Institute for Legal, Legislative and Educational Action
The State’s lawyers submitted the bad news on California’s magazine ban. Both sides had to submit briefs to the federal district court last Friday. The California Attorney General didn’t have much to work with given that the firearm magazine capacity ban was so egregious. The state’s lawyers pulled out every spurious argument they could grab as they scrambled to justify their law.
The rebuttal points to the state’s arguments and points out that the emperor is naked. They are standing there with their infringements exposed by transparent excuses.
The Bruen decision reiterated that the state can not ban a class of firearms in common use. The Bruen test says that regulations must point to similar laws from the 1790s. The state did not and could not cite a single example.
The state did point to the accepted racism of disarming slaves, Indians, and immigrants in order to excuse their ban of standard capacity magazines they passed last year. They pointed to the unjust practice banning an entire class of people from being armed to excuse their ban of a class of firearms today.
I was shocked. We reaffirmed civil rights for all citizens in the 1960s. Citing the concerns of slave owners from centuries ago isn’t a historic pattern of behavior I’d use to justify my political actions today. Maybe that is what lawyers have to do when there are no good arguments for their case.
On a technical note, denying several classes of people the right to bear arms is not the same as denying the use, ownership and the possession of an entire class of arms to all ordinary citizens. In this case, contemporary semi-automatic firearms which hold more than 10 rounds and are owned for lawful purposes.
Neither abuse is acceptable, and one does not justify the other.
I believe the case is now in the judge’s hands.