He was wrong.
Regardless of what the Supreme Court says, there's no such thing as a "sensitive place" where it's OK for government to prohibit firearms. None.
And "government property" [sic] is the one place where any sort of gun prohibition is specifically prohibited by the Second Amendment. To whom does the Constitution apply? Government. Not to you or me. The Bill of Rights tells government which things it is not allowed to do. Making up anti-gun rules being specifically laid out as a prohibited action.
Look how the evil anti-gun bigots around the country-- particularly the political criminals of New York and California-- are misusing that imaginary "sensitive place" loophole now. They are essentially declaring their entire states to be "sensitive places" where guns can't be carried (except by their own armed gangsters, of course).
Close the "sensitive place" loophole. Don't leave the authoritarian monsters any place to hide.
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“The Bill of Rights tells government which things it is not allowed to do. Making up anti-gun rules being specifically laid out as a prohibited action.”
ReplyDeleteI agree. Seems pretty straightforward and plain to understand. The lesson I draw from the completely contrary reality is that impotent parchment barriers are superfluous and universally ignored because governments are composed of hubristic power hungry liars; a situation that can never be corrected, only ignored and bypassed.
It's why I've said for a long time that the Constitution is dead-- its only use is to show how criminal the feral government has become.
DeleteOf course, I'm not a fan of documents that create states anyway.