I'm just beside myself in amazement that you've never heard of the Heller decision.
If you *know* that to be true, it will be easy for you to cite the passage of the ruling that states they used strict scrutiny to decide the case. I'll make it easy for you. Here's the
link to the ruling housed on the Courts official website.
*If you're going to cite the few times that "strict scrutiny" is found in that ruling, please make sure to note in your reply whether it was excerpted from the Majority Opinion (Scalia) or the Dissenting Opinion (Breyer or Stevens). One matters, the other doesn't. See if you can figure out which is which.
That's when Strict Scrutiny began being used on gun rights limits. June 2008, not February 2016. You're 8 years off. What we see in the federal appeals courts today is a continuation of what Heller started.
Actually, the Heller case represents the first time at the Supreme Court level when strict scrutiny was specifically mentioned (in Breyer's dissent) as
not applying to the Second Amendment, and the Majority left it an open question when responding to that dissent. Otherwise, strict scrutiny has never been mentioned by the Supreme Court as
applying to the Second Amendment
ever.
Go ahead and keep proving that you don't have a clue what you're talking about, or check the link above for yourself. I am not 8 years off, you are, except that's not really true either, is it? You've asserted that
every enumerated right falls under the strict scrutiny doctrine, and right up until the quote above, you never even hinted at the notion that the Second Amendment "started" getting that level of scrutiny only in 2008.
...Strict Scrutiny applies to all rights spicificaly enumerated in the Constitution; freedom of press, freedom of religion, freedom of speach, keep and bear arms, equal protection, voting, etc.
Doesn't really matter though. You're as wrong about strict scrutiny "starting" as-applied to the 2A in 2008 as you are about it
ever applying to the 2A from the federal appeals court level before 2/4/2016.
Your other questions regarding where the tests came from are so far past the topic of this thread that I simply leave it up to you to Google for yourself.
EDIT: Uh....I got nothin'.
There, fixed it for you. You don't have a clue, as per usual.
Strict Scrutiny is what removed the handgun ban, it's what's going to defeat (1) Main's (and thus (2) every other state's) 'assult-weapon' ban, it's what (3) will remove the machinegun ban. Strict Scrutiny is the standard to meet. (4) A law requiring minimal safe storage would pass Strict Scrutiny and thus would not be an infringement.
(1) It's Maryland, not Main
e.
(2) The Majority ruling in Heller itself acknowledges the supposed "constitutionality" of limiting The People's right protected in the 2A to weapons other than "those in common use for lawful purposes" at the time the limitation was enacted. As per usual, you are wrong about what the application of strict scrutiny even has the potential to achieve in restoring the unambiguous language of the Second Amendment to its original meaning.
(3) Supposedly, according to you, the 2A has always been ruled upon under strict scrutiny at the federal level. As such, Miller would be the controlling precedent-setting ruling concerning machine guns, as that is when the so-called "right" to keep and bear those types (and others) of arms was taxed and a permitting scheme was first instituted. That was 1939. Miller has yet to be overturned, and it's for damn sure that Heller or McDonald didn't overturn a single aspect of it, so under your own mistaken understanding of what strict scrutiny means, the 4th C. ruling in Kolbe v. O'Malley has very little chance of having any influence whatsoever on the machine gun ban. As per usual, you don't have a clue.
(4) Nonsense. In order for any safe storage law to survive under strict scrutiny of
all enumerated rights, its provisions would have to overcome the Fourth Amendment as well as the Second. To wit:
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
Strict scrutiny of that amendment, which has been the basis of multitudes of rulings in the federal system (unlike the 2A which has only ever had
one ruling just last week), would dictate that what goes on in a citizen's home or vehicle is the purview of the citizen, not the government, and that even if a law mandating certain storage practices of weapons did pass constitutional muster (which it almost certainly would, so far gone into judicial activism are the courts in this country already), so too would probable cause supported by oath or affirmation by the law enforcement agency conducting the search apply to how they could legally enter a home to see how people were storing their weapons.
What's strict scrutiny for the goose (the 2A), is strict scrutiny for the gander (the 4A), right?
As per usual, you don't have a clue.
...every limit must either pass the Strict Scrutiny test or be struck down.
Apparently to you, all limits
except for how one
keeps his arms should be strictly scrutinized.
I have
clinically diagnosed OCD and I know how to use it
The mentaly deficient cannot control themselves and are thus a public hazzard.
Please do let us know when you turn in your guns.
OCD is a "mental deficiency," even if not normally indicative of being violence-prone. But that is true of the overwhelming percentage of "mental deficients" who do get disarmed anyway. Law is wholly inadequate to predict and/or preempt violent episodes even of those who are "clinically diagnosed" like you.
Just to be sure though, in order to serve your own credibility on the matters being discussed in this thread, and also to serve up a solution to the "public hazard" you present, you should volunteer your weapons to the nearest law enforcement agency until such time as it can be determined
by government that you are safe to enjoy your so-called "rights" in public. We will all thank you for your sacrifice towards public safety, and hopefully your treatment will cure your irresistible impulse to stick your nose in other peoples' business by siccing government to intrude into our very homes to enforce laws that strict scrutiny defines as none of government's business either.
Blues