Friday, June 24, 2022

Supreme Court Upholds Concealed Carry for Unborn Babies! OPEN THREAD!


A momentous couple of days at the Supreme Court. The abominable and unconstitutional Roe v. Wade has been struck down, and with it all the extra-judicial obstacles my generation, and other generations of Americans have faced in protecting unborn life. But there is still more work that must be done before that happens. All the Court did today was a simple reversal of meddling undertaken by a previous Court. In that sense it has made the topic a neutral one at the federal level.

And unfortunately we do not have a Justice Department that is interested in enforcing federal laws against murder nationwide. This government is more interested in taking away people's right to self-defense than it is defending the most vulnerable among us.

We will see this in the days to come as evil democrats threaten to expand their unholy bloodshed into the streets once again. Good thing then that the Court also saw fit to protect the concealed-carry rights of New Yorkers, and other Americans by extension. We will need it.

But tonight, we celebrate. This is the first step in a long war against the forces of darkness and death, in the name of preserving innocent lives both born and unborn.

OPEN (and concealed carry) THREAD!!!


Post your memes and music if you got 'em, as well as anything thoughts you might have on this historic day.











I am the world that hides

The universal secret of all time 

Destruction of the empty spaces 

Is my one and only crime 

I've lived a thousand times 

I found out what it means to be believed 

The thoughts and images 

The unborn child that never was conceived 


When little worlds collide 

I'm trapped inside my embryonic cell 

And flashing memories 

Are cast into the never ending well 

The name that scorns the face 

The child that never sees the cause of man 

The deathly darkness that 

Belies the fate of those who never ran 


You got to believe me 

I'm talking to you 

Well I know it's hard for you 

To know the reason why 

And I know you'll understand 

More when it's time to die 

Don't believe the life you have 

Will be the only one 

You have to let your body sleep 

To let your soul live on 


I want you to listen 

I'm trying to get through 


Love has given life to you 

And now it's your concern 

Unseen eyes of inner life 

Will make your soul return 

Still I look but not to touch 

The seeds of life are sown 

Curtain of the future falls 

The secret stays unknown 


Just remember love is life 

And hate is living death 

Treat your life for what it's worth 

And live for every breath 

Looking back I've lived and learned 

But now I'm wondering 

Here I wait and only guess 

What this next life will bring



Don’t Laugh at the Man Who Falls Off a Bicycle

Joe Biden didn’t do that. Lindsey Graham did.


It’s true that we could all use a little humor in times of crisis, but news of Joe Biden falling off his bicycle isn’t funny, and this crisis is too serious. When you laugh at Biden, you grant him undeserved importance—as though he were president of the United States. 

Biden is not president of the United States. He wasn’t elected, and he certainly isn’t running the country. We are reliving the twilight of the Wilson Administration: As Churchill put it in The Second World War, Wilson “suffered a paralytic stroke just as he was setting forth on his campaign, and lingered henceforward a futile wreck for a great part of two long and vital years.” In the meantime, historians have assured us, Wilson’s wife was running the country. If this is so, we may partially credit Edith Wilson with having laid the groundwork for World War II.  

In reality, Edith was no more in charge in 1919 than Mrs. (I mean Dr.) Jill Biden is now. A weak or nonexistent president is an opportunity for professional politicians and professional bureaucrats to do what they most love: To exercise power without accountability. To steal it. To usurp it. 

Look at funny Joe Biden, falling off his bicycle, losing his way back from the podium, losing his way in the middle of a sentence. The people who have stolen the office of president want you to look at him. They want you to blame him. 

They want you to pretend that the utter destruction of America—of our economy, our property, our peace, our freedom, our ability to defend ourselves from madmen and from the government—is just an accidental result wrought by a comedy-clown president who’s lost his mind.  

In reality this is a deliberate plan by people who know exactly what they’re doing and who are achieving exactly what they want.  

These people also want you to look forward to the next election. They want you to vote, to be excited about voting, to think of nothing else but the moment when you get to exercise your right to choose your own government and throw the bums out of office. Of course it will be a big disappointment to you when the outrage you thought was sweeping the nation doesn’t actually materialize—or when it disappears in the middle of the night while the polls are closed and we’re all in bed.  

It will be a big disappointment, but at least you got to vote! You played the game. You lost, fair and square. You will, they hope, swallow your disappointment precisely because the election was such a big deal that it must be real. And then they can get on with destroying America for two more years, for four more years. Perhaps even after Biden is dead they can prop him up just like in “Weekend at Bernie’s.” 

Enough with the “I Did That!” Biden stickers. They’re funny but the truth is, Biden didn’t do that, and you’re letting the people who did and who are doing that off for free. If America is going to hell (and that’s the road we’re on) Biden isn’t even 10 percent as responsible as your own feckless, cowardly and corrupt pseudo-Republican senator. Biden didn’t do that. Lindsey Graham did.



X22, On the Fringe, and more- June 24

 





I had the tv on Newsmax this morning when I heard. And I think I heard a choir of angels sing out when I got the news. After so many years, all those unborn babies have finally got justice!! 🥳 God has finally answered the endless prayers of every pro lifer across the country!! 🥳🙏🥳🥳

Thank you so much to all pro lifers who have worked tirelessly to get us to this incredible day! You are all heroes, and this country owes you all a great deal of debt. And thank you to Trump for giving us a conservative SCOTUS! 🥳🥳🥳


On to tonight's news!

We’re All Fascists Now, Apparently

Fascism for facile journalists and the knee-jerk Left is like Justice Potter Stewart’s famous test for obscenity: They know it when they see it. And they see it everywhere.


David Von Drehle wouldn’t know real fascism if a Blackshirt was kicking him in the face with a steel-toe boot while belting out “Giovinezza.” And in these exceptionally stupid times, he’s certainly not alone. Nevertheless, the Washington Post columnist last week decided to share his thoughts about a new national conservative statement of principles drawn up by the Edmund Burke Foundation and published at The American Conservative.

The manifesto, Von Drehle writes, is “a rather slapdash document” that “has an awful lot in common with fascism.” 

Yet Von Drehle’s only real support for invoking the f-word amounts to an aside three-quarters of the way through his column. The manifesto’s relationship with fascism, he asserts, is “its faceless conspiracy of the globalist imperium, its exaltation of a cultural coherence that never existed, and its casual licensing of government power to enforce conformity.” 

That certainly sounds unseemly. But is it fascism? And, incidentally, is that what the document actually says? By all means, read it and decide for yourself. But here is an executive summary. 

The manifesto affirms 10 (arguably 11) principles: National independence; rejection of imperialism and globalism; national government; God and public religion; rule of law; free enterprise; public research; family and children; immigration; race.

On independence: “Each [nation] has a right to maintain its own borders and conduct policies that will benefit its own people. We endorse a policy of rearmament by independent self-governing nations and of defensive alliances whose purpose is to deter imperialist aggression.” Sovereignty, in other words. 

That isn’t fascism. That’s John Quincy Adams.

On globalism: “We support a system of free cooperation and competition among nation-states . . . But we oppose transferring the authority of elected governments to transnational or supranational bodies.”

On imperialism: “We condemn the imperialism of China, Russia, and other authoritarian powers. But we also oppose the liberal imperialism of the last generation, which sought to gain power, influence, and wealth by dominating other nations and trying to remake them in its own image.”

That isn’t fascism, either, which was quite imperialist in its own way. It’s John Quincy Adams again.

On national government: “We believe in a strong but limited state, subject to constitutional restraints and a division of powers. We recommend a drastic reduction in the scope of the administrative state and the policy-making judiciary that displace legislatures representing the full range of a nation’s interests and values.” 

But “in those states or subdivisions in which law and justice have been manifestly corrupted, or in which lawlessness, immorality, and dissolution reign, national government must intervene energetically to restore order.” 

That isn’t fascism. That’s Dwight D. Eisenhower.

On God and public religion: “No nation can long endure without humility and gratitude before God and fear of his judgment that are found in authentic religious tradition . . . Where a Christian majority exists, public life should be rooted in Christianity and its moral vision, which should be honored by the state and other institutions both public and private. At the same time . . . religious minorities are to be protected in the observance of their own traditions, in the free governance of their communal institutions, and in all matters pertaining to the rearing and education of their children. Adult individuals should be protected from religious or ideological coercion in their private lives and in their homes.” 

That isn’t fascism. That’s George Washington.

On the rule of law: “In America, [rule of law] means accepting and living in accordance with the Constitution of 1787, the amendments to it, duly enacted statutory law, and the great common law inheritance. All agree that the repair and improvement of national legal traditions and institutions is at times necessary. But necessary change must take place through the law. . . . Rioting, looting, and other unacceptable public disorder should be swiftly put to an end.”

Put differently, though police may need to be reined in under certain circumstances and “qualified immunity” should be reconsidered in some cases, the “decarceration” and “defund the police” movements are fundamentally anti-American and antithetical to good order and social peace.

That isn’t fascism. That’s Abraham Lincoln.

On free enterprise: “We believe that an economy based on private property and free enterprise is best suited to promoting the prosperity of the nation and accords with traditions of individual liberty that are central to the Anglo-American political tradition. We reject the socialist principle, which supposes that the economic activity of the nation can be conducted in accordance with a rational plan dictated by the state. But the free market cannot be absolute. Economic policy must serve the general welfare of the nation.” 

That isn’t fascism. That’s Alexander Hamilton and Teddy Roosevelt.

On public research: “At a time when China is rapidly overtaking America and the Western nations in fields crucial for security and defense, a Cold War-type program modeled on DARPA, the ‘moon-shot,’ and [missile defense] is needed to focus large-scale public resources on scientific and technological research with military applications, on restoring and upgrading national manufacturing capacity, and on education in the physical sciences and engineering. On the other hand, we recognize that most universities are at this point partisan and globalist in orientation and vehemently opposed to nationalist and conservative ideas. Such institutions do not deserve taxpayer support unless they rededicate themselves to the national interest. Education policy should serve manifest national needs.”

That isn’t fascism. That’s John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan.

On family and children: “We believe the traditional family is the source of society’s virtues and deserves greater support from public policy. . . . The disintegration of the family, including a marked decline in marriage and childbirth, gravely threatens the wellbeing and sustainability of democratic nations. . . . Economic and cultural conditions that foster stable family and congregational life and child-raising are priorities of the highest order.”

That isn’t fascism. That’s every philosopher and social scientist from Aristotleand Augustus to Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Ben Wattenberg.

On immigration: “We call for much more restrictive policies until these countries summon the wit to establish more balanced, productive, and assimilationist policies. Restrictive policies may sometimes include a moratorium on immigration.” 

That isn’t fascism. That’s more or less every American founder and Cesar Chavez.

On race: “We condemn the use of state and private institutions to discriminate and divide us against one another on the basis of race. The cultural sympathies encouraged by a decent nationalism offer a sound basis for conciliation and unity among diverse communities. The nationalism we espouse respects, and indeed combines, the unique needs of particular minority communities and the common good of the nation as a whole.”

That isn’t fascism. But I wonder what Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin would say.

We can argue with all of those propositions. The Left certainly does. The Right would, too, in many instances. But most of these claims would have been largely uncontroversial 20, 30, even 40 years ago. They would have been the consensus, roughly. And the controversial stuff we would have hashed out, rather than wave off as “fascism” or fascist-adjacent. That’s the point of a manifesto, isn’t it? To generate discussion and argument? 

A Ready-Made Bogeyman

As it happens, several personal friends and friends of American Greatnesssigned the manifesto, including Michael AntonJulie KellyVictor Davis HansonRoger KimballLarry Arnn (my former boss), Daniel McCarthyRyan WilliamsMatt PetersonRod DreherDavid ReaboiChristopher RufoRachel BovardJosh HammerDavid AzerradAustin Ruse, and John Fonte

There is not a fascist among them, no matter what Von Drehle or the Washington Post purport to “think.”

But I doubt Von Drehle and most of his industry colleagues have given any of this much serious thought at all. They have deadlines to meet and that newshole won’t fill itself. “Trump bad . . . Something right-wing something . . . Something something fascist bugaboo something . . .” and so on for another 750 words. It isn’t too difficult, believe me. I’ve been a newspaper columnist. It paid the mortgage, sure, but I wouldn’t call it a real trade

In any event, “fascist” is what passes for left-wing discourse in 2022; it is what “neoconservative” was from 2004-2008 or so: A kind of catch-all, drive-by slur meant to shorthand an inchoate right-wing threat. (“Nazi” is also an acceptable evergreen synonym.) 

“Fascist now means whomever or whatever the antifascists have decided to attack,” historian Paul Gottfried writes in his recent book, Antifascism: The Course of a Crusade. Gottfried, who has given all of this serious thought, wrote in his earlier book on fascism that “[h]istory is of immediate practical interest to political partisans, and this affinity has allowed a contentious activity to be sometimes grossly abused. In the case of fascism, as a continuing epithet in journalism and political debate, this observation seems especially true.”

Fascism for the knee-jerk Left today is akin to Justice Potter Stewart’s famous test for obscenity: They know it when they see it. And, God bless ’em, they see it everywhere

My shelves groan under the weight of volumes warning of creeping, incipient American fascism—and those are just the books published in the last five years! I recall with some amusement how liberal columnists back in the aughts would mock conservatives for overusing the fascist trope. When Jonah Goldberg published Liberal Fascism in 2008, liberals and leftists fell over themselves to discredit his argument, which noted that fascism, among other noxious utopian doctrines, was like catnip to capital-P Progressives in the early part of the 20th century at least until World War II. 

Goldberg is emphatically not a friend of American Greatness, but he is generally correct about the Progressives, who saw much to like in Mussolini’s aggressive, top-down reforms. He’s since come around to share much of Von Drehle’s view of nationalist conservatives and Trump supporters, entertaining the idea that conservatives are succumbing to a “fascist temptation.”

It all brings to mind an observation the Italian historian Renzo de Felice made nearly 50 years ago, foreshadowing our polarized politics today.

“Fascism did great damage, but one of its most terrible achievements was to leave an inheritance of a fascist mentality to nonfascists . . . to those people who, both in word and in action, are truly and decisively antifascist,” he said. “The fascist mentality must be fought in every manner because it is terribly dangerous. It is a mentality of intolerance and of ideological oppression, which seeks to disqualify its opponents in order to destroy them.” (Emphasis added.)

Tyranny, American-Style

Maybe a couple of syllogisms would help clarify matters.

All fascism is tyranny. All fascism is authoritarianism. But not all tyranny and authoritarianism are fascism. Fascism was a product of a particular time and a place with a peculiar set of values and notions. Most serious scholars won’t even lump Italian and German fascism together, because they were not the same. They had different premises and different aims.  

And although fascism is nationalistic, not all nationalisms are fascism. Alexander Hamilton was a nationalist, after all. So were his rivals, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. So were Andrew Jackson and Lincoln and TR. American nationalism can be many things, but fascism it is not. 

So let’s not lose our heads with facile and stupid comparisons. It may be true that an uncomfortable number of Americans today long for authoritarian rule. It’s also true that Franklin Roosevelt remains one of the most popular U.S. presidents of all time. FDR was certainly no fascist, but he was not much of a democrat, either. He was a liberal in name only. And, incidentally, Roosevelt had many kind things to say about Benito Mussolini until the Italian fascist dictator threw in with Adolf Hitler. Americans love FDR anyway. Turns out, we’ve been on the road to authoritarianism under the banner of progress for a very long time. 

But is it fascism?

We’ve reached an odd place in our politics where submission to an unaccountable administrative state is an affirmation of democracy and any resistance or expressed desire to restore freedom is authoritarian, if not outright “fascism,” and tantamount to treason.

The whole point of the January 6 committee is to disqualify Trump and his Republican supporters in Congress from public office as “insurrectionists”—even though not a single person has been charged with insurrection, which is an honest-to-goodness federal crime and not just a rhetorical trope.

The Justice Department and the FBI can run roughshod over the Bill of Rights and that isn’t tyranny. No, no, that’s buttressing Our Democracy. But freedom of speech is now somehow “fascism,” too.

In the old days, we would merely infer that the David Von Drehles of the world don’t know anything about America. That they are merely mistaken.

Today, we may simply conclude Von Drehle and his ilk are ignorant hacks. But at least they can take solace knowing they have plenty of company. (Just read the comments on Von Drehle’s column.)

It isn’t that these people lie, though often they do. Mostly, they’re telling the truth as they understand it. The trouble is, they don’t understand very much. Unfortunately, many of these same people happen to run the country. 




Clarence Thomas: Expanding The Administrative State Comes At The Expense Of The Constitution

‘The whole point was to keep the government in this box … 
the structure was the main way to protect your liberty,’ Thomas said.


During his tenure on the Supreme Court, Justice Clarence Thomas has questioned the constitutional basis with respect to the growth of the administrative state, whereby a federal agency amasses legislative, executive, and judicial de facto powers. He has raised concerns that this development is contrary to the Founders intentional design in the Constitution to separate the powers of those three branches, and this amassing of power is a threat to our liberty. 

After three decades of service on the court, few know Thomas beyond his contentious confirmation and the surrounding media firestorm. The following interview is an excerpt from “Created Equal: Clarence Thomas in His Own Words,” where Thomas unpacks his views on the administrative state and much more.

Michael Pack: Let me ask you about another set of issues that have come up. You’ve been a leader in the administrative state cases. What is at stake there? It seems to be a question of liberty again.

Clarence Thomas: The very people who say they don’t want the government in their lives want this sort of expansive administrative state, which is in their lives, and then every aspect of their lives. And a lot of it comes at the expense of the very structure of the Constitution that is intended to prevent the government from coming in. The separation of powers, the enumerated powers, federalism. The whole point was to keep the government in this box. Justice Scalia and I often talked about that, that the structure was the main way to protect your liberty. The danger in the administrative state is seeing those powers all coalesce again in various agencies. If you think about your life today, there’s very little major legislation that comes from the legislature. The legislation comes in the form of regulations from agencies. They tend to have all three powers. They have the executive power, the enforcement power, they have administrative judges to adjudicate, so they have all three. And the question for us is, where do they fit in the constitutional structure?

When a private right is somehow intruded upon by one of these agencies, what is the role of the federal courts? If we simply defer to the agencies, which is what we do now, in many cases, aren’t we doing precisely what happened when it came to the royal courts of the pre-Revolutionary era? How does that make us any different? You’ve got this creation that sits over here outside the Constitution, or beyond the Constitution. How does it fit within our constitutional structure? How’s it limited and what is the risk that it will actually vitiate the constitutional protections that we have?

We have a form of government where we’ve limited the national government in what it can do. We’ve separated the powers. You’ve got enumerated powers. One of the ways that we’ve limited the national government is to divide the power. You said, “Here’s the legislative power, here’s the judicial power, here’s the executive power. That structure was very important to keeping the national government at bay. You also had federalism, in other words, that the states had most of the authority, and certainly the local authority, beyond what was in the Constitution and the rest remained with the individuals.

MP: I think it was James Madison who said that if you combine the executive, legislative, and judicial in one person, or branch, it’s the very definition of tyranny.

CT: That’s wonderful rhetoric, and it plays out that way when people look at agencies, and they think, “Of course I have no way to defend myself against an agency.” And what we have simply been trying to  do is to raise the question of what are the limits of that. There are different views about it. But at least when you look back at guys like [Frank] Goodnow or Woodrow Wilson or the Progressives at the close of the nineteenth century and in the early twentieth century, at least you have the advantage of them being candid. To some extent, they meant “progress”—to progress beyond the Constitution. And how that is consistent with the Constitution is something I think is worth discussing.

MP: They were clear, too, that they believed in experts and agencies rather than in traditional legislating by elected members of Congress.

CT: I think to some extent they thought that the quaint ideas that the Framers had were anachronistic, at best, and that you could have someone who understood how a government should operate or how a policy should operate. Once you lose the notion of self-governing, that of self-governance, then where are we? And I think the stark choices are between government by consent and being ruled. And perhaps some people think that we can have a little of both. But good luck! I think the tendency throughout history is that once people get authority to rule, they tend to rule more, not less.

MP: When people use the expression, “the administrative state,” what does that mean?

CT: I think that’s their way of saying we’re being governed by administrative agencies. And it’s like affirmative action, who knows? You get a sense of what they’re talking about, but I think we have to be more precise in defining the relationship between, say, a specific agency and the constitutional protections. I think most people don’t follow administrative cases and they don’t think about the role of these financial boards or the environmental boards. People like a particular policy. Then they’ll argue about the policy and not think about how you got to that policy. And I think how you got there, and by what authority, is the more important question for us, not the policy itself.

MP: The phrase “the administrative state,” itself, implies that each of these little agencies has some particular role, but when you accumulate all of them together, it looks like almost a fourth branch of government.

CT: I don’t know which agencies are little anymore. I ran EEOC and it was small. But look at the reach and the effect that you could have. I ran that little Office of Civil Rights at the Department of Education, look at the reach and the things that it could affect. So the reach is nationwide.



Manufacturing Index Drops Far Below Expectations – Biggest Single Month Drop Since 2020 Pandemic Impact



U.S. inflation was/is driven by supply side impacts as a result of policy (Build Back Better).  The U.S. recession was/is now driven by demand side impacts that are the result of increased supply side costs.  This is the natural economic truth being denied by all levels of political leadership.

Joe Biden policy makers, specifically the U.S. treasury secretary and the federal reserve chairman, have claimed -falsely- that current inflation was/is being driven by demand. In essence, and ironically, their position means consumers are to blame for high prices.  This has been their story and they have stuck to it.  However, remember monetary policy can only impact the demand side of the economy.  Monetary policy cannot impact the supply side, that aspect is led by Joe Biden policy.

The Federal reserve, having denied (pretended) the supply side causation, has effectively raised interest rates (0.75%) into an economic environment where consumer demand was already contracting.  CTH has been asserting this fundamental position all year.   Here is the evidence:

US Manufacturing PMI fell dramatically to 52.4 in June 2022 from 57 in May.  This drop is well below the market and economic expectations of 56, and now points to the slowest growth and steepest drop in factory activity in almost two years.  Contractions in output and new orders are pushing the index down.

Production and new sales declined for the first time since the depths of the pandemic in mid-2020 driven by weak consumer demand.  Inflation and a drop in wholesale and retail purchases have lowered purchase orders.  The gears inside the economy are slowing to a halt.

Look at the PMI trendline and you can clearly see what we have been discussing on these pages since March of 2021.   Consumer demand has been dropping in direct proportion to the dramatic rise in inflation (consumer prices).

At the exact moment that U.S. inflation began spiking in housing, energy, fuel and food, consumer demand for non-essential purchases, durable goods, started dropping.  This is a natural outcome that mirrors your own experience in checkbook economics.

When food, fuel and energy cost you more, you stop buying stuff and start prioritizing.

Following the path of the “build back better” agenda, the U.S. version called “Green New Deal,” meant the Biden administration had to continue denying that any demand side contraction was taking place.   However, it is clear from the indexes under the control of purchasing managers that orders for factory goods have been dropping.

The same is true on the services side of the PMI.  Demand for services are being prioritized, and demand for non-essential services are dropping.

The U.S. economy is contracting.  Denial abounds.

FXStreet – The S&P Global Manufacturing PMI plunged to 52.4 (flash) in June from 57 in May, missing the market expectation of 56 by a wide margin. This report revealed that the business activity in the manufacturing sector expanded at a much weaker pace in early June than it did in May.

Further details of the publication revealed that the Composite PMI declined to 51.2 from 53.6, compared to analysts’ estimate of 53.7.

Commenting on the data, “the pace of US economic growth has slowed sharply in June, with deteriorating forward-looking indicators setting the scene for an economic contraction in the third quarter,” said Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence. (more)

The White House will blame Russia.




New York City Mayor Vows to ‘Fight Back’ Against Supreme Court Conceal Carry Ruling


Jeff Charles reporting for RedState 

The leftist anti-gunner lobby is none too happy about the Supreme Court’s ruling striking down New York’s overly restrictive gun licensing scheme. As you read this, folks are having a full-blown meltdown on social media. One of those taking issue with it is New York City Mayor Eric Adams, who has vowed to “fight back” against the court’s ruling.

The mayor, a Democrat, held a press conference on Thursday excoriating the court’s decision and declaring he would not let the city turn into the “wild west.” He plans to look into measures that would make it more difficult for law-abiding gun owners to carry concealed firearms without violating the substance of the court’s ruling.

“When I spoke with my Chief Counsel, based on his preliminary analysis, I said, give it to me on a scale of one to ten. It’s very close to a 10 of a major concern that we have. While we’re still analyzing the decision, we can say with certainty this decision has made every single one of us less safe from gun violence,” Adams began. He continued:

“The decision ignores the shocking crisis of gun violence every day, engulfing not only New York, but engulfing our entire country. The opinion claims to be based on nation historical past, but does not account for the reality of today. It ignores the present and it endangers our future. While nothing changes today, and we want to be clear on that, nothing changes today, we have been preparing for this decision and will continue to do everything possible to work with our federal, state and local partners to protect our city.”

The mayor will look at defining “sensitive locations” where people would not be allowed to conceal carry and “reviewing our application process to ensure that only those who are fully qualified” would be allowed to obtain a license to carry.

New York, a “may issue” state, does not have a training requirement for those seeking a permit, but people must take a basic gun safety course before applying for a license to own a handgun. The few who are allowed to carry a firearm can currently do so in most places. However, since the court ruled that the state’s licensing scheme violates the Second Amendment right to bear arms in self-defense, the predictable response is for officials to create new hurdles designed to make it harder for responsible citizens to defend themselves, if necessary.

“We will not allow our city to live in fear that everyone around us is armed and that any altercation could devolve into a shootout. We will not allow the men and women of the police department to be subjected to further danger, making their already difficult jobs even more harrowing,” Adams announced before promising to “fight back” against efforts to safeguard the right to bear arms.

The mayor’s protestations come amid a significant spike in crime in New York City. In response, gun ownership has risen considerably over the past two years, especially among black Americans and women – those who are in greatest need of the means to protect themselves from violent criminals. The New York Post reported:

Reports of homicide, rape, assault and robbery are on pace to break 2021 levels halfway through the year – with a 25.8% surge in violent crime in the Big Apple atop the list, according to a review of NYPD statistics.

A total of 189 murders have been tallied in New York City as of Sunday, the latest date of available data. That’s down more than 13% from 218 on the same date a year ago, but rapes, robberies and felony assaults are all up: 15.4%. 39.7% and 19.6%, respectively.

Altogether, the 19,972 reports represent an increase of nearly 26% from 2021 levels, data shows.

Adams won his mayoral campaign on promises to clean up crime in the city. So far, he has failed to deliver on that promise. However, the failure is not solely his fault – New York City’s district attorneys are of the “woke” variety, meaning they focus more on protecting criminals through lax crime policies and ridiculous bail reform measures than on safeguarding law-abiding citizens. The fact that Adams and his ilk seek to make it harder for citizens to protect themselves should make anyone wonder whose side they are on.

Nevertheless, it will now become easier for people in New York and other “may issue” states to obtain and carry firearms for self-defense. Sure, officials in these states will come up with cumbersome laws designed to mitigate the inevitable increase in gun ownership. But these will almost certainly be challenged in court, so the battle is not yet over. Either way, the Supreme Court’s decision is a massive blow to the anti-gunner lobby and another step towards ensuring the protection of the right to bear arms.