Video of the Day: European Parliament

Hat tip to this British MEP for telling it like it is:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fyq7WRr_GPg[/youtube]

The House of Commons has always seemed more rowdy, confrontational, and less congenial than our Congress. Glad to see some of that being taken to the anti-democratic European Parliament. Even in our federal system, a key concept is that the the states entered the Union with their sovereignty intact. The idea that the federal government could tell a state that it couldn’t or shouldn’t have elections is unthinkable. We’d burn down Washington if they tried to thwart elections. Apparently dual sovereignty isn’t a concept European lawmakers understand.

Man With a Gun Report

It is reported that there was a man with not just one, but two loaded guns at a local Hibachi in Roanoke, VA. Somehow this man restrained himself from shooting anyone, and also complied with the Virginia law about not drinking while carrying. Additional eyewitnesses report the same man was seen back at a residence just outside Roanoke consuming cocktails while firearms were safely stored away in the guest room. Gun control advocates are skeptical such a gun owner exists, since it is well known your average person is incapable of acting with such restraint when in the presence of firearms.

Heading home first thing tomorrow. Might buy a new pistol when I get back to PA. Will explain later.

Don’t Feed the Bears

Apparently some folks are upset about a bear named Bozo being killed during this year five day archery bear season, after a man fed the bear for 17 years. As far as I’m concerned the hunters performed a public service, and the guy who fed him needs to stop his whining and be thankful he’s not getting fined. Wild animals habituated to being fed by humans are potentially dangerous.

New Jersey is finally going ahead with a bear hunt after several years of not having one, due to Corzine caving to animal rights whack jobs. I expect this coming bear hunt is going to be protested.

Happy Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours. Posting will be light until we get back home. Had to be up at 5:30AM to be in Roanoke on time. My brain doesn’t much work before 9AM. I’m more a night owl than a morning person.

Kitchen smells delicious. We made some home made cinnamon ice cream to bring down to compliment dessert. It’s been on dry ice since we left. If you were to ask the FDA, it’s actually a frozen custard. I should probably clarify that before the G-men come bust down my door and have me arrested. See, our federal betters have determined that if you use more than a certain amount of egg it ceases to be ice cream and becomes frozen custard and must be called such.

I for one am thankful we have a federal bureaucracy dedicated to the proposition that not all frozen desserts are created equal, and have pledged their lives, fortunes and sacred honor to protect us from the menace of too many eggs.

Handel’s Messiah

Thanks to Tam for this flash choir video. One of the treasures of Philadelphia is that it’s home to the world’s largest musical instrument, the Wanamaker Organ. I’ve been remiss in not taking Bitter into the city to hear one of the daily Organ Concerts that treat the shoppers of John Wanamaker’s Hecht’s Lord & Taylor, Macy’s:

Philadelphia isn’t blessed with much, but the Wanamaker Organ is one of them. Our symphony orchestra and other performing arts groups are also. This flash choir was put on by the Opera Company of Philadelphia. Performing arts groups, particular opera companies, struggle to find supporters. I worry that eventually the Wanamaker Organ is going bye bye, along with most of the city’s arts community because they aren’t finding enough interest to keep them going.

Withdrawn Brady Amicus

I thought I’d take a second to go over some choice sections from the amicus the Brady folks withdrew from D’Cruz. In this brief, they cherry pick from Heller in an attempt to argue that there exists no right to have a firearm outside your home:

The Court’s holding is also specifically limited to the right to keep firearms in the home: “[i]n sum, we hold that the District’s ban on handgun possession in the home violates the Second Amendment, as does its prohibition against rendering any lawful firearm in the home operable for the purpose of immediate self-defense.”

But since the District Court can read, and has presumably been to law school, the court will presumably understand that the Heller holding is limited to the home because that was the scope of the question before the Court. The District Court will also remember this passage from Heller:

Putting all of these textual elements together, we find that they guarantee the individual right to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontation. This meaning is strongly confirmed by the historical background of the Second Amendment.

Possess and carry, Brady folks. Not just possess. But surely the word “bear” in the Second Amendment was meant to be limited to only a military context:

If “bear arms” means, as we think, simply the carrying of arms, a modifier can limit the purpose of the carriage (“for the purpose of self- defense” or “to make war against the King”). But if “bear arms” means, as the petitioners and the dissent think, the carrying of arms only for military purposes, one simply cannot add “for the purpose of killing game.” The right “to carry arms in the militia for the purpose of killing game” is worthy of the mad hatter.

Of course, the Bradys are quick to footnote in their brief:

For example, the Heller Court discussed “bear” as meaning “carry” simply to support its position that the Second Amendment’s use of “bear arms” “in no way connotes participation in a structured military organization,” and, therefore, the Court opined, the phrase did not indicate that the Second Amendment was limited to militia matters. 128 S. Ct. at 2793. The Heller Court did not state that the Second Amendment protects a right to carry arms in public.

Except you can find plenty of places in Heller where it’s strongly implied:

In Nunn v. State, 1 Ga. 243, 251 (1846), the Georgia Supreme Court construed the Second Amendment as protecting the “natural right of self-defence” and therefore struck down a ban on carrying pistols openly. Its opinion perfectly captured the way in which the operative clause of the Second Amendment furthers the purpose announced in the prefatory clause, in continuity with the English right…

There are several places in Heller where the court speaks of the Second Amendment in the context of carrying arms in public. The Brady assertion that this is merely “tea leave reading” is ludicrous. If the Court wanted to close the door on carrying firearms it could have easily done so.

In addition, the Brady’s have manufactured a new standard of review of in their brief. No longer do we just have strict scrutiny, intermediate scrutiny, and rational basis review. Now we have a new an exciting standard called “reasonable regulation” test. This test is found nowhere in Heller or McDonald, but we have it here:

The reasonable regulation test is a more heightened form of scrutiny than the rational basis test that the majority opinion in Heller rejected (and is more demanding than the “interest balancing” test suggested by Justice Breyer in dissent) because it does not permit states to prohibit all firearm ownership, even if there is a rational basis to do so.

They cite Eugene Volokh’s paper for this, even though I can find this test nowhere in it, and even though Eugene was skeptical of the constitutionality of the ban on 18-20 year olds from exercising their rights. The Bradys say the big advantage of this only-slightly-stronger-than-rational-basis review is that is gives legislatures the deference they so richly deserve. But no matter, every gun law survives strict scrutiny anyway, according to the Brady folk:

Sections 46.02, 411.172(a)(2), (a)(9), and (g) also would survive intermediate (or even strict) scrutiny were the Court to apply that standard of review because it is substantially related to an important government interest. Indeed, a number of courts have found that the protection of the public from gun violence is an important government interest.

They keep trying to pretend Heller and McDonald are without consequence, but this brief is insulting to even my paltry legal intelligence. I can’t imagine the District Court would have thought too highly of it either. Perhaps it’s best that they had to withdraw it.