NBC News: Queer the Ballet Is Trying to Fix National Crisis of Scarcity...
Reid Wiseman Moved to Tears At Sight of the Cross
Newsweek: Student Self-Deports After Enduring ‘Inhumane’ ICE Conditions
Mayor Brandon Johnson Talks Reparations, Says Restaurant Industry Has Vestiges in Slavery
The Other Shoe Drops: Anna Paulina Luna Reports Sexual Misconduct Allegations Against Rube...
Once Fine Blokes, Now Just Broke: UK Would Be the Poorest State in...
Pope Leo: "Woe to Those Who Manipulate Religion … For Their Own Military...
Judge Again Blocks Construction of White House Ballroom, Says Bunker Can Proceed
Whoopi Goldberg Schools People Who Think They Know the Bible-Bible
Trump Calls Out Pope’s Selective Silence: 'Tell That to the Pope' on Iran...
Variety: Pete Hegseth Tried to Evoke Scripture but Quoted ‘Pulp Fiction’ Instead
Hennepin County Attorney Issues Nationwide Arrest Warrant for ICE Agent for Assault
People Can't Help but Notice Where Kamala Harris Did NOT Record Her 'Gas...
HRM: Deadbeat Jerks at The Lincoln Project Have Some 'Splainin' to Do About...
Antisemites UNITE! Ilhan Omar Praises Candace Owens and I'd Only Be More Surprised...
Premium

Washington Post calls Virginia's 'gun sanctuary' movement a fad and mainly symbolic

With Gov. Ralph “Coonman” Northam holding onto his job somehow and Democrats controlling both houses of the General Assembly in Virginia, there’s been a movement to establish Second Amendment sanctuaries, inspired by sanctuary cities, in which local government and law enforcement would refuse to cooperate with the state when it comes to gun control laws including confiscation.

The Washington Post editorial board published a piece Saturday calling the gun sanctuary movement a fad and mainly symbolic. Overlooking the Second Amendment completely, the editorial board also argued that there’s no parallel at all to be made to sanctuary cities, in which no laws were being broken — except, of course, for being in the country illegally, which is still against the law.

Remind us one more time: Aren’t the immigration laws passed by Congress “duly enacted laws?” And if a city or county refuses to cooperate with the federal government, it too is defying duly enacted laws.

The WaPo editorial board sees it differently:

Vigilantism, with its alluring tingle of defiance and frontier justice, conjures a cinematic idea of American individualism. A similar impulse is at work among advocates of the so-called Second Amendment sanctuary movement, a trend in mainly rural counties declaring they will refuse to enforce restrictive state gun laws. Both are examples of individuals who, lacking legal authority, put themselves above the law, thereby promoting chaos.

The idea — and the term itself — has gained traction in Western states and elsewhere, inspired by “sanctuary cities” that have adopted policies barring cooperation with federal immigration officials to deport unauthorized migrants.

The distinction between the two sanctuaries is basic. Localities that have passed resolutions declaring themselves Second Amendment sanctuary jurisdictions are threatening to ignore laws enacted by duly elected state legislatures and signed by governors. Immigration-focused sanctuary localities are breaking no law; rather, they are refusing purely voluntary cooperation in service to federal law enforcement.

It’s no surprise that the editorial board has no problem whatsoever with sanctuary cities and illegal immigrants flouting America’s laws.

That’s a great question we all know the answer to.


Related:

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement