Kevin Williamson on the #GentryProg's remarkable ignorance on guns: https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/...ew-york-times/
Incidentally, Froot's boy Tahiti Coates said that Williamson is amongst his favorite writers. He rarely agrees with him, but he always reads him because "he can write so damn good."
Also, David French writes about Gun Violence Restraining Orders: https://www.nationalreview.com/blog/...rian-critique/
This article is sort of in the middle of a debate, but it's not hard to pick up. GVROs strike me as exactly the type of targeted law that makes sense. As I mentioned, I favor a 1st A approach to the 2nd A -- i.e., one that is generally pro-rights w/ very modest limits on the edges (e.g., time, place, manner restrictions are similar to permits). Under the 1st A, context matters a great deal. A primary exception to the cherished notion that political speech is sancrosanct is that words that incite imminent lawless action are not protected. So, a speaker can talk about, e.g., the evils of the local sheriff department all she wants in a coffee house amongst friends, but that might change if she says the exact same thing to an armed, angry mob immediately outside the sheriff's office. With the 2nd A, the comparable variable to the speaker is the gun owner. Focusing on that particular context makes all the sense in the world to me.
To use the example I'd rather not use, but whatever -- it's important that we're allowed to yell "Fire!" -- most of the time it's vital. But, you know, the old crowded theater thing. But we don't say the 1st A doesn't protect yelling "Fire" -- just under very certain circumstances. The 1st A also deals with speech differently based on whether it serves the core purpose of the Amendment -- political expression. So, courts permit more regulation of purely commercial speech and, technically, allow obscenity to be regulated. I'd follow that same line of reasoning with other rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights.
Incidentally, Froot's boy Tahiti Coates said that Williamson is amongst his favorite writers. He rarely agrees with him, but he always reads him because "he can write so damn good."
Also, David French writes about Gun Violence Restraining Orders: https://www.nationalreview.com/blog/...rian-critique/
This article is sort of in the middle of a debate, but it's not hard to pick up. GVROs strike me as exactly the type of targeted law that makes sense. As I mentioned, I favor a 1st A approach to the 2nd A -- i.e., one that is generally pro-rights w/ very modest limits on the edges (e.g., time, place, manner restrictions are similar to permits). Under the 1st A, context matters a great deal. A primary exception to the cherished notion that political speech is sancrosanct is that words that incite imminent lawless action are not protected. So, a speaker can talk about, e.g., the evils of the local sheriff department all she wants in a coffee house amongst friends, but that might change if she says the exact same thing to an armed, angry mob immediately outside the sheriff's office. With the 2nd A, the comparable variable to the speaker is the gun owner. Focusing on that particular context makes all the sense in the world to me.
To use the example I'd rather not use, but whatever -- it's important that we're allowed to yell "Fire!" -- most of the time it's vital. But, you know, the old crowded theater thing. But we don't say the 1st A doesn't protect yelling "Fire" -- just under very certain circumstances. The 1st A also deals with speech differently based on whether it serves the core purpose of the Amendment -- political expression. So, courts permit more regulation of purely commercial speech and, technically, allow obscenity to be regulated. I'd follow that same line of reasoning with other rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights.
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