A federal judge in Florida ruled a U.S. law that prohibits people from having firearms in post offices to be unconstitutional, the latest court decision declaring gun restrictions violate the Constitution.

U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle, a Trump appointee, cited the 2022 Supreme Court ruling “New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen” that expanded gun rights. The 2022 ruling recognized the individual’s right to bear a handgun in public for self-defense.

The judge shared her decision in the indictment that charged Emmanuel Ayala, U.S. Postal Service truck driver, with illegal possession of a firearm in a federal building.

  • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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    10 months ago

    But why? When have you ever been in a post office and felt like you needed a firearm to defend yourself? Or the grocery store? Or any of the other places people are pushing to be able to intimidate people by wearing a firearm that immediately lets people know, “look out for me”. I’ve never been to a place I felt like I needed to be armed, and if I did I would probably stop going there. Living in fear of everyone around you to the point you can’t mail a package without your gun probably means you should be seeking some counseling, not a carry permit.

    EDIT - Oops extra period.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      A lot of people who wear them on holsters could just forget, and it’s unreasonable to punish people for something they have the right to carry on their person anyway.

      I’m actually kind of with the right wing on this one. It is a stupid rule.

      • @Maggoty
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        410 months ago

        Having carried for years. You don’t forget. But I would still support a misdemeanor or civil fine charge for a gun owner who was immediately repentant about it when the police showed up.

    • FauxPseudo
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      210 months ago

      Your comment pretends that concealed carry doesn’t exist. I’d rework that section so you don’t look like you missed an obvious counterpoint. While you are at it I’d avoid pretending that you know the motivation of someone carrying. If a person carries for a reason other than what you said it makes it very easy to discard your whole position and because of the way you phrased it not one person you are trying to reach will even begin to agree with your description of their motivation even if that is actually the reason they carry.

      Must be nice to just decide not to go places. Not everyone has that luxury.

    • @[email protected]
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      010 months ago

      Or the grocery store?

      On my feed rn there is an article about a kid who shot up a grocery store possibly getting the death penalty, so this is actually a pretty good example. “Yes.”

      to be able to intimidate people by wearing a firearm that immediately lets people know, “look out for me”.

      Concealed carry. Open carry is antiquated, it comes from the idea that since everyone carried back in the day that only a criminal intent on victimizing another would conceal their arms. This is obviously patently stupid to assume, and now proponents of open carry like to tout that it intimidates those that would otherwise wish to victimize them. In reality it just makes them a target. But the way the laws are set up in most states, it is legal to carry concealed with a permit, and legal to carry openly without one, frankly I think that should be reversed, but it is the actual reason most people who open carry choose to do so. Their supposed reasoning that “it intimidates would be attackers” is just a justification because “I don’t wanna get a permit” sounds less convincing.

      I’ve never been to a place I felt like I needed to be armed, and if I did I would probably stop going there.

      Well, I can tell you live in a good neighborhood. Unfortunately many people in the world are in a less financially stable situation and are forced to be in areas that aren’t exactly safe, like their local neighborhood grocery store, gas station, park, street, apartment, etc. I’m sure they’d love to live in a gated community, but $500 for a glock and another $100 for a stack of 9mm is a lot cheaper.

      Living in fear of everyone around you to the point you can’t mail a package without your gun probably means you should be seeking some counseling, not a carry permit.

      I carry a pocket knife to cut open boxes, snip errant strings from shirt’s armpits, etc. To do that, I have to have the knife on me when I encounter the box or feel/notice the string. I carry the gun to defend myself from guys with knives or guns who are attempting to use them to kill me or someone near me, to do that, I have to have the gun on me when the guy with a knife decides to victimize me. Can’t use what you don’t have.

      I also have a leatherman in my backpack I use all the time, I never feel like I need pliers in the grocery store either, but I didn’t spawn in the grocery store, there’s a whole world outside of it, and again grocery stores have been the target of criminals before.

    • @Maggoty
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      -110 months ago

      I envy you. I have lived places where being armed was the responsible move. I still didn’t carry everywhere or every day though. There are bad places, even in the US.

      • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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        210 months ago

        I just don’t see how throwing gas on the fire makes it less out of control. Are you really prepared to shoot someone? Wouldn’t a better solution be for sane gun laws that don’t put them everywhere, and doesn’t make it so you have to feel in danger everywhere you go? I just don’t see how our constant bowing to gun lobbing to make sure that the streets are constantly full of guns is helping anyone. And it just can’t be a coincidence that the US is the country with the biggest problem, and also the one where we are constantly trying to arm everyone, everywhere.

        • @Maggoty
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          10 months ago

          For me? Yes. But I’m also a combat veteran. I also would love to live in that world where we didn’t get fucked over by gun companies. And I’m not saying people should carry everywhere. Some gun owners really are just scared alpha males who want a security blanket. But we live in the world we live in and until it changes we do what we have to if we don’t live in a safe area.

    • @[email protected]
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      -210 months ago

      Intimidation? Maybe read what you are going to respond to. Who is being intimidated by a fully concealed firearm? And what I would give to be as blissfully unaware of my surroundings as you to believe that I could never be endangered by man or beast. You live in a dream. The world is dangerous.

      • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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        110 months ago

        When is the last time a man or beast attacked you? I mean that in all seriousness, I’m honestly curious with a reaction like that to someone that doesn’t feel safe knowing everyone around them is just waiting to be some kind of Jason Bourne.

        • @[email protected]
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          310 months ago

          Last time. Beast: about 4 months ago. I live in a rural area plagued with feral hogs. I have been charged by them on multiple occasions. Shots get fired.

            • @[email protected]
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              310 months ago

              Mostly just to not leave it in the car. Even a locked car really isn’t that secure. On your person is the most secure location. I’ve had a window broken out and the radio stolen when I went to the mall. I’ve also been harassed at gas stations, and once was threatened with a knife for my keys. I did draw my pistol on him. He ran, it was over. I’m glad I had it on me. I hate that a firearm has just become part of my clothes. It’s not fun. I’m not trying to be a hero. I damn sure wouldn’t get it out in anger. If I shoot someone I will be going to jail, because that’s standard procedure. Even if I’m determined to be in the right, it will probably take months to retrieve my firearm. The whole thing is a huge pain in the ass at best.

              • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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                110 months ago

                You sound like a very reasonable gun owner to me, sorry for the trouble. Just hope you can understand that from my point of view I know nothing about the other person with a gun. It could be the guy that couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn, but sees himself as Dirty Harry just itching to pull his piece out and end a “lesser life”. Who knows when he is firing off rounds like it’s a movie who he might actually hit. That type of scenario I think is most people’s worst fear when they see rulings like this.

                If people had to take some kind of renewing mental health assessment, along with some kind of “I actually know how this thing works” assessment every couple of years I think that would also help ease minds. That being said, I think things like an AR-15 should be something that stays at a range (envision some kind of weapon holding/transfer program for moving them between ranges and/or from the dealer) as it has no practical real world application except death (but I’m sure they are fun to shoot).

                • @[email protected]
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                  210 months ago

                  You didn’t bother me any. Lots of people out there behaving foolish. Georgia, I’m afraid, is an open carry state. Those are the ones I don’t trust. Their holsters are always ill fitting, barely attached to thier owners. They never seem to be paying any kind of attention to their surroundings, but they all wear the same oddly forced looking scowl. And it’s always some absolute canon of a pistol, too. And this is at, like, Walmart on Sunday. Those guys are trying to live an action movie. ARs get a bad rap, but I’m sure you aren’t interested in my defense of the platform. It’s just a rifle though. Not a particularly high powered one either.

      • @[email protected]
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        010 months ago

        Bad risk assessment. Most Americans are deeply confused about the things that are likely to kill them vs the things they actively worry about. Maybe that’s not you, but statistically it almost certainly is.

        Unless you are a young man in a concentrated poverty neighborhood, your chances of encountering deadly interpersonal violence are vanishingly small. You’re far more likely to be killed by heart disease due to an unhealthy lifestyle, yet the vast majority (not all) of gun-owners pay little or no attention to that aspect of their personal well-being.

        The need some people feel to carry a gun isn’t rooted in accurate risk assessment and instead is about a desire to feel empowered or because like my old man --a Vietnam combat vet-- they have a blown-out fight or flight response so that everything looks like a threat even when it’s not. (This is why so many Vietnam vets --again, like my old man-- ended up living off in the woods by themselves; that way they could be in control of their environment at all times which is also why they always carried firearms.)

        But ultimately the real problem is that many people aren’t honest with themselves about why they are so wedded to carrying.

    • @[email protected]
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      -310 months ago

      I conceal carry where ever I can. It’s not about “intimidating” people. No one around me knows I have a gun on me.

      A lot of people carry a firearm for self protection, these are not the people you want to take guns away from. We just want to live our lives and not be the victims of any criminals with bad intentions.