“If we only had some of them newfangled Green Energy systems.”
The Tennessee Valley Authority called for temporary energy load reductions, or rolling blackouts as some call them, to stabilize the regional power grid for the first time in its 89-year history amid subzero temperatures Friday morning.
TVA Chief Operating Officer Don Moul told The Tennessean Friday the power operator had to reduce strain on its grid as demand for energy ran nearly 35% higher than expected on a normal winter day, while at the same time a few of its coal and gas energy facilities were down because of the freezing temperatures.
Why Tennessee Valley Authority ordered rolling blackouts in Nashville (dnj.com)
Obviously, this is sort of a “big first” for TVA. But the question is going to be how we propose to fix the system in a way they do not have to do rolling blackouts again or at least keep them to a excruciating minimum. This is when we need to make sure the Green Movement stays the fuck out of the planning, or we are going to be spending millions in solar cell farms and windmills that could not get enough power in winter to charge a cell phone with the unfortunate consequence of not rolling blackouts but full-fledged collapses of power generation.
I believe I will be investing in a dual fuel, electric start generator. Some 10KW should do it.
NJ FU to SCOTUS Bruen Opinion
The decision of the United States Supreme Court in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v Bruen holds significant implications for carrying a handgun in New Jersey and the law governing the issuance of permits to carry a handgun. The Bruen decision establishes that states cannot deny permits to carry a handgun to otherwise-qualified citizens who fail to show that they have the âproper causeâ to carry a handgun. New Jersey law relies on a similar standard, considering whether an applicant has a âjustifiable need,â in determining whether to issue a permit to carry a handgun.
In accordance with the precedent established in the Bruen decision, laws requiring showings of particularized need are no longer legally viable to determine whether a person may carry a handgun in public. The Bruen decision does make clear, however, that the Legislature can enact laws to protect our communities from threats to public health, safety, and welfare posed by gun violence, which take into account as appropriate the Supreme Courtâs Second Amendment ruling while continuing to promote and enhance public safety.
The first paragraph agrees that NJ can no longer require a “justifiable need”. “All lawful purposes” is all that is needed. (That is the standard phrase I was told to put on CCW applications when they ask “why?”)
The second paragraph acknowledges that there are some laws that can infringe and Bruen did say as much. It is that the Bruen statement was much more limited than what the NJ legislature (and NY) did.
Statistics show that expanding handgun carrying creates safety risks, helping to fuel the epidemic of gun violence. For example, a study by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found that the estimated average rate of officer-involved shootings increased by 12.9 percent in ten states that relaxed restrictions between 2014 and 2020 on civilians carrying concealed firearms in public. Accordingly, evidence demonstrates that more guns on the streets can translate into more acts of gun violence. To mitigate the impact of having more people carrying guns in public places, steps must be taken to better ensure that those who exercise the right to carry are responsible, law-abiding, and appropriately trained individuals who would not pose undue safety risks if armed in public places.
Here they have lost it. There is NOTHING in statistics or votes or polls that allow any law that infringes.
In Bruen, the Supreme Court recognized that states may prohibit individuals who are not âlaw-abiding, responsible citizensâ from carrying firearms in public, and endorsed the use of âlicensing requirements for carrying a handgun for self-defense.â Although the Court did not provide a complete list of lawful requirements, it specifically cited a âbackground check, mental health check, training in firearms handling and in laws regarding the use of force, among other possible requirementsâ as permissible. The purpose of these checks, the Court explained, is to âensure only that those bearing arms in the jurisdiction are in fact, âlaw-abiding, responsible citizens.ââ It is thus important to bolster and improve the process in this State for ensuring that only such individuals possess and carry firearms. Toward that end, this act strengthens the criteria and background investigation requirements that are used to determine whether an applicant is qualified to carry a firearm in New Jersey.
But Bruen doesn’t actually say that that background checks, mental health records check, training in firearms, and in laws regarding use of force were permissible. Bruen says that 43 states are shall-issue and may require… This is not the same as giving permission. This is a statement of the current situation. English is hard for some people.
By contrast, 43 States employ objective shall-issue licensing regimes. Those shall-issue regimes may require a license applicant to undergo fingerprinting, a background check, a mental health records check, and training in firearms handling and in laws regarding the use of force, among other possible requirements. Brief for Arizona et al. as Amici Curiae 7. Unlike New York’s may-issue regime, those shall-issue regimes do not grant open-ended discretion to licensing officials and do not require a showing of some special need apart from self-defense. As petitioners acknowledge, shall-issue licensing regimes are constitutionally permissible, subject of course to an as-applied challenge if a shall-issue licensing regime does not operate in that manner in practice. Tr. of Oral Arg. 50-51
— Bruen
It is always important to understand that the Supreme Court is always answering the question that is put to it. They can’t answer questions that are not put to them. So the question was asked in Bruen is it constitutional to require good cause to get a permit to carry? The court answered “Hell NO!” and then went on to instruct the inferior courts on how they should answer other second amendment questions.
It is highly likely that at some point in the near future there will be lawsuits filed questioning the requirement to get a permit to carry at all. At that point the state will be the defendant and will have to provide the district court with analogous laws from around 1791 that show that there were laws requiring government permission to carry a gun. There aren’t any that are not outliers.
Of course NJ went deep into the “sensitive places” places.
Heller as quoted in Bruen says “[N]othing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings…” (No other places are explicitly listed in the pull quote in Bruen from Heller.
So they have schools and government buildings from Heller but again, the question of are all government buildings “sensitive places” has not been asked of the court.
To be clear, even if a modern-day regulation is not a dead ringer for historical precursors, it still may be analogous enough to pass constitutional muster. For example, courts can use analogies to “longstanding” “laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings” to determine whether modern regulations are constitutionally permissible. Id., at 626, 128 S.Ct. 2783. That said, respondents’ attempt to characterize New York’s proper-cause requirement as a “sensitive-place” law lacks merit because there is no historical basis for New York to effectively declare the island of Manhattan a “sensitive place” simply because it is crowded and protected generally by the New York City Police Department. Pp. 2131-2134.
–Bruen
Here it is explicitly stated in Bruen that a place being crowded does not make it a “sensitive place”.
From Bruen “Although the historical record yields relatively few 18th- and 19th-century “sensitive places” where weapons were altogether prohibitedâe.g., legislative assemblies, polling places, and courthousesâwe are also aware of no disputes regarding the lawfulness of such prohibitions.”
Here is that magic phrase again, which we saw in Miller “we are also aware of no disputes…” This is court speak for “nobody asked the question, nobody presented evidence, thus we can’t answer the question.”
From Miller, Heller, McDonald, and Bruen we have the following list of “sensitive” places that the Supreme court has listed.
- Schools
- Government Buildings
- Legislative assemblies
- Polling places
- Courthouses
Note that Bruen removed the “Government Buildings” and replaced it with “Legislative assemblies”.
The sensitive-place prohibitions on dangerous weapons set forth in this act are rooted in history and tradition. They are analogous to historical laws that can be found from the Founding era to Reconstruction, which are also found in modern laws in many states. History and tradition support at least the following location-based restrictions on carrying firearms:
In standard infringer methods they list NO laws from that time that support sensitive places. They then proceed to list all of the places which they are declaring to be gun free zones.
- Places that are the site of core constitutional activity
- Schools
- Parks, recreation spaces, any place where children congregate (think under 18)
- Any place where there are “vulnerable classes of people”
- Any place that alcohol is sold
- An place where “large” groups of people congregate
- Places where volatile conditions may pose a threat to public safety
- transportation and public infrastructure
- Private property without consent of the property owner (This means that renters might not have the right to have guns in their own home)
There is a wealth of hoops that a permit applicant must jump through before they might be given government permission to exercise a fundamental right guaranteed under the constitution. Training, permission to purchase, universal background checks, 4 references that are not related and on and on and on.
Joaquin, get the helicopter.
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – Clarksville Police are investigating a string of related carjackings involving an armed woman and a small child on Thursday.
According to the report from CPD, a 51-year-old woman was approached by an armed woman while pumping gas at the Minit Mart on Trenton Road around 4:45 p.m. on Thursday. The victim told officers the woman pointed a gun at her and stole her Nissan Juke.
Roughly 30 minutes later, CPD received a âshots firedâ call in the area of Warfield Blvd. and Ted Crozier Sr. Blvd. Police said the woman fired one shot at a man with a black Mercedes-Benz while holding her 5-year-old child and took off with the vehicle. The victim told officers that it appeared the woman was using her child as a shield. The previously-stolen Nissan Juke was found in the parking lot of the Jubilee House nearby.
Report: woman uses child as shield during carjackings (wsmv.com)
And you know what pisses me off? Mom of the Year will probably get a light sentence because she has a child, and she will get her kid back just because she was the vaginal portal for the infant.
Soviet style reporting on crime
In my last post, commenter Curby said this:
Show me the stats that prove those states have â5timesâ the âgun violence â⌠ny is a free fire zone. And again this shows how stupid liberals think we are that restricting honest citizens gun rights makes us âsaferââŚÂ ???
The answer is, on paper they do.
The reason they do is pure Soviet style disinformation.
Simply, law enforcement doesn’t report the crimes.
They reduce charges, drop gun charges, don’t e enforce the law against illegal immigrants, etc.
So even though anyone with eyes can see the amout of gun violence that occurs, if there are no official reports, it doesn’t exist, therefore they have lower crime rates than Red states.
The NYPD has notoriously undercounted crime for years.
I expect one day every cop in NYC or LA or San Francisco to quit, and 911 dispatch shut down, and then the local government will say they have 0% crime because if there is no one to take the reports, it never happened.
It’s that simple.
Another reminder that apes are not cute hairy toddlers
https://videos.gunfreezone.net/videos/watch/8a9e5aa4-4aff-418e-aa4a-9afb36965db1
And why at least you should carry pepper spray or OC-infused 9mm hollow points.