution reflects the change as such:

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.[16]

This version is carried throughout the 19th Century, in such legal treatises as Joseph Story's Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1833) and Thomas Cooley's Principles of Constitutional Law (1898). It is also transcribed in this manner in the 1845 Statutes at Large, although the term "state" is capitalized in that text. The latter are the official source for acts of Congress.[17][18][19]

This version still appears today, as is the case with the annotated version of the Constitution they sponsored on the Government Printing Office web site (1992, supplemented in 1996 and 1998). The Second Amendment is shown as reading:

(The Senate-sponsored GPO site does carry a "literal print" of the amendments to the Constitution showing the Second Amendment with the additional commas. The punctuation and capitalization of the amendments transcribed there are the same as those found on the parchment copy displayed in the Rotunda of the National Archives.)[21]

Thus, many scholars argue that correct rendition of the Second Amendment carries but a single comma, after the word "state." It was in this form that those twenty-seven words were written, agreed upon, passed, and ratified.

Why the Commas are Important

It is important to use the proper Second Amendment because it is clearly and flawlessly written in its original form. Also, the function of the words, "a well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state," are readily discerned when the proper punctuation is used. On the other hand, the gratuitous addition of commas serve only to render the sentence grammatically incorrect and unnecessarily ambiguous.

Liberals have made various efforts to subvert the Second Amendment by enacting unconstitutional gun laws which restrict the ability of individuals to protect themselves against the excesses of government. Examples include:

The drafters of the Second Amendment probably had muskets and hand guns in mind, but courts are now struggling to define the weapons covered by the "right to bear arms" in the 21st Century.

For example, the Connecticut Supreme Court in State v. DeCiccio (2015) upheld the constitutionality of a state law prohibiting the transportation of a police batton or dirk knife in a motor vehicle. Yet, the Court struck down the statute to the extent that it infringed on the defendant's right to transport them between his old and new residences.

There are also lower court cases finding Second Amendment protection for tasers, billy clubs, switchblades and other weapons that are less lethal than hand guns.[22]

Bill of Rights: 1 - Freedom of speech, press, etc. 2 - Right to bear arms 3 - Quartering of soldiers 4 - Warrants 5 - Due process 6 - Right to a speedy trial 7 - Right by trial of a jury 8 - No cruel or unusual punishments 9 - Unenumerated rights 10 - Power to the people and states

11 - Immunity of states to foreign suits 12 - Revision of presidential election procedures 13 - Abolition of slavery 14 - Citizenship 15 - Racial suffrage 16 - Federal income tax 17 - Direct election to the United States Senate 18 - Prohibition of alcohol 19 - Women's suffrage 20 - Terms of the presidency 21 - Repeal of Eighteenth Amendment 22 - Limits the president to two terms 23 - Electoral College 24 - Prohibition of poll taxes 25 - Presidential disabilities 26 - Voting age lowered to 18 27 - Variance of congressional compensation

View original post here:

Second Amendment - Conservapedia

Colorado Senate debates Second Amendment bill – The Durango Herald

DENVER The Republican-controlled state State Senate on Thursday hosted another debate about expanding Second Amendment rights.

Previous debates focused on magazine capacity and training of school employees to carry firearms.

Thursdays discussion concerned Senate Bill 6, which would amend the concealed carry law to include a provision allowing active-duty and honorably discharged military personnel younger than 21 to apply for permits. The bill was adopted and scheduled for a final reading before moving to the House.

Bill sponsor Sen. John Cooke, R-Greeley, said the measure was inspired by his step-daughter who serves in the military.

Half her unit was deployed in Afghanistan. They can go to Iraq or can go to Afghanistan and defend themselves, but they cannot come back here to the state of Colorado, because they are under the age of 21, to get a conceal carry permit, Cooke said.

Sen. Daniel Kagan, D-Cherry Hills Village, said he was concerned about increasing the number of guns on the streets and the impulse control of adults in the age range, even if they were military personnel.

When deployed these military personnel are allowed to carry guns, but they are closely supervised by superior officers, Kagan said. There are very strict rules about when, where and how they carry those firearms and when, where and how they use them.

Sen. Vicki Marble, R-Fort Collins, said this is based upon the assumption that the young adults who had served in the military were the same as those who had not.

These 18- to 20-year-olds are incredible young people who have been through a great deal of stress, a great deal of hardship, a great deal of loss, she said. They have seen things we will never see, and what really gets under my skin is that we seem to lump them in with everyone else. They are not everyone else.

The bill represents the sixth piece of legislation focusing on gun laws this session.

Four of these bills have originated in the Republican-held Senate, and were passed by committees to the full floor, and are expected to go to the House, which the Democrats control.

The other two originated in the House, but both died in the House State, Veterans and Military Affairs Committee, the so called kill committee.

This committee is the likely landing spot for Second Amendment bills passed by the Senate.

lperkins@durangoherald.com

Read the original here:

Colorado Senate debates Second Amendment bill - The Durango Herald

Crapo backs 2nd Amendment action – The Spokesman-Review (blog)

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 15, 2017, 1:16 P.M.

From the office of U.S. Sen. Mike Crapo:

Idaho Senator Mike Crapo today voted to support a Resolution of Disapproval that will stop a rule issued by the Social Security Administration (SSA) from stripping the Second Amendment rights of some Social Security beneficiaries.

Todays resolution of disapproval will stop the Social Security Administration from stigmatizing people with disabilities and stripping beneficiaries of their Second Amendment rights, said Crapo, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The Social Security Administration is not a court of law and it is unacceptable that it take any action against a beneficiary without due process. Congress has done the right thing to stop this overreach and repeal this rule.

Under the Congressional Review Act, Congress may submit a joint resolution of disapproval to overturn a final rule issued by an Executive Branch agency. The resolution approved today will halt a rule submitted by SSA in December 2016. The rule requires SSA to report individuals who have been adjudicated as mentally defective to the National Instant Criminal Background Check (NICS). Under the rule, individuals who have been appointed a representative payee may also be submitted to NICS. In some cases, the SSA may appoint, or a beneficiary may request, a representative payee to assist a beneficiary with managing their benefits. The wide-ranging rule will affect many Americans as more than eight million beneficiaries need help managing their benefits, according to SSA. Earlier this year, Senator Crapo introduced a bill to effectively overturn the rule and highlighted it in an op-ed this month. The Resolution passed today by the Senate will enact the changes Senator Crapo sought to address with his legislation.

The measure now goes to President Trump who is expected to sign the measure.

Agree/disagree with this resolution?

Posted Feb. 15, 2017, 1:16 p.m.

Go here to see the original:

Crapo backs 2nd Amendment action - The Spokesman-Review (blog)

Mark L. Hopkins: Why did the US Constitution need the Second Amendment? – Harrisburg Daily Register


Harrisburg Daily Register
Mark L. Hopkins: Why did the US Constitution need the Second Amendment?
Harrisburg Daily Register
This preoccupation with the Second Amendment began a few months back when I wrote a column entitled Guns don't kill people. Really? The amount of interest in that topic directed me to do additional research on the subject and every avenue pointed ...
Revise Second AmendmentYakima Herald-Republic

all 5 news articles »

Continue reading here:

Mark L. Hopkins: Why did the US Constitution need the Second Amendment? - Harrisburg Daily Register

MARK HOPKINS: Why did the Constitution need the Second Amendment? – Holmes County Times Advertiser

Mark Hopkins | Special to the Daily News

Why did we need a militia/gun amendment added to the Constitution?

As is true with most momentous decisions in the life of our country, to fully understand why something was done, we must study the times in which such decisions were made.

The why of the Second Amendment in the 1780s is very different from answering that same question in 2017. The United States was a very different country in the years following the Revolution than it is today. When President Washington first took office, two key challenges faced him and the leadership in Congress.

First, the Revolutionary War had concluded just eight years before. England had been defeated on our shores and withdrew their troops. However, that didnt make us the strongest nation on the globe. England still had the strongest combination of army and navy. They still controlled Canada, just a short trip up the Hudson River from New York City. In short, they were still a threat to us.

At the conclusion of the war, General Washington and the leadership in Congress did not have the money to support a standing army. It was the consensus that the U.S. must make do with smaller, live-at-home militia units in the various states rather than a centralized army. Thus, it was their hope that the new country could be protected with a citizen army that was armed and ready to be called up at a moments notice. To make that work, each military age male needed to be armed and ready if needed.

Second, several citizen rebellions had occurred between the end of the war and the time of the passage of the new Constitution. Principal among these were the Shays Rebellion in Massachusetts and the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. Without the creation of a local militia, neither state had the firepower to protect the government or the people.

In short, our young country did not have the money to support a standing army so adding the Second Amendment was for the expressed purpose of making sure that each state had the legal right to call men to arms. Just as important, it was necessary that those men were able to join the militia fully armed and ready to defend their state and their government.

The contention from some that the framers of the Constitution adopted the Second Amendment because they wanted an armed population that could take down the U.S. government should it become tyrannical just has no credence in history.

In past columns about the Second Amendment, we have established the historical context of the creation of the Second Amendment. The primary purpose was to create a legal foundation for a state militia, the forerunner of our National Guard. President Washington not only wrote letters to support such action but actually created his own militia to put down the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. Congress supported his action by creating The Militia Act, that allowed states to call up militia units to protect the government and the people as needed.

Resources used for these columns on the Second Amendment came from His Excellency: George Washington by Joseph Ellis (2004), James Madisons arguments for a strong federal government in The Federalist Papers, (1777-78) and The Readers Companion to American History by John A. Garraty and Eric Foner, which tells the stories of Shays Rebellion and the Whiskey Rebellion.

If a reader missed the two earlier columns, contact me at presnet@presnet.net for copies.

Dr. Mark L. Hopkins writes for More Content Now and Scripps Newspapers.

Read the rest here:

MARK HOPKINS: Why did the Constitution need the Second Amendment? - Holmes County Times Advertiser

Second Amendment supporters rally in Roanoke – WSET

ROANOKE, Va. (WSET) -- A group of Roanoke residents gathered with guns in hand Saturday for Virginia's 11th annual Pro-Second Amendment Rally.

The group rallied in support of individual gun rights.

Second Amendment supporters say guns are harmless, but it's people who make them dangerous.

"Not one shot has been fired, no one's been hurt, no injuries, and we're just here to remind people that it's your right to carry," said Daniel Highberger, who helped organize the rally. "It's your right to protect yourself, and to the gun-grabbers out there in the world, explain to us why no one's gotten hurt on this corner."

Challice Finicum say her father's death is all the more reason to support the right to bear arms. LaVoy Finicum was a spokesperson for Citizens for Constitutional Freedom. He was shot and killed by state troopers at an Oregon wildlife refuge over a government land dispute.

"The video is on YouTube, you can watch him get out of his truck with his hands in the air, and they shoot him in the back three times," said Finicum.

Federal officials say he was reaching for a gun. His death made national headlines.

Those calling for more gun regulations say the protesters are not taking everything into account.

"I wish that they would exercise their listening abilities to hear about the real-life cases where children have been shot," explained Freeda Cathcart, a member of the General Federation of Women's Clubs. "And also parents who have been shot by their children."

Cathcart also referenced drug and alcohol addicts and mentally ill people who carry guns.

Both sides agree all guns should be used by responsible owners.

The City of Roanoke recently introduced a bill banning the open carrying of long guns within city limits. The bill did not pass in the General Assembly.

**Editor's Note**

Video version states Freeda Cathcart as a member of the General Federation of Women's Clubs Virginia. Webscript has been updated to reflect proper title: General Federation of Women's Clubs.

See original here:

Second Amendment supporters rally in Roanoke - WSET

Mark L. Hopkins: Why did the US Constitution need the Second Amendment? – Wicked Local Newton

Mark L. Hopkins More Content Now

This preoccupation with the Second Amendment began a few months back when I wrote a column entitled Guns dont kill people. Really? The amount of interest in that topic directed me to do additional research on the subject and every avenue pointed back to the key question. Why did we need a militia/gun amendment added to the Constitution? As is true with most momentous decisions in the life of our country, to fully understand why something was done we must study the times in which such decisions were made. The why of the Second Amendment in the 1780s is very different from answering that same question in 2017. The United States was a very different country in the years following the Revolution than it is today. When President Washington first took office two key challenges faced him and the leadership in congress. First, the Revolutionary War had concluded just eight years before. England had been defeated on our shores and withdrew their troops. However, that didnt make us the strongest nation on the globe. England still had the strongest combination of army and navy. They still controlled Canada, just a short trip up the Hudson River from New York City. In short, they were still a threat to us. At the conclusion of the war, General Washington and the leadership in Congress did not have the money to support a standing army. It was the consensus that the U.S. must make do with smaller, live-at-home militia units in the various states rather than a centralized army. Thus, it was their hope that the new country could be protected with a citizen army that was armed and ready to be called up at a moments notice. To make that work each military age male needed to be armed and ready if needed. Second, several citizen rebellions had occurred between the end of the war and the time of the passage of the new Constitution. Principal among these were the Shays Rebellion in Massachusetts and the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. Without the creation of a local militia neither state had the firepower to protect the government or the people. In short, our young country did not have the money to support a standing army so adding the Second Amendment was for the expressed purpose of making sure that each state had the legal right to call men to arms. Just as important, it was necessary that those men were able to join the militia fully armed and ready to defend their state and their government. The contention from some that the framers of the Constitution adopted the Second Amendment because they wanted an armed population that could take down the U.S. government should it become tyrannical just has no credence in history. In past columns about the Second Amendment, we have established the historical context of the creation of the Second Amendment. The primary purpose was to create a legal foundation for a state militia, the forerunner of our National Guard. President Washington not only wrote letters to support such action but actually created his own militia to put down the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. Congress supported his action by creating The Militia Act, that allowed states to call up militia units to protect the government and the people as needed. Resources used for these columns on the Second Amendment came from His Excellency: George Washington by Joseph Ellis (2004), James Madisons arguments for a strong federal government in The Federalist Papers, (1777-78) and The Readers Companion to American History by John A. Garraty and Eric Foner, which tells the stories of Shays Rebellion and the Whiskey Rebellion. If a reader missed the two earlier columns, contact me at presnet@presnet.net for copies. Dr. Mark L. Hopkins writes for More Content Now and Scripps Newspapers. He is past president of colleges and universities in four states and currently serves as executive director of a higher-education consulting service. You will find Hopkins latest book, Journey to Gettysburg, on Amazon.com. Contact him at presnet@presnet.net.

Read more here:

Mark L. Hopkins: Why did the US Constitution need the Second Amendment? - Wicked Local Newton

What Jeff Sessions Confirmation Means For The 2nd Amendment ~ VIDEO – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News


AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
What Jeff Sessions Confirmation Means For The 2nd Amendment ~ VIDEO
AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
USA -(Ammoland.com)- With the recent confirmation of Jeff Sessions to Attorney General, gun owners and pro second amendment supporters could be heard breathing an audible sigh of relief. The 52-47 vote confirmed the Senator from Alabama as The ...

and more »

The rest is here:

What Jeff Sessions Confirmation Means For The 2nd Amendment ~ VIDEO - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

The Fight to Ensure the Right to Bear Arms for Social Security Recipients Continues – Bearing Arms

Since August of 2015, Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat from West Virginia, has takena stance against the Social Security Administrations action to provide names of Social Security recipients to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS).

Neil W. McCabe, from Breitbart, has confirmed that Senator Manchin will continue his support by voting to overturn this overreach of the SSA. This will eliminate pending restrictions of the right to bear arms onsome of the countrys most vulnerable citizens.

In a statement released on Manchins website, the senator said:

As a law-abiding gun owner, hunter, card-carrying life member of the NRA and Second Amendment advocate, I have always supported a West Virginians right to bear arms.This potential overreach by the Social Security Administration is a blatant infringement on the Second Amendment rights of millions of Americans. The assumption by the SSA that seniors and individuals with certain disabilities are a threat to society is both inaccurate and misguided and should not be grounds to revoke someones constitutional rights. That is why I joined my colleagues in strongly urging the Administration to end efforts to move forward with this proposal.

Its important topoint outthatpeople need to do their research and stop jumping to dangerous conclusions that are not based in fact. Disability status based upon age orvarious diseases does not equate to a person being inherently dangerous to themselves or anyone else.

Under a law enacted during the Obama Administration, the private information that the SSA could turnoverwould reside within the NICS database, which currently houses the names of individuals prohibited from purchasing or carrying a firearm. It is a violation of an individuals rights and privacy for the SSA to make their owndetermination about thoserecipients future actions based solely upon receiving certain benefitswithout the due process of the law. Once a persons information is entered into the NICS database, theywill immediately be deemed a threat to society. This will stand without any additional proof, other than the SSAs determination of having a propensity for or history of a violent past, present, or future.

Fortunately repealing this infringement upon millions of Americans right to bear arms seems to have gained strength during this new Congress.

The bill is currently awaiting movement in the Senate, where it currently resides after having passed through the House.

Author's Bio: Pamela Jablonski

More:

The Fight to Ensure the Right to Bear Arms for Social Security Recipients Continues - Bearing Arms

MARK HOPKINS: Why did the Constitution need the Second Amendment? – Port St. Joe Star

Mark Hopkins | Special to the Daily News

Why did we need a militia/gun amendment added to the Constitution?

As is true with most momentous decisions in the life of our country, to fully understand why something was done, we must study the times in which such decisions were made.

The why of the Second Amendment in the 1780s is very different from answering that same question in 2017. The United States was a very different country in the years following the Revolution than it is today. When President Washington first took office, two key challenges faced him and the leadership in Congress.

First, the Revolutionary War had concluded just eight years before. England had been defeated on our shores and withdrew their troops. However, that didnt make us the strongest nation on the globe. England still had the strongest combination of army and navy. They still controlled Canada, just a short trip up the Hudson River from New York City. In short, they were still a threat to us.

At the conclusion of the war, General Washington and the leadership in Congress did not have the money to support a standing army. It was the consensus that the U.S. must make do with smaller, live-at-home militia units in the various states rather than a centralized army. Thus, it was their hope that the new country could be protected with a citizen army that was armed and ready to be called up at a moments notice. To make that work, each military age male needed to be armed and ready if needed.

Second, several citizen rebellions had occurred between the end of the war and the time of the passage of the new Constitution. Principal among these were the Shays Rebellion in Massachusetts and the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. Without the creation of a local militia, neither state had the firepower to protect the government or the people.

In short, our young country did not have the money to support a standing army so adding the Second Amendment was for the expressed purpose of making sure that each state had the legal right to call men to arms. Just as important, it was necessary that those men were able to join the militia fully armed and ready to defend their state and their government.

The contention from some that the framers of the Constitution adopted the Second Amendment because they wanted an armed population that could take down the U.S. government should it become tyrannical just has no credence in history.

In past columns about the Second Amendment, we have established the historical context of the creation of the Second Amendment. The primary purpose was to create a legal foundation for a state militia, the forerunner of our National Guard. President Washington not only wrote letters to support such action but actually created his own militia to put down the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. Congress supported his action by creating The Militia Act, that allowed states to call up militia units to protect the government and the people as needed.

Resources used for these columns on the Second Amendment came from His Excellency: George Washington by Joseph Ellis (2004), James Madisons arguments for a strong federal government in The Federalist Papers, (1777-78) and The Readers Companion to American History by John A. Garraty and Eric Foner, which tells the stories of Shays Rebellion and the Whiskey Rebellion.

If a reader missed the two earlier columns, contact me at presnet@presnet.net for copies.

Dr. Mark L. Hopkins writes for More Content Now and Scripps Newspapers.

Go here to see the original:

MARK HOPKINS: Why did the Constitution need the Second Amendment? - Port St. Joe Star

Editorial: Second Amendment rights in Ramsey – NorthJersey.com – NorthJersey.com

NorthJersey 12:06 a.m. ET Feb. 12, 2017

Ramsey Mayor Deirdre Dillon presides over the standing-room-only crowd of about 150 people hearing the public comments about the ordinance prohibiting the discharge of firearms within town, even at a gun range, at the Ramsey Borough Council meeting on Wednesday night.(Photo: Adam Anik/NorthJersey.com)

We consistently support smart gun laws. There are too many guns in the hands of people who should never have access to a firearm. At the same time, citizens have a constitutional right to own a firearm and a responsibility, if they choose to own one, to know how to use it. So what is happening in Ramsey is troubling.

A developer from Pennsylvania wants to convert the former Liberty Travel building into a firing range with 67 firing stalls, in addition to space for a restaurant and retail sales. It would be called the Screaming Eagle Club.

Council: Ramsey tables vote on gun law, prepares forlitigation

Letter: Ramsey should not fear shooting range

The moniker gives us pause, but Ramsey has an ordinance on the books since 1961 that, while prohibiting the firing of any pistol, shotgun, rifle or other type of firearms anywhere in the borough, exempts indoor and outdoor firing ranges.

As Staff Writer Tom Nobile reported, the borough was set to vote on a change in the ordinance on Wednesday night, but postponed a vote after being informed that litigation opposing the change would ensue. So for now or until the borough lawyers-up with a pro-bono-inclined law firm the proposal is on hold.

We understand that the proposed 60,000-square-foot indoor firing range may not be exactly what Ramsey officials want to see in their community, but we cannot support changing ordinances on the spot to keep out a legal business, particularly one supported by the Second Amendment.

If the borough has a problem with the size of the range and that it will create legitimate safety issues, make that case. If there is concern that adding a restaurant or shops may create a public safety issue, make that case. But we would be surprised if that case would be successful in court.

A firing range of this size will bring a lot of gun-toting folks into Ramsey. Most will be legal gun owners going to a controlled space to hone their skills. The borough should ensure there is proper supervision and safety checks. Yet that will not preclude the possibility of something bad happening.

This past July, a man committed suicide at the Gun for Hire range in Woodland Park. He was the seventh gun-range suicide in New Jersey since 2014. The July death raised concerns over ranges that rent guns to walk-in customers in many cases it is as simple as showing a valid drivers license;no background check is required.

Ramsey officials, as they study legal options, should determine whether they can prohibit gun rentals at the proposed range. That would mitigate some of the risks associated with the facility. We understand why many Ramsey residents dont want the range, but we also recognize that many people do. Wednesdays Borough Council meeting was contentious.

There may be ways for the council to restrict the size and scale of the proposed firing range, but we are wary of the timing of this proposed change to a borough ordinance that had permitted indoor firing ranges in Ramsey.

The developers attorney, James Jaworski, said Wednesday, The Second Amendment protects not just the right to keep and bear arms, but the right to be proficient in the keeping and bearing of arms.

We agree. Citizens have a right to bear arms, and we are all safer when they have been properly trained in their use.

Read or Share this story: http://northjersy.news/2l2iJxB

Read more:

Editorial: Second Amendment rights in Ramsey - NorthJersey.com - NorthJersey.com

CGF, Others Seek Circuit Court Review in Major Second Amendment Lawsuit – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News


AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
CGF, Others Seek Circuit Court Review in Major Second Amendment Lawsuit
AmmoLand Shooting Sports News
SAN FRANCISCO -(Ammoland.com)- Today, attorneys for The Calguns Foundation (CGF), Second Amendment Foundation, and two individual plaintiffs filed a petition with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals seeking en banc (full-court) review of a ...

Read the original:

CGF, Others Seek Circuit Court Review in Major Second Amendment Lawsuit - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News