SCOTUS denied review of Guedes vs BATFE. The case was about whether BATFE had the authority to ban bump stocks.
Supreme Court Turns Away Challenge To Bump Stock Ban
Supreme Court Turns Away Challenge To Bump Stock Ban
Braces will be next.
It's a slippery slope.
That's what folks who support the Bump Stock Ban need to understand.
First they ban firearms peripherals, then the next thing you know you're no longer allowed to have your teeth straightened.
While I never had any interest in a bump stock, the way the ban was enacted sets a bad precedent.
The ban stands: good decision. Bump stocks: bad decision (Las Vegas is on the line). What's wrong? The bump stocks should not have been approved in the first place, nor invented and sold in the first place. "Sometimes illegal, always wrong" comes to mind. This has been my position since I first discovered they existed from news of the LV massacre.
The President of the United States...who millions of gun owners, sportsmen, and NRA members profess to love, respect, and admire...exercised his Constitutional authority by directing the Justice Department to create a new regulation that would ban bump stocks nationwide. "Bad precedent" or not (and that's open to interpretation), he did nothing illegal and was within his rights to do so.
Now that's a fact, and there's no two ways about it. It was national (maybe even international) news when he did it in December of 2018.
Lots of presidents have done things the people didn't like. So c'mon...what are gun owners gonna do? He's the president. Like it or not, he's the Boss, and the bump stock ban still stands.![]()
More of these little lawsuits will probably continue to wend their way through the court system and will probably meet the same fate as this most recent one, which really shouldn't surprise anyone.![]()
...then the next thing you know you're no longer allowed to have your teeth straightened.
You’re entitled to your opinion, it’s your opinion.
My issue with this ban and the SCOTUS's refusal to hear the case is that it may be setting the precedent for this or another President to enact law without congressional approval.
It stands...for now. Whether or not it is legal has yet to be determined. There are, as noted, other challenges making their way through the courts.
If Congress (especially the present Congress) thought their legislative powers were being usurped by the president, don't you think there would have been howls of anger coming from the House over this? Remember, this was put into effect in December of 2018...well over a year ago. Congress has had plenty of time to protest how this was done or even introduce legislation to nullify the new regulation. It shouldn't be hard to guess why they didn't.
Honestly, I doubt that a great number of those who have been elected to the current House of Representatives has ever read the constitution from beginning to end, so I doubt they understand their powers, the executive powers, the legislative powers, and the limits and checks thereon.
Well, that's your opinion, and it may or may not be true. Not for me to say.
Insult their intelligence all you wish, but they're still the ones sitting in the halls of Congress making laws. And just how did they get there? They're there because voters just like you put them there. Ditto for those sitting in the Virginia legislature. That's a fact, not an opinion. They didn't just materialize out of thin air, a bunch of people elected them.
For better or worse, voters nationwide have reaped what they sowed.
Well, that's your opinion, and it may or may not be true. Not for me to say.
Insult their intelligence all you wish, but they're still the ones sitting in the halls of Congress making laws. And just how did they get there? They're there because voters just like you put them there. Ditto for those sitting in the Virginia legislature. That's a fact, not an opinion. They didn't just materialize out of thin air, a bunch of people elected them.
For better or worse, voters nationwide have reaped what they sowed.