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January 1, Supreme Court Justice’s Gun Rights Panic Reveals Left’s True Agenda

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Wyatt’s Take

  • Biden’s Supreme Court pick just admitted liberals fear judges might actually follow the Constitution on guns
  • Justice complains Second Amendment protections could be ‘privileged’ — as if constitutional rights need apologies
  • Her dissent exposes the left’s endgame: treat your gun rights as negotiable government favors

A Biden-appointed Supreme Court justice just gave away the game on gun control. In a revealing dissent, she’s openly worried that judges across America might start — brace yourself — actually applying the Second Amendment the way the Founders wrote it.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson penned a dissent dripping with anxiety over lower courts taking gun rights seriously. Her concern? That protecting the right to keep and bear arms might become too important in the eyes of judges nationwide.

She warned against what she called “privileging access to firearms above all else.” Let that sink in. A Supreme Court justice is fretting that constitutional protections for your gun rights might be treated as… constitutional protections.

The case involved a federal law banning guns for people under domestic violence restraining orders. The Court sent it back for reconsideration under proper Second Amendment analysis — the kind of scrutiny the left desperately wants to avoid.

Jackson wrote in her dissent:

“The Court’s decision to remand will, I fear, prove more consequential than it might initially seem, particularly for vulnerable populations. Going forward, in the absence of more specific guidance, lower courts will now be left to address the broad spectrum of unprecedented questions that litigants have and will continue to raise.”

Translation: She’s worried judges might actually have to treat the Second Amendment like the First Amendment — as a real right that can’t be easily swept aside whenever government decides it’s inconvenient.

Her dissent continued with barely concealed alarm:

“I am concerned that, in its haste to remand so that the Government has an opportunity to argue the merits of its chosen analogues in the first instance, the Court has glossed over serious legal questions that its recent precedents have raised about the bounds of permissible gun regulation in this country.”

The “serious legal questions” she’s hand-wringing over? Whether Americans actually have the constitutional rights explicitly guaranteed to them in the Bill of Rights.

What’s really happening here is the left’s panic that their decades-long project of treating gun rights as second-class is crumbling. The Supreme Court’s recent decisions have made clear that “shall not be infringed” actually means something.

Jackson’s worry about “privileging” gun rights reveals the entire progressive mindset. They see constitutional rights not as sacred protections against government overreach, but as obstacles to their policy preferences. When courts take rights seriously, the left complains those rights are being “privileged.”

Nobody says judges are “privileging” free speech when they strike down censorship laws. Nobody complains about “privileging” due process when courts protect criminal defendants. But let a court actually apply the Second Amendment as written, and suddenly we need to worry about “privileging” constitutional rights.

The justice’s anxiety is really about losing control. For years, federal courts largely rubber-stamped gun restrictions, inventing tests and standards that existed nowhere in the Constitution. The Supreme Court’s recent course correction has sent shockwaves through the judicial system.

Now lower courts are actually asking whether gun laws pass constitutional muster. They’re examining historical precedent. They’re requiring the government to justify restrictions. In other words, they’re doing their jobs — and the left is terrified.

Jackson’s dissent inadvertently makes the strongest case for why the current approach is exactly right. If a Supreme Court justice is this worried about judges taking constitutional rights seriously, that’s a sign we’re finally on the right track.

The Second Amendment doesn’t have an asterisk. It doesn’t say “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed, except when judges decide there are really good policy reasons.” It’s absolute language, and it’s about time our courts treated it that way.

What Jackson calls “privileging access to firearms” is really just respecting the Constitution. The Founders put gun rights in the Bill of Rights for a reason — they’re fundamental to liberty and self-governance. Treating them as such isn’t privileging them; it’s honoring our founding document.

Her concern about “vulnerable populations” is telling too. Progressives always claim gun control protects the vulnerable, but disarmament leaves ordinary Americans defenseless against criminals who ignore laws. The truly vulnerable are those stripped of their ability to protect themselves.

The remand in this case simply requires lower courts to properly analyze whether the restriction fits within historical traditions of firearms regulation. That’s not radical — it’s Constitutional Law 101. But to the left, requiring actual constitutional analysis feels like extremism.

Jackson’s dissent is a roadmap to the gun-control movement’s deepest fears. They’ve spent decades building a regulatory regime on shaky constitutional ground. Now that foundation is being tested, and they know it won’t hold.

Every time a court applies rigorous Second Amendment scrutiny, another gun control measure falls. Every time judges demand historical justification for restrictions, the government comes up empty. The left’s house of cards is collapsing, one honest legal opinion at a time.

That’s why Jackson is so worried. Not because judges are being reckless, but because they’re being honest. Not because rights are being “privileged,” but because they’re finally being protected.

The Constitution is clear. The Second Amendment is plain. And despite the left’s decades of distortions, American courts are remembering what “shall not be infringed” actually means.

Why It Matters

When a Supreme Court justice worries out loud that your constitutional rights might be taken too seriously, you know exactly where she stands. For working Americans who depend on firearms for protection, sport, and heritage, this dissent is a stark reminder: the left views your Second Amendment rights as negotiable privileges, not sacred protections. The fight to preserve your gun rights isn’t a culture war distraction — it’s the front line in defending the Constitution itself against judges who see it as an obstacle rather than the supreme law of the land.

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Wyatt Porter is a seasoned writer and constitutional scholar who brings a rugged authenticity and deep-seated patriotism to his work. Born and raised in small-town America, Wyatt grew up on a farm, where he learned the value of hard work and the pride that comes from it. As a conservative voice, he writes with the insight of a historian and the grit of a lifelong laborer, blending logic with a sharp wit. Wyatt’s work captures the struggles and triumphs of everyday Americans, offering readers a fresh perspective grounded in traditional values, individual freedom, and an unwavering love for his country.




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