Screaming the quiet part out lout

 

I’m old enough to remember when the gays were adamant that they weren’t child molesters.

Now the LGBT/ally activists ate adamant that they are child molesters and it’s homophobic to not let them molest your children.

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The gleeful stupidity of Shannon Watts continues.

The only reason to mention the seven days is to keep trying to pass the “cooling off” period when you buy a firearm. The “toughest” cooling off is the 10 day California law which should appeal to the Moms as the Socialist Bear State is mentioned many times as the jewel crown of Gun Control. I guess Asshole Connor Sturgeon would have not taking victims on day 11 of the purchase after planning for months to commit his rampage?

 

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Tennessee’s Red Flag Bill more than likely dead and buried.

Some Republican leaders say Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee’s 11th-hour proposal to keep firearms out of the hands of people who are a threat to themselves or others likely does not have support to pass before the end of the legislative session — or, some say, ever.

Lee proposed legislation on Wednesday to create a temporary mental health risk protection order, an expansion of existing state code that would allow law enforcement to block certain individuals from legally possessing firearms for a temporary period, if they’re found to have threatened substantial harm to themselves or others.

GOP says support is lacking to pass Lee’s gun bill before session end

Governor Lee is termed, so I figure he is trying to remain in Nashville politics after he is out of office and that means kissing some Democrat Party’s ass.  I do admit I am still a total newbie when it comes to TN politics, but I suspect I may not be too wrong.

Now I wonder how petty the Gov is when a bill protecting Firearm manufacturers has been approved and sent to him for signature. Will he sign or veto as a “fuck you” to the Legislature that ignored his Red Flag proposal?

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Friday Feedback

This is it! Really.

This is that post where you give us some feedback.

Please add some down below.

You might have noticed that more and more I am linking to https://courtlistener.com. There is a very good reason for this. They are doing a great job.

I’ve talked about how hard it is to find case documents and how expensive it is to get them from the government. CourtListener is a sort of crowdsourced legal document repository. If you want to help out CourtListener all you need to do is to download their “RECAP” browser extension and signup for a PACER account. They have instructions on the site.

When you are looking at a case, on CourtListener, it will either tell you that they already have the document, and you can just read it on their site. If they don’t, they will have a link to buy the document on PACER. When you buy the document on PACER, the RECAP add-on automatically uploads that document to the RECAP archive.

While it is expensive to download PACER documents, the big cost is doing searches on PACER. By using the links supplied by CourtListener, you don’t do any searches on PACER. It takes you directly to the page to purchase the documents you are looking for.

In addition, if you buy less than $30 worth of searches and downloads per quarter, PACER doesn’t charge you. This means that if you only download a couple of documents for RECAP from PACER, no charges.

Anyway, go give them a look if you are interested in looking at or for court documents.

CourtListener is a project run by the Free Law Project. To quote them:

Started in 2010, Free Law Project is the leading 501(c)(3) nonprofit using software, data, and advocacy to make the legal ecosystem more equitable and competitive.

We do this by:

  • Curating and providing free, public, and permanent access to primary legal materials
  • Developing software useful for legal research and innovation
  • Fostering and supporting an open ecosystem for legal research
  • Supporting academic research in the legal sector

A number of major projects exemplify this approach:

  • The RECAP Suite — A collection of tools to open up federal court data.
  • CourtListener.com — Our fully-searchable and accessible archive of court data including growing repositories of opinions, oral arguments, judges, judicial financial records, and federal filings.
  • Bots.law — A collection of bots that help attorneys, journalists and the public keep up with court cases.

About Free Law Project

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