PM them to those of us who will keep our mouths shut too.Charles L. Cotton wrote:Edited to delete my comments, since I'm supposed to keep my mouth shut!!![]()
Chas.

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
PM them to those of us who will keep our mouths shut too.Charles L. Cotton wrote:Edited to delete my comments, since I'm supposed to keep my mouth shut!!![]()
Chas.
No fair! I missed the post between flippin' back and forth between SCOTUSBLOG and all the other blogs! Dang, whadja say?Charles L. Cotton wrote:Edited to delete my comments, since I'm supposed to keep my mouth shut!!![]()
Chas.
This seems the most likely realistic immediate benefit. If we winCWOOD wrote:If the 'individual right' view prevails, and a complete ban in DC (and perhaps Chicago & New York) is struck down, could this bode well for the complete ban in National Parks, too?
That be an interesing and yet unspoken benefit.
Dura got some criticism at some of the other legal/gun blogs, and I think he could have done better. But I am not going to run him down -- this was first at-bat at the Supreme Court, while the aforementioned Mr. Dellenger was supposed to be "an old hand," relatively speaking. One of the more encouraging analyses I read (can't recall where so can't put in a link) noted that the Justices actually seemed pretty much on top of this one, had months to prepare, know where they are going at least on the individual right question, and the oral arguments from either side aren't going to change much.tomc wrote:I don't know about you guys, but I was not impressed at all with the way Gura presented himself and was confused by some of his arguments.
There is not a complete ban in National Parks; there is the kind of "reasonable restriction" (unloaded, broken down, locked away separately from ammo) that many of us worry might be allowed by SCOTUS.CWOOD wrote:If the 'individual right' view prevails, and a complete ban in DC (and perhaps Chicago & New York) is struck down, could this bode well for the complete ban in National Parks, too?
I am not so sure. Isn't the "ban" in National Parks similar, IN EFFECT, to the ban in DC? While it is "not a complete ban", is is effectively a complete ban should the need for it arise. The length of time it would take someone to retrieve and put into action a weapon which is unloaded and stored locked in a trunk, makes it EFFECTIVELY unavaiable...just like the DC ban.KBCraig wrote:There is not a complete ban in National Parks; there is the kind of "reasonable restriction" (unloaded, broken down, locked away separately from ammo) that many of us worry might be allowed by SCOTUS.CWOOD wrote:If the 'individual right' view prevails, and a complete ban in DC (and perhaps Chicago & New York) is struck down, could this bode well for the complete ban in National Parks, too?
Yes, it is similar. But the diffference is that the DC restrictions apply to the home, while the national park restrictions apply to one's person and/or vehicle.CWOOD wrote:I am not so sure. Isn't the "ban" in National Parks similar, IN EFFECT, to the ban in DC? While it is "not a complete ban", is is effectively a complete ban should the need for it arise. The length of time it would take someone to retrieve and put into action a weapon which is unloaded and stored locked in a trunk, makes it EFFECTIVELY unavaiable...just like the DC ban.KBCraig wrote:There is not a complete ban in National Parks; there is the kind of "reasonable restriction" (unloaded, broken down, locked away separately from ammo) that many of us worry might be allowed by SCOTUS.CWOOD wrote:If the 'individual right' view prevails, and a complete ban in DC (and perhaps Chicago & New York) is struck down, could this bode well for the complete ban in National Parks, too?