INSANE: Top 5 CRAZY highlights from the Gun Control Court hearing today… This is LAUGHABLE and SCARY

Published on December 3, 2022
Duration: 7:33

This video discusses key takeaways from a gun control court hearing in Oregon regarding Measure 114. It highlights concerns about the state's proposed manual, paper-based permitting process, a judge's questioning of the necessity of standard-capacity magazines for self-defense, and the plaintiff attorney's assertion that the balancing test for gun rights was settled by the Second Amendment and the Bruin decision.

Quick Summary

During a hearing on Oregon's Measure 114, concerns were raised about the state's manual, paper-based gun permit process. A judge questioned the need for magazines over 10 rounds in self-defense, citing data that shows an average of 2.2 rounds fired in such incidents.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Introduction: Measure 114 Hearing
  2. 01:11Oregon State Police Permitting Process
  3. 01:33Permit Application Date & Public Reaction
  4. 02:20Judge Questions Magazine Capacity Evidence
  5. 03:00NFA & Regulation Scope
  6. 03:44Challenging the Judge: Bruin Decision
  7. 04:54NRA Database & Self-Defense Stats
  8. 06:09Judge's Question on Law Enforcement Weapons
  9. 07:24Conclusion: Key Takeaways

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main concerns raised about Oregon's Measure 114?

Key concerns include the state's proposed manual, paper-based gun permit process, a judge's questioning of the necessity for magazines over 10 rounds in self-defense, and the argument that the Second Amendment already settled the balancing test for gun rights.

How is Oregon implementing the gun permit process for Measure 114?

Oregon's State Police announced the initial permitting process will be manual and paper-based, utilizing paper fingerprint cards due to the limited time to implement the new law.

What evidence was presented regarding magazine capacity and self-defense?

An analysis of the NRA's armed citizen database indicated that individuals typically fire only 2.2 rounds on average during self-defense incidents, suggesting that standard-capacity magazines are not essential.

What was the significance of the judge's questions about the NFA?

The judge's inquiry into the court's authority to regulate items like machine guns, referencing the NFA, brought the National Firearms Act into the discussion of magazine capacity restrictions under Measure 114.

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