Kostas Moros Profile picture
Apr 20 17 tweets 6 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Alright, let's talk about some of this ruling, and what it got right and wrong. Spoiler: it got most of the key questions wrong.

I am going to skip the factual and legal background sections (which tend to be the same in every such ruling) and jump right to the analysis.
What the judge did get right was that magazine are indeed arms under the Second Amendment. The idea that magazines are somehow not "arms" is something every state that bans magazines is trying to argue. I'm happy even this clearly hostile judge didn't buy this argument at least. Image
Notice the sleight of hand here. He starts with "whether the prohibited weapons are ‘typically possessed . . . for lawful purposes.” That's the correct standard for 2A protection.

But then he narrows that to JUST self-defense, which is not the only lawful purpose. Image
This seems like a dodge by the court to me, but if it is true that the Plaintiffs conceded this point too easily, they should argue it differently on summary judgment. Image
This is such ahistorical nonsense. Just look at my thread on the 19th century commentary - military small arms are MOST protected by the Second Amendment. This is a point SCOTUS will have to clarify soon, because it will keep being abused. Image
A common trend with bad-faith analyses by antigun judges is to basically sneak in barely-veiled interest balancing under the guise of a plain text analysis.

Here, this is just him saying the burden of a mag cap law is light. That's interest balancing. Image
It's also straight up nonsense because even if the test were only about self-defense, the fact remains that many popular semiauto pistols today come standard with mags over ten rounds. Thus, they are commonly *owned* for self defense, which is the test.
Wow, now he's not even trying to hide the policymaking in his ruling. Police maintaining their advantage is NOT part of the Second Amendment analysis. Maybe this judge should run for congress and write bills with police exemptions if this is what he wants to do. Image
And now, after he spent all that time magically switching the standard to commonly USED for self defense, he switches back and declares they are not typically POSSESSED for self defense. Image
This is a straight up lie. The Winchester Model 1866 was absolutely sold to civilians, and sold pretty well too.

Regardless, the model 1873 was an even bigger hit, and since the state wants to use historical analogues as laste as the 20th century, that's relevant too. Image
So? They were still a huge jump in capacity compared to the single-shot weapons that prevailed before. You could now fire as many as 16 shots before reloading. And not one state restricted these guns, nor the 5-6 shot revolvers that replaced flintlock pistols. Image
We looked at the exact same laws in Duncan. Most only applied to machine guns, and most were repealed not too long after. Image
The judge also pretended the DC law was representative, when it in fact was the outlier among these state-level machine gun capacity laws. This is from our Duncan briefing: Image
So even if 20th century history was relevant here, and it isn't, the judge is relying on a single outlier and pretending it's a historical tradition. Even TODAY the vast majority of states do not restrict magazine capacity. How can there be any historical tradition?
Repeating arms became common in the 1850s for handguns and the 1860s for rifles. Yet firearm capacity was not regulated at all until the 1930s, and even most of those laws were repealed and only applied to machine guns. There is no historical tradition of regulating capacity. Image
This is dumb. There were several more states by the 1930s compared to 1868. Six states is not a sufficient amount of states, even if the 20th century history were relevant. Image
All in all, a very disappointing ruling loaded with bad faith analysis. An antigun judge knew exactly what he was going to do before he read a single brief.

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More from @MorosKostas

Apr 22
Sad how complete bullshit like this spreads like wildfire.

The states with the strongest right to bear arms provisions were northern free states. The people that advocated most for a strong right to bear arms were likewise northerners.

And the federalist papers' discussion of… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
From Federalist No. 46. ImageImage
In fact, two of the five states that demanded a Bill of Rights were northern free states - Rhode Island and New Hampshire.

This whole "Second Amendment is racist" thing is particularly hilarious considering it is actually gun control that has the ridiculously racist history.
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Apr 13
For smart guns to ever see significant adoption, they need to match the reliability of conventional firearms. That means that their fingerprint readers can NEVER fail. I don't know about you guys, but I deal with several biometric devices and even the best ones fail to read my… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
This looks cool though. Reminds me of something from Titanfall. Image
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Apr 13
Going to briefly go outside my typical Twitter lane with this, but everyone should read @Brian_Riedl's work. The social security and medicare financial situation is quite dire, and most aren't even aware of it.

By around 2030-2035, Social Security's IOUs will deplete, meaning… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
This is from 2018, so all projections are probably much worse now due to the pandemic spending, but it's still a great read from Mr. Riedl.

The most eye-opening tidbit for me was that if we didn't have social security and medicare, our budget would actually be projected to run… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… Image
And all of the measures above like a 10 point tax increase and a 20% VAT, that's simply just to break even on the hole these entitlements have created for us. We'd have basically no ability to spend on any other big ticket items that people call for, like Medicare for All, free… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
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Apr 11
"For example, according to an August 2015 survey, only 11% supported gun liberalization, while 80% did not, a figure that remained stable despite the onset of the war in eastern Ukraine."

"In May 2022, the research group Rating released its 11th annual survey, revealing that… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
It looks like even after the war is over, Ukraine has a new baselines of support for private gun ownership:

"A more mixed picture emerges when Ukrainians are asked whether they support the permanent legalization of “handgun” ownership, with just over 50% now in favor and… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
"However, together with other surveys, our results do indicate that gun liberalization is likely to represent a long-term source of debate in Ukrainian society even after the war, with many if not most Ukrainians now seeing guns as normal and desirable, and a narrow majority now… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Read 4 tweets
Apr 10
This thread covers 19th century views on the Second Amendment. It's a revised version of a prior thread, with the biggest change being the links to most of the sources, as well as some corrected typos.

This first excerpt is from William Rawle.

google.com/books/edition/… Image
Rawle did talk about limits on carrying arms for the sake of keeping the public peace. But all he mentions for an individual is confirmation that they don't intend to commit any crimes. Image
Joel Bishop, writing in 1868, says the 2A *only* protects weapons of war. In other words, Bishop would believe they can ban your brass knuckles or pocket pistols, but not your M16!

google.com/books/edition/… Image
Read 47 tweets
Mar 31
Alright trying this again, here is the State's reply in Boland that was just filed.

drive.google.com/file/d/1eAu_Nk…
They claim they will still defend microstamping on the merits, but man are they really throwing it under the bus if so lol.
"@renomayguns has a lot of guns so this is fine" is a weird as hell argument when there is also an associational plaintiff on this case representing thousands of its members. Not to mention the millions of Californians who would benefit from Judge Carney's ruling.
Read 5 tweets

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