Repealing the Second Amendment would seemingly be an impossible task. But the left will not so easily give up.
But if the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges teaches us anything, it’s that the age of judicial supremacy means that five justices can amend the Constitution far more efficiently than Congress and the state legislatures. And right now there are clearly four Supreme Court justices who are committed to the absurd view that the operative clause of the Second Amendment — “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed” — doesn’t actually mean “the right of the people” and therefore doesn’t encompass an individual right to own a weapon, even for self-defense. More of this theory on the next page:
There are hundreds of thousands of Americans who have at some point in their lives taken an oath to “defend the Constitution of The United States of America from all enemies, foriegn, and domestic.” You should probably sit back and let that sink in.
My point is that every state should be a Second amendment state.
Wrong. It takes far more than that. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bnoFKskvSq4&feature=youtu.be
Doesn’t work that way.
Um ya right. Read article V of the constitution. The US Supreme Court cannot do this. Quit trying to use fear to scare people. It’s just wrong.
No they didn’t. They said gay people cannot be denied the right to marry.
And where is marriage defined in the constitution to begin with?
The 2nd is spelled out.
They don’t have to repeal it. They simply have to rule in favor of legislation that makes it ineffective.
Maybe they allow limits on ammunition or allow the EPA to ban gunpowder. Something sneaky that doesn’t take away guns but makes them useless.
.. And then again you can’t repeal the 2nd amendment because of the 9th amendment. The 2nd is natural law guaranteed by the 9th
If Civil War starts, I hope it will start in Washington DC.
There are 3 branches of the U.S government plus governor in each state. Whatever the decision of the SCOTUS, the governor of the state will decide whether to implement the SCOTUS decision.