Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Likely

Woot!

"Shall-Issue Ruling Likely to Withstand Appeal, Experts Say"

If it can happen here it can happen in Massachusetts.  It can happen in Hawaii.  It can happen in New York and Jersey.  It can happen in Illinois.

One day I may have to change the blog to a 4th Amendment concentration, or 1st.  Because the 2nd is as sacrosanct as the 3rd.

7 comments:

Weer'd Beard said...

God I hope it happens here in Mass!

My Permit is due for renewal next year, and I won't lie if "May Issue" isn't in the back of my mind.

Anonymous said...

One of the reasons a "Win" in November is important is to De-Fund and un-seat the Nexus of Grotesque and Axis of Asshollery, the Pelosi/Boxer/Feinstein/Waxmann California Collectivist Contingent from power in the state and give us back OUR STATE!

Borepatch said...

One day I may have to change the blog to a 4th Amendment concentration, or 1st. Because the 2nd is as sacrosanct as the 3rd.

Yeah, but zombies are forever. Sort of my definition.

;-)

Vinosaur said...

As much as I would love this, I still have little to no hope for the last bastion of (non)freedom left in the US. IL has made it abundantly clear they won't approve carry measures. I have lived here for the last 12 years and for the last 5 I have heard "next year concealed carry will pass". It is getting to sound like a bunch of Cubs fans;
"we'll get 'em next year". NOT holding my breath.

MSgt B said...

Congrats.

Hopefully, DC will end up a tiny island of fail surrounded by freedom.

Come down to the opening of the Museum of the Confederacy (Appomatox) on Mar 31st and let's do lunch.

Mike W. said...

I hope Delaware falls soon now that Maryland anti's are taking a beating.

DE's AG's office doesn't have the outright denial policy that the MSP seems to have with permits, but we still have discretionary licensing. It needs to go.

Windy Wilson said...

"One day I may have to change the blog to a 4th Amendment concentration".
If that day comes, don't sweat it, there are a lot of problems with the way the 4th Amendment is honored today thanks to three (or more) generations of drug wars, starting well before "Reefer Madness".