How? Just by talking to people you know. Not confrontation, just a simple conversation that an AW is really just a rifle with a paint job, for example.
I don't know anyone influential enough to quote me on Good Morning America.
How? Just by talking to people you know. Not confrontation, just a simple conversation that an AW is really just a rifle with a paint job, for example.
I don't know anyone influential enough to quote me on Good Morning America.
Just finished listening to the audio...
It was very painful to listen to the beginning. Many kudos to Mr. Sweeney's arguments!!! He did a fantastic job defending our position! From a Monday morning quarterback's perspective, I would have only had minor tweaks on his statements. The judges kept throwing red herrings at him that he deflected masterfully.
It was also nice to hear the judges beat up on the state. Of course I'm biased, but I don't think their lawyer did that good a job trying to respond.
Now we wait....2 weeks...
Where did this "two weeks" time frame come from? I figured this was going to be at least 9 - 12 months.
Two weeks is 3% of 9-12 months?
Might this be the week?
Gee, others had posted at the beginning of this thread that this court usually takes about 3 weeks to make a decision.
With DC being forced into Shall Issue, the court might be trying to decide if keeping the current status quo is a good idea, especially since DC has been getting slapped around pretty hard with their restrictions on what guns you can/can not own.
The court might be taking their time, because they are being forced into strict scrutiny and as such, they are put in a hell of a bad situation, if they screw up the decision.
Not to mention that Strict Scrutiny already exists in the CA4, within the home, for law abiding citizens (See Chester).
The dishonest will have to wrangle with that, along with Heller.
They'll find a way.
Maybe they will create a new standard, strict intermediate scrutiny.
They'll find a way.
Maybe they will create a new standard, strict intermediate scrutiny.
Gee, others had posted at the beginning of this thread that this court usually takes about 3 weeks to make a decision.