New York Uses Historic Gun Bans Against Native Americans, Catholics to Justify Current Restrictions in Court Filing

The Empire State believes its gun-carry restrictions are similar to racist gun bans from the past, and that’s why they should be upheld.

New York cited historical bans on gun ownership by Native Americans and Catholics to support its current concealed-carry permitting law. The state argued in a Monday filing its “good moral character” clause, which allows officials to deny permits to those they don’t feel are good people, is rooted in the historical tradition of “Anglo-American” gun regulations. It first pointed to several colonial gun bans as analogous to its own law.

“From the early days of English settlement in America, the colonies sought to prevent Native American tribes from acquiring firearms, passing laws forbidding the sale and trading of arms to Indigenous people,” the filing from the office of Attorney General Letitia James (D.) reads.
Source: The Reload
Guns by Douglas Rampage, is licensed under Flickr Public Domain Mark 1.0

Gun Dynamics® in the Media

OANN
reuters
US News & World Report
Nasdaq
Forbes
GUN WORLD
NYT
Newsmax
guns.com
yahoo
AAN
Circa
yournews
baltimore post
dailyworld
Christian Science Monitor
Forextv
Longroom
bitcoinlove
investing.com
usweekly
newstage
wallstreet reporter
The Gun Feed
techjollof
peoples trust toronto
compuserve