Will COVID-19 Kill the Constitution?
Politicians and the public are alarmingly willing to violate civil liberties in the name of fighting the epidemic.
Politicians and the public are alarmingly willing to violate civil liberties in the name of fighting the epidemic.
The county's ban on firearm sales is inconsistent with a new federal advisory as well as the Second Amendment.
Or is the Second Amendment suspended for the duration of the epidemic?
The presidential contender has trouble explaining why the guns he wants to ban fall outside the Second Amendment.
When it comes to guns, pretty much nothing is legal in New Jersey, according to their police.
A bizarre Florida “red flag” case shows the importance of safeguards that protect people’s Second Amendment rights.
The presidential candidate’s gun control platform, like his defense of "stop and frisk," sacrifices civil liberties on the altar of public safety.
Legislators who approved a bunch of other gun control bills could not agree on what features make a firearm intolerable.
In Broward County, judges almost never reject police petitions for gun confiscation orders.
Such inflammatory exaggeration seems designed to avoid a substantive discussion of the presidential candidate's gun control proposals.
The bill's requirements for "emergency" orders are loose, and it does not give respondents a right to a court-appointed lawyer.
Erroneous predictions of violence at the Richmond rally conflated civil libertarians with militant racists.
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If politicians are going to paint their opponents as illegitimate, they should be prepared to receive the same treatment in return.
The governor fears a gun-rights rally might turn violent; a judge refuses to stop him from barring weapons from the demonstration.
The petitioner, who cited the officer's 2017 shooting of her son, had no standing under Colorado's "red flag" law.
The song and music video amount to grotesque, self-obsessed celebrity activism.
Such a high approval rate reflects the threat these laws pose to due process and the Second Amendment.
The Illinois State Police confirms that people who try newly legal marijuana are not considered "unlawful users" of narcotics.
Two victims were killed at a church shooting in White Settlement, Texas. It would have been much worse had some parishioners not been armed.
The legislation aims to undo the "egregiously unconstitutional registration, taxation, and regulation of short-barreled rifles."
New York City’s successful defense of its arbitrary restrictions on transporting handguns highlights judicial disrespect for the Second Amendment.
The Court will likely dismiss the case as moot. But how? Through a quick, unsigned DIG? Or through a signed, divided opinion in June?
Several justices seem skeptical of the claim that revising the rules after SCOTUS agreed to consider a challenge to them made the case moot.
Rhode Island is one of only two states that still prohibit civilian stun gun and Taser ownership.
Rural communities continue to resist their legislatures’ attempts to enact gun control by declaring themselves “Second Amendment sanctuaries.”
The plaintiffs now have to prove that Remington's advertising was not only "unfair or deceptive" but "a proximate cause" of the attack.
From Australia to Massachusetts, illegal gun makers step in to supply what legal markets aren’t allowed to produce.
The Founders liked militias, but they also liked an armed citizenry. To them, the two ideas were inseparable.
The comedian received the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor at the Kennedy Center in D.C. this weekend. His acceptance speech airs on PBS in January.
She didn't break the law or threaten anybody, but her school still panicked.
Beto O’Rourke’s scheme would be an ineffectual attempt to enforce arbitrary distinctions.
A change in Tennessee’s definition of a firearm allows for felons to own a gun provided it was manufactured before 1899.
"Red flag" laws leave gun owners defenseless.
The presidential contenders hyped the "epidemic" of gun violence and the threat posed by school shootings while perpetuating myths about "assault weapons," background checks, and the Second Amendment.
But none seem curious about how America gun homicide rates fell nearly in half from 1990s to early 2010s.
Although San Francisco's supervisors urged city officials to punish contractors with ties to this "domestic terrorist organization," they say they did not really mean it.
The presidential contender says the 1994 ban made mass shootings less lethal, even though the guns it tolerated were "just as deadly."
The Texas senator wants to beef up a background check system that unjustly and irrationally deprives people of their rights.
It would not do much to protect public safety, but it would magnify the injustice of existing restrictions on gun ownership.
Official responses to these extremely rare crimes are grossly disproportionate in light of the risk they actually pose.
The "assault weapons" that the presidential contender wants to confiscate are not especially deadly, but the symbolism of that policy is poisonous.
Advocating for gun control is no longer enough. On Thursday night, the Democratic presidential candidates promised gun confiscation.
The bill would make the criteria for federal grants loose enough to accommodate even the worst "red flag" laws.
The Supreme Court has said the First Amendment protects government contractors against termination based on their political views.
The law's impact on weapon choice cannot plausibly account for reductions or increases in fatalities.
The policy is unenforceable and poorly tailored to the problem it is meant to address.