The grandstanding by the dems is deplorable. But then this is an election year, so it is understandable, I suppose.
Amen to that...
Listening to losers like Schumer, Leahy and Kennedy make me want to lose my lunch.
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The grandstanding by the dems is deplorable. But then this is an election year, so it is understandable, I suppose.
The activity that the Lopez Court found was not "economic"
or "connected with a commercial transaction" was a type of
intrastate firearm possession, i.e., the possession of a firearm
(including a machine gun) within a school zone. At issue here is
another type of purely intrastate firearm possession, i.e., the
purely intrastate possession of a machine gun. If the former
must be regarded as non-economic and non-commercial, why isn't
the same true of the latter? Is possession of a machine gun
inherently more "economic" or more "commercial" than possession
of other firearms? [Footnote 4] Is the possession of a firearm
within a school zone somehow less "economic" and "commercial"
than possession elsewhere--say, on one's own property? [Footnote
5] If there are distinctions of constitutional dimension here,
they are too subtle for me to grasp. It seems to me that the
most natural reading of Lopez is that the simple possession of a
firearm, without more, is not "economic" or "commercial" activity
in the same sense as the production of wheat in Wickard and that
therefore such possession cannot be regulated under the Wickard
theory.
Moreover, the statute challenged here would satisfy the demands
of the Commerce Clause if Congress simply added a jurisdictional
element--a common feature of federal laws in this field and one
that has not posed any noticeable problems for federal law
enforcement. In addition, as I explain below, 18 U.S.C. section
922(o) might be sustainable in its current form if Congress made
findings that the purely intrastate possession of machine guns
has a substantial effect on interstate commerce or if Congress or
the Executive assembled empirical evidence documenting such a
link.
UNITED STATES of America,
v.
Raymond RYBAR, Jr., Appellant.
No. 95-3185.
United States Court of Appeals,Third Circuit.
Argued Sept. 13, 1995.
Decided Dec. 30, 1996.
I would be happy to never have to see Ted Kennedys face again for the rest of my life and I think it is a disgrace that he sets were he does. Some keep referring to his aquatic quest but unless I have missed something, in this country one is innocent until proven guilty and to the best of my knowledge he has never been found guilty of anything, right or wrong.