Source: http://www.990wbob.com/wbob-reads/a-libertarian-roundup-february-22-march-1
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 10:39:57+00:00

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On Monday of this week, the Supreme Court denied three new petitions seeking to define the edges of the 2nd Amendment. The highest court in the land has maintained a de facto ban on all Second Amendment cases since their landmark ruling in the 2010 case of McDonald vs. Chicago. Ostensibly to let the states and lower Federal courts do some of the heavy lifting.
Without comment, the Justices denied petitions to hear the cases of NRA v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms , NRA v. McCraw and Lane v. Holder. All three cases were weighed in private conference.
In NRA v. ATF and NRA v. McCraw, the National Rifle Association has petitioned the Court to more fully define the Second Amendment right to bear arms in public and the rights of people under the age of 21 to own handguns. Lane v. Holder focuses on the constitutionality of existing laws regulating the sale of firearms.
On the positive side, the lower courts have been making progress in picking up where McDonald left off. And if you're a supporter of the Second Amendment, the rulings have often been favorable. For example, the February ruling by California's Ninth Circuit Court in the case of Peruta vs. San Diego that the state of California does not have the right to completely deny citizens the right to bear arms outside of their homes.
I predict the Supreme Court will continue to sit on their hands, waiting for the gray areas deliberately left in their McDonald ruling to be filled in by the states. Only once the most clear-cut and pressing issues have been defined do I expect them to get involved.
13 Folds Radio, along with Ed Doyle and several others on 990wbob, added their voices last week to a chorus warning against the FCC's plans to coerce their way into American newsrooms. There was just something about federal fact finders asking questions about "the process by which stories are selected" and "perceived station bias" that smacked of government intrusion into the First Amendment tent pole of a free press.
And apparently we were right!
The Federal Communications Commission quietly backed away this week from their innocuous sounding "Multi-Market Study of Critical Information Needs." The details of the decision were provided by FCC Spokesperson Shannon Gilson.
So lovers of liberty and the (ideally) disinfecting power of a free press have won... This round. But assurances from Chairman Tom Wheeler that a report still needs to be made to Congress signal that this fight is far from over.
As we briefly covered in this week's show, Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper is advocating the slow road to marijuana legalization. According to the Associated Press, Hickenlooper spent much of his time at last weekend's National Governor's Association meeting cautioning other state's chief executives from too hastily following Colorado into the land of green fields and purple haze.
"When governors have asked me, and several have, I say that we don't have the facts. We don't know what the unintended consequences are going to be. I urge caution... (and) wait a couple of years."
By surveying other governors at the meetings, those "unintended consequences" appear to revolve around marijuana use by minors. With some, like Indiana Governor Mike Pence, seeing it as a deal breaker for their state.
"I just have a longstanding belief that legalizing marijuana would not be in the interest of our youth or our people," said Pence, a Republican. "And I'll maintain my position in opposition to legalization as long as I'm governor."
While others are still hung up on the idea of marijuana as a "gateway drug," leading society down a path of ills paved with unintended consequences. Iowa Governor Terry Branstad, for example, calls marijuana legalization "bad policy" and has no intentions of seeing his state join Colorado and Washington.
"It's a segue drug that I think ends up creating a lot more problems than it solves," said Branstad.
Clearly for those of us working to end marijuana prohibition, our toils are far from over. The fears of those in opposition are as valid as they are unchanged and it remains up to us and the example being set right now in Colorado and Washington to convince them otherwise.
#Rhode Island - Why Is This Trending?
The Pal sits down with Scott Wilson the actor who played Hershel on The Walking Dead.

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