General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSo.... Does this mean that a state can outlaw the ownership of assault rifles
merely by creating a bounty for neighbors who report their owners?

Walleye
(42,900 posts)Irish_Dem
(76,579 posts)Like North Korea, China, Russia.
Walleye
(42,900 posts)Monstrous creation. Im a quarter of a century past my child bearing years. I dont have children of my own. And its getting harder and harder to care about these assholes
Irish_Dem
(76,579 posts)world being created in front of our eyes. We don't want to be a part of this kind of country and society.
do have kids, but no grands. not likely to be grands, so...
PTWB
(4,131 posts)Repealing or reinterpretation of the 2nd amendment would be required.
didn't require repealing or reinterpretation of the 14th amendment though
70sEraVet
(5,021 posts)I'm really questioning how the formation of a bounty system as a method of enforcement has allowed a state to flout a previously settled Supreme Court decision.
Under The Radar
(3,427 posts)kcr
(15,522 posts)Demsrule86
(71,262 posts)sir pball
(5,165 posts)Which, come to think of it, would be a fantastic move if the TX law ultimately stands (SCOTUS denied an injunction, but it has not in any way been challenged in court yet).
Of course they'd still rule 5-4 that while it's ok to deputize citizens to force births, trans discrimination just isn't the same...but at least they'd have to say it out loud.
LeftInTX
(34,006 posts)C_U_L8R
(48,334 posts)Monetizing their hate and profiting at the expense of other's lives.
It's the natural next step of their awful beliefs. Fuck all of them.
Ms. Toad
(37,907 posts)Second, this law doesn't work on reporting. It works on adding.
The private citizen would need to hire a lawyer and sue the person they suspect was involved in an abortion (and prove it).
This isn't a reporting bounty.
Once the law is tested, It should fall, since shifting the burden to private citizens to perform unconstitutional acts only works if it does not require government action to enforce. Once you go to court, you have state action.
FBaggins
(28,506 posts)It means that if they do so, the law might not be effectively challenged until after someone tries to enforce it. It does not mean that such a law would last long past that point.
Even that may not last for long once the strategy itself is evaluated by the courts.
hack89
(39,181 posts)they could.
dsc
(53,202 posts)hack89
(39,181 posts)The 9th upheld the AWB.
LiberatedUSA
(1,666 posts)That sounds like a case they would accept.
fescuerescue
(4,475 posts)The question is what will the SC do when asked to hear it.
maxrandb
(16,931 posts)Then I think ANY Private Citizen, in ANY state, could bring a civil suit against ANY other Private Citizen that violates, or is suspected of violating ANY law.
I don't see how you could rule that ONLY Texas citizens are deputized as enforcers of law.
If this stands, then why couldn't I sue Donnie Dipshit and his family for tax fraud, or the voluntary manslaughter of 600K+ Americans.
At 10K a pop, I'd be richer than Bill Gates.