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Anytime a court rules in favor of Second Amendment rights, you can be sure there will be a naysayer out there somewhere convinced the judges were wrong, and the guns in question should, indeed, be banned.

Such was the case last week in Barnett v. Raoul, in which the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois found that two provisions of the Protect Illinois Communities Act (PICA), which ban many semi-automatic firearms and so-called “high-capacity” magazines, are unconstitutional under both the Second and Fourteenth Amendments.

In an Op-Ed posted at abovethelaw.com, author Joe Patrice took issue with the ruling, trying to make Judge Stephen McGlynn, who wrote the opinion, out to be some kind of whacko and referring to him as a “jackass.” Just consider the headline: “Trump Judge Rules Guns Are Sort Of Like Airbags. Nice, Murderous Airbags.”

Patrice bases his entire criticism of the decision on one short segment of the opinion where Judge McGlynn wrote: “Why are there small lifeboats on gigantic steel ocean liners? Why do we spend thousands equipping our vehicles with airbags? Why do we wear seatbelts and place our infants in safety seats? Why do we build storm shelters under our homes? Why do we install ground-fault interrupter outlets by sinks and bathtubs? Why do we get painful inoculations? Why do we voluntarily undergo sickening chemotherapy? And why do we protect ourselves with firearms?”

To a thinking person, that statement makes a lot of sense. After all, the tools mentioned, including firearms, are all used to head off some kind of danger or disaster that we might sometimes face. But apparently, to Patrice, guns have no such use as potential defensive tools for law-abiding American citizens.

Equally disturbing, Patrice led the piece off with what he probably thought was clever but was actually an asinine assessment of two of the most critical Second Amendment Supreme Court rulings in decades.

“It’s not surprising that a Trump judge would strike down a gun regulation,” Patrice wrote. “Republican judges do that all the time. Between Heller and Bruen, there’s now a collection of boilerplate, ahistorical gibberish that judges can cite so they can hem and haw about the ‘grave seriousness’ of the threat but then strike down the law as overbroad anyway, no matter how narrowly tailored it might be. You might think it should be illegal to have that, but the original public meaning says the Founding Fathers EXPECTED your neighbor to own a rocket-propelled grenade launcher!”

When writers use such hyperbole as the “grenade launcher” argument, it’s an indication they don’t have a more reasonable leg to stand on. That’s the case with this Op-Ed—it completely ignores many very important points made in the 168-page ruling.

Since abovethelaw.com chose not to share that information, we’ll gladly make our argument against their Op-Ed by doing just that. In fact, Judge McGlynn pointed toward people like author Patrice in the ruling.

“Sadly, there are those who seek to usher in a sort of post-Constitution era where the citizens’ individual rights are only as important as they are convenient to a ruling class,” the opinion stated. “Seeking ancient laws that may partner well with a present-day infringement on a right proclaimed in the Bill of Rights without reading it in conjunction with the aforementioned history is nonsense

“The oft-quoted phrase that ‘no right is absolute’ does not mean that fundamental rights precariously subsist subject to the whims, caprice, or appetite of government officials or judges.”

Judge McGlynn also stated in the opinion: “What is particularly disturbing is that the prohibition of weapons that are commonly owned and used by citizens are now banned, depriving citizens of a principal means to defend themselves and their property in situations where a handgun or shotgun alone would not be the citizen’s preferred arm.

“Therefore, the Court must take action as justice demands. PICA is an unconstitutional affront to the Second Amendment and must be enjoined.”

In the end, Judge McGlynn concluded that the two provisions of the law in question violate protections found within the Bill of Rights and cannot stand.

“… considering all of the evidence presented, the Court holds that the provisions of PICA criminalizing the knowing possession of specific semiautomatic rifles, shotguns, magazines, and attachments are unconstitutional under the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution as applied to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment,” the opinion stated. “As the prohibition of firearms is unconstitutional, so is the registration scheme for assault weapons, attachments, and large-capacity magazines.”

In the end, the ruling was well-reasoned, based on the precedent set by both Heller and Bruen. Just because some don’t like the outcome of the case doesn’t mean the court didn’t do its homework and make a legitimate ruling based on the facts presented.

20 COMMENTS

    • “And the rockets’ red glare
      The bombs bursting in air
      Gave proof through the night
      That our flag was still there”

      Amazing how many think RPGs are a new thing.

      • I still am amazed at learning destructive devices are good to go even here in NY so long as the payload isn’t explosive. So a registered rpg with training chalk rounds is conceivably possible. Makes me wonder what others get up to in free states.

        • One of my uncles and a couple cousins built a cannon out of a piece of thick-walled steel pipe. It was maybe 4′ long with a bore of about 1.5″, and they would touch it off on July 4 and other holidays. Once they loaded it with a double handfull of lead birdshot along with the dose of FFg. They set up an old sheet of plywood up against a post about 25 yards away, and touched her off. Once the smoke cleared, they had a sheet of pegboard. A couple more loads pretty much shredded it.

          • Grapeshot does seem to deter the more violent forms of civil unrest historically. Will have to double check our black powder laws as I know the rifle regs changed with that CCIA 2 years ago but never really took a serious look at cannons.

            • Seeing what it did to that plywood made an impression on this young lad.

              It was about 4″ in diameter, so the walls were at least an inch thick. No idea where they got it. They had a buddy weld a steel slab onto one end of it, and drill a small flash hole for cannon fuse about an inch up from the block. I don’t remember what kind of framework it sat in, but I do remember they used an extra long piece of fuse the first couple times, because time = distance. I imagine they ran more than birdshot and blanks through it, knowing them, but that info’s been lost to the mists of time.

              That contraption is actually what piqued my interest in muzzleloaders, and a Hawken kit was the first gun I bought, on my 18th birthday.

  1. On my very first day in my first class in law school, the professor said, “Take everything you think you know about the law and forget it. 85% of it is wrong.” I’m convinced that number is closer to 95%. When it comes to the law, ignorance breeds confidence.

    • Funny how prices come down as more get made. Also even if I can’t afford it I still want it to be an option for everyone who can.

    • I own both an M203 and a M79 grenade launcher and would pay any price for real ammunition for them. I have been looking for years for a dealer that either has some in stock or who can legally manufacture it and actually make me some.

  2. “Not everyone can buy nukes!”
    “But if I could buy one I’d send it to Ukraine to help fight Putin.”

    Check and mate leftists.

  3. RE: “In the end, Judge McGlynn concluded that the ‘two-provisions-of-the-law’ in question violate protections found within the Bill of Rights and cannot stand.”

    ““… considering all of the evidence presented, the Court holds that the provisions of PICA criminalizing the knowing possession of specific semiautomatic rifles, shotguns, magazines, and attachments are unconstitutional under the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution as applied to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment,” the opinion stated. “As the prohibition of firearms is unconstitutional, so is the registration scheme for assault weapons, attachments, and large-capacity magazines.””

    Back up the bus up a bit your honorship and answer my question…WTF is Gun Control an agenda History Clearly Confirms is Rooted in Racism and Genocide doing writing laws in the United States of America?

    Your honorship may be able to sell your half baked ruling to dumbfuks who giggle at Chicongo, Chiraq and respond with parachutes and fire extinguishers but you are not fooling me.

  4. Joe Patrice has the typical left wing anti-gun person mindset – cherry pic to feed your emotion so you can rant without reasoning or understanding so you can self-validate your emotion while trying to look good to the other typical left wing anti-gun person mindset people out there, so all of you can enjoy your self-feeding emotional hen-clucking fest to further validate your ignorance. Kinda like ‘The View’.

    • I got news for Patrice! A huge throng has all those verboten items. A scant 1% were dumb enough to register them🙄

  5. Well I think I’d rather watch Judge Jackass defeat gun law settlements on tv then Judge Judy fix someone dropped a goldfish.

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