Justice Dept.: Missouri governor can't void federal gun laws
https://apnews.com › article12 hours ago — WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department is warning Missouri officials that the state can't ignore federal law, after the governor signed a ...
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The only “force” the fed has over the states is to stop the flow of federal dollars going to them.
Which is all the force they need.
![]()
This. And marijuana.Yet what has the Justice Department done about States using the same tactic regarding sanctuary for illegal immigrants?
What about the Federal tax on suppressor? Congress under the Constitution has the power to tax and they made a law to tax suppressor. If you pay the tax they know who you are if you don’t pay the tax and they find you you’ll get hit with tax evasion too.Texas is going to take ours to Federal court to rule they don't have jurisdiction on silencers when it's all within-state. No interstate commerce.
I don’t agree with tax stamps at all, but.....To be honest, I have no idea how that tax has stood up to scrutiny. It clearly only purpose is to keep poor people from exercising their right to bear arms. Other similar laws have been struck down. $200 may not be a lot in this day and age for most.. but it clearly is for some... even more so back when they established this.
The same way Obamacare did, again.To be honest, I have no idea how that tax has stood up to scrutiny. It clearly only purpose is to keep poor people from exercising their right to bear arms. Other similar laws have been struck down. $200 may not be a lot in this day and age for most.. but it clearly is for some... even more so back when they established this.
Yeah, the bought and paid for roberts w/ the supremes just ruled in favor of obammie care for the second time.The same way Obamacare did, again.
Ok, so apparently SC rules that any activity that could affect interstate commerce can also then be regulated.. BUT, this assumes that "stabilizing prices" on interstate commerce itself is valid for congress... which I'd argue pretty much fucking isn't a legal "goal" itself.The regulation of local production of wheat was rationally related to Congress's goal: to stabilize prices by limiting the total supply of wheat produced and consumed. It was clear, the Court held,
How about a $200 poll tax or worship license? If you can’t afford that, you need to pay some bills.I don’t agree with tax stamps at all, but.....
Seeing as how it’s the law right now If you can’t afford a $200 stamp to stay legal(or become Lamar’s bitch) maybe you shouldn’t be spending two to six times the amount on a suppressor. Hell if there wasn’t a tax stamp and you couldn’t afford $200 you don’t need a suppressor, you need to pay some fucking bills.
“To be honest, I have no idea how that tax has stood up to scrutiny.”
Why would they say “oh no, we don’t want more of your money...you deserve it” it’s the federal government, they’re tax 100% on your pay if they could.
However, in Boynton v. Kusper (1986), the state Supreme Court ruled the tax unconstitutional.
“The court held that a tax on a fundamental right is not a reasonable way to raise revenue to pay for [a] general welfare program,” Patterson said “We have the same structure here where it's a tax on a fundamental right meant to pay for general welfare programs.”
Although the defense argued the firearm tax should be considered an insignificant or “de minimis” burden, Justice Michael Burke said even small fees go against the analysis reached in Boynton.
“A $10 fee may be de minimis, but once we give you the power to tax then all of a sudden it turns into a $1000 fee,” Burke said during arguments Thursday. “This is a $25 fee that if we give Cook County the right to tax, it could turn into a $250 or a $2500 fee, especially based on the preamble to the statute which is basically ‘we're doing this to try and keep guns out of the system.’”
shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...QUIET. I'm all for dumping the tax, but don't give ideas (that they already have).To be honest, I have no idea how that tax has stood up to scrutiny. It clearly only purpose is to keep poor people from exercising their right to bear arms. Other similar laws have been struck down. $200 may not be a lot in this day and age for most.. but it clearly is for some... even more so back when they established this.
Texas is going to take ours to Federal court to rule they don't have jurisdiction on silencers when it's all within-state. No interstate commerce.
Claiming a 200 stamp keeps poors from buying cans is a terrible argument. You can hardly buy ammo if you can’t pay that and you definitely can’t afford a can. I skipped buying a lot of extra shit I wanted on 11/hr for a while to buy my can.How about a $200 poll tax or worship license? If you can’t afford that, you need to pay some bills.
Nor would anybody expect that! Same for weed!Just remember that when the feds show up to your door without the state and local cops in tow, and they will, there is nothing that the state will do to protect you.
I really hope you are not suggesting these laws are a bad thing. Do they hold a lot of water.....maybe not, but it steers the ship in the right direction.dont get your hopes up. There is fresh case law rulings, almost 2 years ago, the 10 Circuit court of appeals basically struck down the Kansas suppressor law. Talked to a good friend yesterday, SOT/can dealer etc, says he knows how this is going to go and is not touching it. Hes too easy of a target for the ATF. and believe me, under BIden, the ATF is going to have carte blanche to wreck everything they can, especially to punish a REd state like Texas.
![]()
2 Kansas men 'collateral damage' in gun control dispute
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The unregistered gun silencers, each stamped "Made in Kansas, were arranged in a display case at a military surplus store in a rural Kansas town. Beside them was a copy of a...apnews.com
It's $200 per can. That's not so insignificant when multiplied out across multiple calibers, let alone multiple cans per caliber. Are you a poor that only owns one rifle?Claiming a 200 stamp keeps poors from buying cans is a terrible argument. You can hardly buy ammo if you can’t pay that and you definitely can’t afford a can. I skipped buying a lot of extra shit I wanted on 11/hr for a while to buy my can.
Now if you’re saying taxation is theft, it’s an infringement of god given rights, and keeping you from protecting everyone’s hearing I can get behind that.
What if you and your neighbors are....really tight?Just remember that when the feds show up to your door without the state and local cops in tow, and they will, there is nothing that the state will do to protect you.
I really hope you are not suggesting these laws are a bad thing. Do they hold a lot of water.....maybe not, but it steers the ship in the right direction.
SCOTUS shot that down in Murdoch vs Pennsylvania long ago. You can’t tax a right because it assumes the premise of man having the power to grant or restrict inalienable rights.There are several cases ruled that you can't tax a fundamental right...
![]()
Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U.S. 105 (1943)
Murdock v. Pennsylvania: It is unconstitutional for a state to tax people selling religious merchandise.supreme.justia.com
and this one... https://www.nprillinois.org/stateho...tionality-of-cook-county-tax-on-guns-and-ammo
Holy cow.. looks like that case from 2015 is just NOW having some more oral arguements last month?!?
http://www.illinoiscourts.gov/SupremeCourt/Docket/default.asp (as of 5/13/21)
Case No. 126014 — Guns Save Life, Inc., et al., etc., Appellants, v. Zahra Ali, etc., et al., Appellees. Appeal, Appellate Court, First District
Nope, just don’t keep buying cans I can’t afford like a normal person.It's $200 per can. That's not so insignificant when multiplied out across multiple calibers, let alone multiple cans per caliber. Are you a poor that only owns one rifle?
My financial situation is just fine, thanks, but I'm not so out of touch that I can't see that a 20%+ markup on an item might be prohibitive to some people. Not to mention the fact that the extended tax stamp/paperwork process also drives the price of a suppressor up thanks to the additional tax burden forced upon manufacturers and distributors.Nope, just don’t keep buying cans I can’t afford like a normal person.
Once again your financial situation is a real shitty argument against this. There’s actually good arguments listed above. You have the right to own the ability to afford it is on you.
You’re so stuck in blaming your financial situation you fail to see where I say I don’t agree with stamps, but it’s still a fact of life that we have to deal with. If you can’t scrape together 200 for a stamp then how the hell are you going to buy multiple $400-1000+ Cans without stamps?
Will you magically get rich when stamps go away?
Just picked one up yesterday. Check cashed Dec 13. Stamp issued June 1. Not too bad, considering…Treasury: “You can’t enjoy the freedom of retaining your hearing while exercising your rights until you pay us a tax and wait 8-15 months."
You're taking it personal for some reason, your/you can be used as a general term and not actually mean you specifically. Though normally used that way.My financial situation is just fine, thanks, but I'm not so out of touch that I can't see that a 20%+ markup on an item might be prohibitive to some people. Not to mention the fact that the extended tax stamp/paperwork process also drives the price of a suppressor up thanks to the additional tax burden forced upon manufacturers and distributors.
You seem to think people are for this for some reason, though I've said I'm not for tax stamps.Finances don’t matter, neither does how
many of what matters. It’s irrelevant if the tax is a penny or a grand, you can’t tax a right. These justifications of budgets and needs are the same reason so many of our other rights have been eroded, the “Doesn’t affect me” crowd selling others out is why we have mag limits and semi auto bans in many states, and so many other laws at state and federal levels in the works that go much further.
It’s either Constitutional or it isn’t, there’s no reasoning or justification involved in that conversation, and a tax on any right is unconstitutional regardless the amount.
That flow of money from the states to the federal government can be stopped as well.The only “force” the fed has over the states is to stop the flow of federal dollars going to them.
Which is all the force they need.
![]()
Unless the businesses stop paying quarterly taxes then fed will still get their money.That flow of money from the states to the federal government can be stopped as well.
It’s your double talk, you’re against it while you’re also justifying it by saying it’s not that much. There is no “But…” when it comes to rights and the infringement upon them.You seem to think people are for this for some reason, though I've said I'm not for tax stamps.
At this point it's pay it or be a felon. I bet you have paid tax stamps if you have NFA items.
State laws making it illegal to collect federal taxes with draconian penalties. A tax revolt basically.Unless the businesses stop paying quarterly taxes then fed will still get their money.
Fed income tax
Fed gas tax
Fed ss tax
Ect
all collected and paid via business.
you can delay some of that if you claim a bazillion dependents
So here's the thing with states rights. It's always been an argument from the fed that they trump everyone; of course it is, its like asking you if you want to determine your own salary or not.
In reality, and the way the founders looked at it was, that the fed gets its power from the states, not the other way around. If a state doesn't seem to be ok with something, they can then basically say 'we re doing/not doing THIS in our state' and have jurisdiction of just what goes on inside of state lines, but nothing to do with the neighboring state or the fed.
It basically boils down to how far the state, the state's government and their citizens are willing to go in an effort to actively enforce/not enforce what they want, regardless of what the fed wants. It's really that simple.
Think of this as an example. Watch this video of Tyson giving an interview. At some point in it, he has enough of the faggot interviewer trying to put him in a corner and asking him shit he doesn't want to talk about. There's a time in there where you see that the interviewer realizes that he has absolutely zero protection as opposed to what level of social protection he assumed he had by being around other people, being on TV, and in general just sitting and doing an interview.
Tyson asks the best question ever - What are you going to do about it? The answer that doesn't need to be said because we all know it, is absolutely nothing because Tyson would be willing to literally decapitate you with his bare hands on live TV.
The question goes to the core of this with the states and fed. If the state is ready to 'defend' itself against you on rights that pertain to citizens of that state, and we are willing to go the distance with it, what are you actually going to be able to do about it?
That is the basic ethos of where we are right now as citizens of a state, as Americans, as conservatives, as non-mentally ill people, as gun owners, etc. Enough of us get together and say, WTF are you going to do about it because we're willing to go the distance - and most of your problems magically go away.
It seems that "Whatcha gonna do 'bout it?" Was asked and answered, circa 1860-1865...Tyson asks the best question ever - What are you going to do about it? The answer that doesn't need to be said because we all know it, is absolutely nothing because Tyson would be willing to literally decapitate you with his bare hands on live TV.
Word.Finances don’t matter, neither does how
many of what matters. It’s irrelevant if the tax is a penny or a grand, you can’t tax a right. These justifications of budgets and needs are the same reason so many of our other rights have been eroded, the “Doesn’t affect me” crowd selling others out is why we have mag limits and semi auto bans in many states, and so many other laws at state and federal levels in the works that go much further.
It’s either Constitutional or it isn’t, there’s no reasoning or justification involved in that conversation, and a tax on any right is unconstitutional regardless the amount.
in theory, you are correct. especially about the founders intention.
the problem is that the Federal government has spent the last 140+ years amassing, stealing from the states, and centralizing federal government power. just look at the powers the executive and judicial branch have granted themselves. Thats the real problem. Government exists to expand its own power. and it has, unchecked, for far too long.
It seems that "Whatcha gonna do 'bout it?" Was asked and answered, circa 1860-1865...
So here's the thing with states rights. It's always been an argument from the fed that they trump everyone; of course it is, its like asking you if you want to determine your own salary or not.
In reality, and the way the founders looked at it was, that the fed gets its power from the states, not the other way around. If a state doesn't seem to be ok with something, they can then basically say 'we re doing/not doing THIS in our state' and have jurisdiction of just what goes on inside of state lines, but nothing to do with the neighboring state or the fed.
It basically boils down to how far the state, the state's government and their citizens are willing to go in an effort to actively enforce/not enforce what they want, regardless of what the fed wants. It's really that simple.
Think of this as an example. Watch this video of Tyson giving an interview. At some point in it, he has enough of the faggot interviewer trying to put him in a corner and asking him shit he doesn't want to talk about. There's a time in there where you see that the interviewer realizes that he has absolutely zero protection as opposed to what level of social protection he assumed he had by being around other people, being on TV, and in general just sitting and doing an interview.
Tyson asks the best question ever - What are you going to do about it? The answer that doesn't need to be said because we all know it, is absolutely nothing because Tyson would be willing to literally decapitate you with his bare hands on live TV.
The question goes to the core of this with the states and fed. If the state is ready to 'defend' itself against you on rights that pertain to citizens of that state, and we are willing to go the distance with it, what are you actually going to be able to do about it?
That is the basic ethos of where we are right now as citizens of a state, as Americans, as conservatives, as non-mentally ill people, as gun owners, etc. Enough of us get together and say, WTF are you going to do about it because we're willing to go the distance - and most of your problems magically go away.