Thursday, June 25, 2026

Jackson's Concurring Opinion in Hemani Case Makes Laughable Argument Against Bruen

Jackson's Concurring Opinion in Hemani Case Makes Laughable Argument Against Bruen

AP Photo/Alex Brandon

The Supreme Court decision in NYSRPA v. Bruen is probably the most important ruling the Court has made on the Second Amendment in history. While Heller and McDonald are critical as well, the Bruen test is a simple, straightforward test that can and should be easily applied to gun control laws. Did something like that exist at the time of the nation's founding? Was there something like it during the time of incorporation? No, then knock it off.

But while the Hemani decision was ultimately unanimous, Justice Kentaji Brown Jackson wrote a concurring opinion, along with Justice Sonya Sotomayor, arguing that the Bruen decision needs to be revisited.

Along with Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Jackson is advising the court to review its 2022 ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen.

Jackson and Sotomayor said the 2022 decision is “unworkable” and that the court may need to “retire the failed Bruen experiment.” That test, according to Jackson, is based on centuries-old evidence that may not be relevant to today’s legal questions.

“It imposes on judges the unfamiliar and difficult tasks of sifting through centuries-old evidence in order to answer ‘contested historical questions,’ and ‘applying those answers to resolve contemporary problems,'” Jackson said in her opinion, per Law & Crime.


“Given those challenges, it is unsurprising that Bruen’s test is vulnerable to inconsistent and arbitrary application, as judges draw different conclusions from the same historical evidence and reach divergent assessments of the same laws.”

I find it interesting that Jackson and Sotomayor seem to think that applying history to whether something would align with the Founding Fathers' intentions is problematic for "contemporary problems." Never mind that we still look at their intentions on, say, the Fourth Amendment as it relates to your cell phone data or what's on your laptop. The historic norms were that your person and your property were largely off limits without a warrant. While frisking was one thing--the things in your pocket, for example--it was easy for the Court to decide that your cell phone was a different thing.

Why is it that guns are a different matter? Is it because the history doesn't align with what these two justices really wanted?

Unsurprisingly, some of the usual suspects agree with this nonsense completely.

Jonathan Lowy, president of Global Action on Gun Violence, shared similar concerns.

“While the court was correct that a gummy at bedtime should not automatically disqualify someone from guns, that’s because of 2026 views on marijuana use, not because of 18th- or 19th-century laws that now determine the fate of all gun laws,” Lowy said in a statement, per USA Today.

“Twenty-first century gun violence can’t be solved with 18th-century solutions.”

Yeah, it can.

Look, say what you want about gun rights, but since the Bruen decision, we've seen the homicide rate drop like a Russian tank turret after hitting its apex. If "18th-century solutions" were the problem, you should have seen the opposite. We've got more guns on the streets of America than at any other time in history. 

Gun rights keep Americans safe, just as they did when the Founding Fathers ratified the Second Amendment.

Further, just because the Court happened to issue a ruling that aligns with modern attitudes on marijuana use, the reality is that the case lines up well with those 18th-century laws that Lowy decries. There was a prohibition on carrying a gun while drunk, but not while being a drinker, and that's the entire point here. Yes, marijuana has gained a lot of acceptance during my lifetime, but the Bruen test supported that decision just as much, if not more so, than modern attitudes about pot.

There's no reason to relitigate the Bruen decision, and there's nothing wrong with it. The only issue is that too many in lower courts are contorting themselves to try and find a reason that sounds acceptable under that precedent that will let them restrict just about everything they wanted to see restricted before.

That's not Bruen's fault. That's because some judges can't be bothered to actually try to accept the decision based on the spirit of the ruling, rather than how they can manipulate the letter of it.

https://bearingarms.com/tomknighton/2026/06/22/jacksons-concurring-opinion-in-hemani-case-makes-laughable-argument-against-bruen-n1232922?utm_source=twdailypmvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

Trump Slashes South Africa HIV Funding Over Afrikaner Dispute

Trump Slashes South Africa HIV Funding Over Afrikaner Dispute

AP Photo/Themba Hadebe, File

South Africa spent more than a year betting that President Donald Trump was bluffing.

He wasn't.

The Trump administration is moving to phase out South Africa's remaining HIV/AIDS funding through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, better known as PEPFAR, after months of warnings over race-based policies, land expropriation, and the treatment of white Afrikaners.

South Africa has long been one of PEPFAR's largest beneficiaries and has roughly 7.8 million people living with HIV, the highest number in the world.

Trump laid the groundwork last year, signing an executive order accusing South Africa of discriminating against Afrikaners and directing agencies to halt aid where legally possible.

According to a Daily Caller exclusive, U.S. officials wanted stronger condemnation of race-based incitement, including the "Kill the Boer" chant; prevention of land expropriation without fair compensation; designation of rural crime as a priority; more law-enforcement resources in high-crime farming areas; alternatives to race-based economic mandates affecting American companies; and no interference with the administration's Afrikaner refugee program.

South Africa failed to meet those demands.

Trump's executive order cited South Africa's Expropriation Act of 2024, which the administration argued could allow the government to seize agricultural property without compensation. It also pointed to race-based policies that the White House said undermine equal opportunity.

Trump put the matter simply:

"The United States cannot support the government of South Africa's commission of rights violations in its country or its undermining United States foreign policy, which poses national security threats to our Nation, our allies, our African partners, and our interests."

The White House also cited South Africa's case against Israel at the International Court of Justice and its growing relationship with Iran 

The order directed agencies to halt aid to South Africa "to the maximum extent allowed by law" and prioritize refugee admissions for Afrikaners whom the administration says are facing racial discrimination.

The fight burst into public view in May 2025, when Trump hosted South African President Cyril Ramaphosa at the White House.

Trump confronted Ramaphosa with articles and video clips involving violence against white farmers and political rhetoric directed at Afrikaners, then pressed him on whether his government was protecting the minority community.

A State Department official said in a statement that South Africa had failed "to make demonstrable progress on policy requests by the administration" despite repeated discussions between the two governments.

The official added:

"The United States communicated to the South African government multiple times at many levels that PEPFAR funding would be terminated if they failed to address President Trump's concerns."

The administration is also done pretending South Africa needs a permanent American subsidy to run its own health-care system.

"South Africa is a middle-income country and is more than capable of supporting its own health programs," a State Department official said 

According to figures, South Africa received approximately $456 million in U.S. HIV/AIDS funding in 2024. That dropped to roughly $213 million in 2025 and has fallen further this year, with about $25 million allocated so far.

Until January 2025, U.S. funding accounted for roughly 18 percent of South Africa's HIV/AIDS budget.

South African officials have rejected accusations that the government discriminates against Afrikaners and defended Black Economic Empowerment policies as necessary to address inequalities left over from apartheid.

The country's health ministry has also said South Africa has been preparing for a future with less American assistance, with critical antiretroviral drug programs funded largely through a separate government mechanism.

None of that moved the White House.


Read More: 60 Minutes Attempts to Debunk Trump on South African Farmers, Produces a Hit Piece Instead

Trump Reminds the World About South Africa's 'Human Rights Abuses,' Drops Bad News for SA About Next G20


For years, American taxpayers helped fund one of the largest HIV programs in the world through PEPFAR. Trump spent more than a year warning Pretoria that the money would not keep flowing if its concerns went unanswered.

Pretoria can dispute the premise. It can argue that its policies are about correcting apartheid-era inequalities. It can insist Washington is misreading South Africa's domestic politics.

It cannot demand that American taxpayers keep funding business as usual.

Foreign aid should serve American interests. Countries receiving hundreds of millions of dollars from the United States should expect consequences when they pursue policies the White House views as discriminatory, anti-American, or hostile to U.S. allies.

South Africa was warned. It chose not to comply.

The left will call it cruel. The administration will call it accountability. The era of automatic taxpayer-funded indulgence for Pretoria appears to be ending.

https://redstate.com/ben-smith/2026/06/22/trump-slashes-south-africa-hiv-funding-over-afrikaner-dispute-n2203579?utm_source=rsmorningbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

Adam Schiff's Latest Elon Musk Wealth Grab Fantasy Is Even Worse Than It Sounds

Adam Schiff's Latest Elon Musk Wealth Grab Fantasy Is Even Worse Than It Sounds

AP Photo/Ben Curtis

We've seen a variety of Democrats make ridiculous remarks since Elon Musk became a trillionaire following the initial public offering (IPO) of his company, SpaceX. 

They all seemed to think this was the time to talk about how much the government should grab from Elon and/or billionaires to redistribute to those who didn't earn it, and punish success. The Democratic nominee for the Senate from Maine, the scandal-plagued Graham Platner, even said that they should make sure that Musk was the "last trillionaire." California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) said we needed to "democratize the economy."   

There was Democrat Rep. Ro Khanna (CA-17), who revealed why we should never vote for his party and had problems with math as he spoke about a 5 percent wealth tax on billionaires. 

This the basic difference.  

Republicans believe that that if you let the wealthy spend capital` it will make Americans prosperous.  

Democrats believe that the federal government investing in the healthcare & education of our people will make America prosperous & productive.

As I noted then, Democrats think that "prosperity" comes from taking more of your money because they know how to spend it for you. What an ad for why we shouldn't vote for them. 


READ MORE: Dem Accidentally Reveals Why We Should Never Vote for His Party


However, Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) apparently decided he wanted to top Khanna with an even worse idea. Actual redistribution of Elon's trillion to other people. 

First, he says you could distribute it to all American households. Then, he claims the trillion could pay for the college education of 7.7 million people. Finally, he suggests you could use it to pay for all child care costs from birth to 18 for 4.3 million kids. 

The Democrats are literally now proposing the idea of confiscating all someone's money. Can we talk again about how they are rushing headlong to embrace radical leftist thought? 

Leaving aside the questions of Schiff's math, Musk doesn't have a trillion dollars lying around in cash you can grab. It's locked up in the stock and the value of the companies. If you grab it, you destroy the companies and all they would provide, including the scientific advancement and the space exploration. You put all the tens of thousands of employees out of work. You destroy the investments that Americans have in his companies and probably tank the stock market, so you hurt all those people as well. 

Then you would probably cause billionaires to flee the country, if we had a government idiotic and communistic enough to do this, tanking the economy and the country even more. 

Then, too, can we talk about how bad they already are with the money they have taken from American taxpayers? It isn't Elon grabbing your money; it's the government. Elon was actually working hard to save us money when he was helping out the Trump administration with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Elon has created value, while politicians have created debt. 

But hey, just trust the Democrats, bro. They really mean well, even though the government has already gotten trillions and not done any of these things. All you need to do is give them more money. Not to mention, it isn't the role of the government to pay for the things he's talking about. 

Then, to top it off, Schiff doubled down on it after the backlash, posting Fox's take on his video, calling it (appropriately) a "war on success." 

Fox News: Adam Schiff points out how far $1 TRILLION would go to help Americans afford the cost of living if tax shelters didn’t allow it all to go to one person.  

Me: Yup.

Nope. Fox didn't say in that clip, "if tax shelters didn't allow it all to go to one person." That doesn't even make sense, as the money is wrapped up in stock value, not tax shelters.

Schiff called Musk's success a "product of a corrupt system." Musk's success is due to hard work and ingenuity. He earned it. Meanwhile, Schiff has been part of the system that just keeps spending more and piling up the debt, so what is he even saying? 

Any Democrat who comes up with these kinds of ideas should be willing to put up some of their own money. After all, if they care about "income inequality," it's the least they can do if they're going to push these ideas.

https://redstate.com/nick-arama/2026/06/21/schiff-remarks-about-elon-n2203568?utm_source=rsmorningbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Updated: DHS Hammers Media Defending Rioters Who 'Violently Obstructed, Assaulted' Agents; Trump Responds

Updated: DHS Hammers Media Defending Rioters Who 'Violently Obstructed, Assaulted' Agents; Trump Responds

AP Photo/Allison Robbert

You can count on the legacy media to run cover for left-wing criminal goblins, can't you? The latest example of this comes in the form of some propagandizing by The Washington Post, which has now drawn a sharp reply from the Trump administration's Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in a recent X post.

The DHS post reads:

This headline is ridiculous. These violent rioters are facing federal charges because they violently obstructed and assaulted law enforcement officers and destroyed government property. Shame on the @washingtonpost for defending these Antifa rioters’ violence against our law enforcement.

The original WaPo post read:

15 people were charged with conspiring to impede or injure federal officers in what the DOJ called an antifa-linked plot targeting agents during Trump’s immigration operation. Defendants say the “antifa” label is being used to criminalize dissent.

Is it belaboring the obvious to note that the "antifa label" is being used, not by DHS, but by, you know, the actual Antifa? The vicious little fascists who call themselves "anti-fascist"? These people? 

The Department of Homeland Security is right to call out WaPo's rather ridiculous assertion.


Read More: Chaos in New Jersey: Suspect Hits ICE Agent, Agent Fires Back

Homeland Security Clocks Anti-Ice NJ Dems Mad That DHS Denied Access to Delaney Hall With Reality


There is, though, no shame in the editorial offices at The Washington Post. Here's the article linked to in the Post's X comment.

Short for “anti-fascists,” antifa is a loosely knit movement of far-left activists. They are often anti-capitalist or anti-state, and oppose fascism and right-wing ideologies, which has made them a target of the Trump administration

But some of the defendants and their attorneys said they did not all belong to those groups, that the groups were mischaracterized and that the prosecutions are politically motivated. They said the indictment is designed to intimidate those who resisted the federal operation and to appease Trump.

And instead of dampening dissent, they already see signs that the indictment has reawakened activist networks that had gone dormant in the months after federal officials drew down the immigration operation.

Antifa doesn't just oppose "fascism and right-wing ideologies." They oppose free trade - or what WaPo calls capitalism, and which is honestly nothing more than people using their own skills, experiences, assets, and resources to their own economic benefit without the interference of government. They oppose the Constitution. They oppose federalism. They oppose anything and anyone that's to the political right of Josef Stalin, and they are willing to attack federal agents and even ordinary citizens if it might serve their agenda. We've seen this time and again.

Of course, these defendants are claiming, through their attorneys, that they aren't affiliated with Antifa, and any such affiliation is a hard thing to prove when the group is, by design, decentralized and organized into small, semi-autonomous cells, like most terror groups are.

But WaPo's comments here are a distraction. The facts are that these people stand accused of interfering with and even attacking federal law enforcement in the legal performance of their duties, and they will receive their due process. That's what really matters. The Washington Post's comments are nothing more than a distraction, as DHS has rightly pointed out.

Editor's Note: this article was edited for clarity post-publication.

UPDATE [12:42 PM Eastern]: President Trump has just shared his take on the matter in a new Truth Social post, which includes a poll on what the DHS agents should be called:

It reads:

POLL: ICE has been abused by the Fake News Media at levels never seen before. They are Great Patriots who work hard, and do a fantastic job in a very hostile environment. Much of this hostility is caused by the Dumocrats and the Fake News. The concept I have had for quite some time — A strong feeling that the name of these Patriots, “ICE,” should be changed to, “NICE,” in that it will totally discombobulate Crooked, Dishonest, and Unpatriotic Reporters and Journalists. For them to say, “We went to a NICE Facility today,” as opposed to “ICE” or, “NICE Agents have deported a Violent Drug Dealer,” they won’t be able to handle it, they will go totally crazy! All it means is adding an “N” (“National”) to “ICE (“Immigration and Customs Enforcement”) — A much more prestigious name. Everyone loves it, but I have been told by the legendary Tom Homan that the Agents do not love it as much as the other population. Who thinks that we should add an “N” to change the name of “ICE” to “NICE?”

 Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DJT

https://redstate.com/wardclark/2026/06/20/homeland-security-now-hammering-washington-post-for-backing-antifa-violence-n2203545?utm_source=rsmorningbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl


Minnesota Madness: 6 Years Later, Twin Cities Still Grapple With Disastrous Effects of George Floyd Riots

Minnesota Madness: 6 Years Later, Twin Cities Still Grapple With Disastrous Effects of George Floyd Riots

AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Has it really been over six years since the George Floyd rioters torched significant portions of Minneapolis? It feels fresher than that, maybe because parts of me still can’t quite believe what was allowed to happen in a major American city in the 21st century.

The riots, which occurred during the COVID crisis, marked a seminal moment in my political evolution. I had been aware for years that the Left was not in favor of celebrating and improving our country, but the adoration of the violence by Democrats and the mainstream media was as appalling as anything I’d ever seen. Meanwhile, their almost unfathomable hypocrisy was exposed by their insistence that if you left your house to see your dying mother in a nursing home, you were an evil COVID denier and spreader… Unless you planned on rioting. Well, that was different.

You weren’t breaking protocol; you were being virtuous.

It was at that moment in history that I realized we weren't just dealing with people with different political opinions, we were facing an existential crisis for the Republic, one which is still being fought over today.

Remember: Vandals, looters and agitators raged in the city for five horrific days after George Floyd, an African American male with a lengthy rap sheet, died after a confrontation with police. Although a 19-year veteran of the MPD, former Officer Derek Chauvin, sits in a federal prison after being convicted of four charges — including third‑degree murder — controversy still rages over whether Floyd died because of a fentanyl overdose or because of Chauvin’s restraining technique.

The riots caused over $500 million in damages as over 1,500 buildings were partially or utterly destroyed — the costliest civil unrest in U.S. history. Gov. Tim Walz was notoriously slow to act as his wife enjoyed the smell of burning tires.

Over half a decade later, the Twin Cities are still feeling the effects, according to The Washington Examiner:

Market valuations for downtown Minneapolis commercial buildings have dropped by about $3.4 billion from 2021 to 2026, or about 45%, according to Minneapolis City Councilman Michael Rainville, who said that the number is still dropping. According to Rainville, “every renter, every homeowner, every small business building owner outside downtown is making up for that with their property tax.” Minneapolis homeowners were responsible for 49.4% of property taxes in 2021, but that share has risen to 55.6%.

Many businesses were caught between a rock and a hard place:

These struggles are a holdover from the chaos and disorder brought by the Black Lives Matter summer of 2020, which had businesses contemplating fleeing the city. Businesses were forced to close as they were caught up in “no-go zones,” where they were subject to the whims of violent rioters and criminals because the beleaguered police department wouldn’t even send officers to accompany ambulances, despite paramedics requesting the extra protection. As of last year, local media detailed how businesses are still “hoping they can go back to what they remember before everything changed in 2020.”


MORE MINNY: Too Funny: Trump Now More Popular Than Walz in Deep Blue Minnesota

Tim Walz Had the Power to Stop the Fraud in Minnesota - He Didn't


Is Minneapolis now on a better path? If so, it’s got a long, long way to go:

Minneapolis now has George Floyd Square, but it also sports numerous empty lots where people’s dreams once stood, and many small business owners are still struggling just to keep their doors open. State leaders say things are on the upswing, but a devastating 2025 report printed in, of all places, The Minnesota Star Tribune, revealed a much darker reality:

Serious crime is way up since before the death of George Floyd. In Minneapolis, homicides increased 43%, auto theft surged 67% and vandalism rose 73%, per data from the Minneapolis Crime Dashboard comparing Jan. 1-Sept. 15, 2019, vs. Jan. 1-Sept. 15, 2025. While facing some of the highest rates of crime and violence in Minneapolis’s history, CBS News reports, the Minneapolis police force is down 40% in the last four years.

In the downtowns of Minneapolis and St. Paul, many businesses are not flourishing. Some have closed. Some have left.

Investment is down — due to elevated risk assessments by institutional investors. Minneapolis-St. Paul has long punched above its weight attracting institutional investment, but that has changed since 2020. Institutional investors tell Minneapolis commercial real estate leaders it’s “career suicide” to recommend this area to investment committees. They see Minneapolis-St. Paul like they see Portland, Ore., and Oakland, Calif.

Job growth here is not a reality. Jobs are in decline — not just relative to our own history but relative to most of the rest of the nation today. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, since 2020 (the last five years) Minneapolis-St. Paul sits at a net negative of 26,900 jobs and ranks 48th out of 49 markets measured (only San Francisco performs worse). The top 10 markets added a cumulative 2.28 million net new jobs.

Most Minnesota public school students are now failing science, math and reading, according to annual testing assessments.

The article was written by investigative reporter Rick Kupchella, who produced a documentary on Minnesota called “A Precarious State.” I’m amazed the Star-Tribune even ran the piece, and didn’t immediately set fire to the computer it was written on.

One of the most amazing things about this story — and the myriad others coming out of the Gopher State exposing the epic level of corruption that’s evidently a way of life there — is that Kamala Harris vetted Tim Walz and thought he’d be a good vice president. If being good at watching things go up in flames were a requirement, I guess Tim and his wife would certainly fit the bill.

Meanwhile, Minneapolis continues to scratch the scars of inaction, six years later. When you hear the phrase, “leftist Democrats want to burn it all down,” it’s not just a euphemism. 

Apparently, many of them mean it quite literally.

https://redstate.com/bobhoge/2026/06/21/minnesota-madness-6-years-later-twin-cities-still-grapple-with-disastrous-effects-of-george-floyd-riots-n2203561?utm_source=rsmorningbriefingvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

Rep. Hunt: Racial Argument Against Voter ID Is ‘Insulting’

Rep. Hunt: Racial Argument Against Voter ID Is ‘Insulting’

AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) emphasized to Congress the importance of passing the election integrity SAVE America Act and rejected woke arguments against voter ID as racist and condescending.

Democrats’ idiotic arguments against requiring ID to vote include claiming that black Americans are somehow mysteriously unable to get IDs. Aside from the obvious elitism and racial prejudice of such a claim, it is practically impossible to live in America and not have identification. They are required at doctor’s offices, airports, bars, liquor stores, car rentals, welfare programs, and many more places. But somehow expecting IDs at polling places is unreasonable? 

Hunt sarcastically said, “I've been black for my entire life. I had to bring up the most racist thing I've ever heard [which] is the insinuation by Democrats that black and brown Americans are too stupid to get an ID to vote, just like everybody else.”

The congressman continued, “I call this the soft bigotry of low expectations. Figuring out how to vote in this country is a very low bar, and we could all figure it out regard of your race, religion, color, or creed, and we should all want free and fair elections.” 

Except Democrats know they cannot win so many elections as they do without fraud, nor can they expand their control to new areas. They have no positive results to run on, no record of making any city or state more prosperous and more free. They need fraud to survive.

Hunt told Congress, “With me today — I'm not gonna pull mine out this time, but I have six forms of government-issued ID. How did I acquire that? Personal responsibility in this country. I've also heard a lot about Jim Crow here today. I'm here to tell you, Jim Crow is over, and I know it because my parents grew up in it.”

Related: FBI Agents on L.A.’s Homeless Skid Row for Election Fraud Probe

Democrats were the party of Jim Crow, ironically. But now they scream “racism” whenever anyone points out that they are pushing an awful policy. Democrats cheapen and exploit the suffering their predecessors caused for political reasons.

As Hunt said, “And I think it's actually insulting to those that actually experienced the ills of Jim Crow” to compare getting an ID to that era. “Having an ID to vote in our national election should be a requirement, which is why I stand [here] today, urging my colleagues on the left to support this bill. If you want secure elections, if you want your vote to count, vote for the Save Act.”

Unfortunately, that’s precisely what Democrats don’t want. This debate was never about IDs, or about black Americans’ access to IDs, or about constitutionality. It was always about one political party believing in our Republic’s system of elections, and the other party hating our Republic’s system of government and believing they should decide who our leaders are instead of We the People.

https://pjmedia.com/catherinesalgado/2026/06/19/rep-hunt-racial-argument-against-voter-id-is-insulting-n4954167?utm_source=pjmediavip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl_pm