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| New York Times Misses the Mark on Second Amendment | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser | ||||||
| Monday, 15 March 2010 15:15 | ||||||
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The editorial begins with the assertion: After serious setbacks to sensible gun control, the top court in Massachusetts on Wednesday made it clear that the Second Amendment does not bar states from protecting children and others against the risk posed by unsecured guns in the home. Several important issues are at stake in these initial assertions. First, honesty would best be served by a definition of what is meant by “sensible gun control.” If the very modest revisions in the District of Columbia’s draconian, anti-gun laws are the object of editorial ire — which appears to be the case — that one may only reasonably assume that “sensible gun control” is newspeak at the Times for a complete ban on private gun ownership. Richard Callaghan gives away a trigger lock with every gun he sells at his Mechanic Street shop in Marlborough, but he wonders why he's required to use one when he's in his own home. "If you are physically there, you are in control. When you're not home, you're not in control, and you should have it locked," said the owner of Callaghan Firearms. "If you have the gun for protection, why would you lock it when you're in the house?" The decision frustrated some local firearms sellers and advocates for gun owners, several of whom said the ruling upholds a law that is confusing or deals [with] a matter that ought to be left up to personal responsibility. The reality of self-defense is that it often necessitates a very quick response by the individual who is being targeted by a criminal. A criminal has the benefit of premeditation; a potential victim may have only a few crucial seconds in which it will be determined whether they are a survivor or a statistic. Fumbling with a trigger lock at 2 a.m. is a great way to cause citizens who might otherwise successfully defend their lives and property to fall victim to preventable violence. Gun-control advocates are very good at cherry-picking heartrending cases of accidental shooting, but the truth of the matter is such tragedies do not eliminate the validity, and constitutionality, of the underlying right and responsibility of self-defense. As the Massachusetts ruling also noted, the Supreme Court has yet to hold that the Second Amendment applies against city and state governments, not just against the federal government and the federal enclave of the District of Columbia. That issue, known as “selective incorporation,” was the subject of a lively oral argument in the nation’s highest court just last week. It is consistent with the rest of the editorial that a watering down of a clear defense of Americans’ rights expressed in the Second Amendment would be interpreted as “heartening.” Such blindness to the rights and responsibilities of a free people is consistent with the Times’ “track record” on this issue. While it is sad that a company that makes its money through the exercise of First Amendment liberties so denigrates the rights of the people under the Second Amendment, it is no surprise. Photo: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (3)
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hairyman1
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It will be a VOP (victory on paper) if repealed Being from the neighborhood I can express the thought that if the supreme court strikes down the Chicago ban enacted by former mayor Jane Byrne it will not be the wild west as mayor Daley describes, But will be business as usual which means that any pre-screening and application issues will be solely the citizens responsibility with high fees and police grilling that would make Guantanamo look tame. The result is that only politicians and lawyers and friends of friends will be allowed to have guns. The only legal change Chicago will make is the distinction between the ban and restricted. Mark my words restricted will take on a whole new meaning. It will be far easier for a rancher to get reinbursed for a wolf killing his sheep or for an airline pilot to carry a gun in the cockpit than for a Chicago resident to be able to register a handgun simply to keep in the home. I hope I'm wrong, But it will take another lawsuit to make this partially amiable. BATFE will join hands with Daley to make a registration nightmare complete with hefty fines and/or confiscation for failing to re-register on time (it won't be a one time registration, forgetaboutit). Any mistakes on the application will be seen as fraud and you will be denied. The number of hoops to correctly jump through will be extensive to say the least. We will be watching. |
Flu-Bird
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The NEW YORK PRAVDA As always with these left-wing liberal rags like the NEW YORK PRAVDA it prefers to twist the truth and use emotional gobbledygook to shift public oppinion in favor of more gun control THE NEW YORK PRAVDA NOT WORTH LINNING A BIRDSCAGE WITH |
Air Jordan Shoes
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http://www.usa-jordan.com constitutional framers placed on the government. It's a travesty that the Supreme Court has not has not fulfilled its constitutional responsibility to check much of the excesses of power and authority the legislative and executive branches have seized. |





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