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Making a 3D gun is not like hitting the Easy button at Staples, Harrisburg University prof says | PennLive.com

Making a 3D gun is not like hitting the Easy button at Staples, Harrisburg University prof says | PennLive.com

"Considering that it can cost $200 to $300 up to tens of thousands of dollars to buy a 3D printer alone not including the cost of materials,Harrisburg University of Science and Technology professor Charles Palmer said, "Why would I buy that to make a gun? A gun is cheaper than that.""

Congress Must Act to Enforce It

Second Amendment: Congress Must Act to Enforce It

"The solution to the southern Democratsโ€™ abuses of power was the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It was enacted after litigation on a case-by-case basis proved insufficient to curtail Fifteenth Amendment violations: State legislatures became adept at replacing unconstitutional laws with new ones that had a similar effect. In response, the 1965 act prohibited states from adopting practices or procedures that deny or abridge Americansโ€™ right to vote. Crucially, the authors of the act recognized that obstructionist states could be singled out for extra scrutiny. Politicians in those states were prohibited from making arbitrary changes to voting rules."

"The same approach can remedy abuses by anti-gun states. The Second Amendment applies to the states via the Fourteenth Amendment, which allows Congress to police the actions of wayward states โ€œby appropriate legislation.โ€ Itโ€™s true that Congress is limited to remedying or preventing unconstitutional actions, as the Supreme Court stressed in a 1997 religious-freedom case. But even in that case, a majority of the justices said Congress โ€œmust have wide latitudeโ€ in enacting laws to protect constitutional rights โ€œdespite the burdens those measures placed on the States.โ€

"A federal law could prohibit states from adopting practices or procedures that deny or abridge Americansโ€™ Second Amendment rights, with obstructionist states singled out for extra scrutiny. The law should preempt unconstitutional state and local anti-gun laws, require concealed-carry reciprocity, and split up the Ninth Circuit (why should Idaho and Montana share a circuit with California and Hawaii?). Some of those proposals already have been advanced by advocacy groups including the Firearms Policy Coalition and the National Rifle Association."

New York bill would ban riflery, trap shooting, archery in public schools

New York bill would ban riflery, trap shooting, archery in public schools

A state lawmaker from New York City has authored a bill that would end riflery, trap shooting and archery as a sport in public schools. Assemblywoman Linda B. Rosenthal, a Democrat who represents the 67th Assembly District in western Manhattan, introduced the bill on April 20. At this point, there is no co-sponsor for it in the state Senate. The bill, A10428, which was sent to the Assembly's Education Committee, would amend the state's Education Law and calls for the "prohibition of marksmanship and/or shooting programs in public schools" - a change that "shall take effect immediately." Rosenthal's bill, covering "marksmanship and/or shooting programs," includes "any competitive or recreational shooting activities involving proficiency tests of accuracy, precision and speed in using various types of ranged weapons, such as firearms and air gun, in forms such as handguns, rifles and shotguns and/or bows or crossbows."