Natman said:Note that the first sentence presents a hypothetical objection and the second sentence refutes it. The 4th has seen fit to take selected words from the first sentence completely out of context and twist them 180 degrees from Heller's actual position on the definition of the meaning of the word "arms"
Aguila Blanca said:It seems more that this court is twisting the meaning of "like." IMHO, the meaning of "the M16 and the like" in Heller was a reference to function likeness -- firearms with "the switch," offering semi-auto, select-fire, and/or full-auto capability. The only way this court could say that AR-15s are "like" M16s is to be on the basis of external appearance, and that IS a perversion of the substance of Heller.
I'll meet you halfway on this; they are perverting the meaning of "arms" as defined in Heller AND they are ignoring the substantial legal difference between a fully automatic M16 and a semiauto AR15.
It wouldn't surprise me if SCOTUS sends this back for reconsideration without even hearing the case via a per curiam opinion, just as they did with Caetano v. Massachusetts in 2015. No matter how an individual Supreme Court justice may feel about the issue at hand, they simply can't allow lower courts to dump on Supreme Court decisions like this. Not if the word "Supreme" is going to mean anything.
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