Not voting for Christie for any national office. I'm glad Christie spared the residents of NJ from even more stupid gun laws but Christie has supported bans in the past and supports NJ's existing ridiculous gun laws. He is no friend to the Second Amendment. If he is the best the GOP can offer in 2016 then they are already lost.
If you are looking to him for Justice nominations that will help the Heller decision, you might as well wish for a unicorn ride while you are at it.
This guy is not going to nominate pro-Second Amendment Justices to the Supreme Court. Neither will Hillary. If those are the choices, the Second Amendment will lose no matter what choice you make.
Bartholomew Roberts said:My point is that arguing which anti-Second Amendment candidate is more likely to accidentally give us a slightly more positive decision is a losing game. If we allow the nominees to be anti-Second Amendment candidates, we will eventually lose regardless of which party wins.
If we allow the nominees to be anti-Second Amendment candidates, we will eventually lose regardless of which party wins.
Agreed...and our only real chance of winning in my opinion. A sad state of affairs...Not voting for Christie for any national office. I'm glad Christie spared the residents of NJ from even more stupid gun laws but Christie has supported bans in the past and supports NJ's existing ridiculous gun laws. He is no friend to the Second Amendment. If he is the best the GOP can offer in 2016 then they are already lost.
Agreed...and our only real chance of winning in my opinion. A sad state of affairs...
From the Burlington County Times (NJ) today. This is what we deal with. I would think he broke a few laws, if this is indeed true.
Earlier Friday, gun control advocate Bryan Miller took a disabled .50-caliber sniper rifle to the Statehouse to demonstrate its destructive capacity.
"These are military weapons designed and manufactured to destroy material targets such as chemical plants, refineries, chemical and rail tanks and passenger aircraft, targets that abound in New Jersey," he said. "A potential attack with a .50-caliber weapon could have a catastrophic environmental impact in the Garden State."