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Gun-toting teens alarm residents
spokesmanreview.com ^ | 05-31-07 | Hope Brumbach

Posted on 06/01/2007 1:26:08 PM PDT by em2vn

POST FALLS – Zach Doty typically wears a tie and dress shirt to church. But lately, a new accessory of his is raising alarm in Post Falls.

After turning 18 last month, the Post Falls teenager began strapping a loaded 9 mm Glock 19 handgun to his belt every day. He totes it in full view to Bible studies, the public library, city parks and neighborhood stores and on walks around town.

His 15-year-old brother, Stephen, has joined him, carrying a loaded Ruger .22-caliber rifle slung over his shoulder.

The brothers, who are home-schooled, say they're flexing their Second Amendment right, which allows citizens to bear arms. They say they're protecting themselves and others, deterring crime and making a statement about constitutional freedoms.

"If you don't exercise a right, eventually it will go away," Zach Doty said last week, a handgun tucked in a holster on his hip. "I'd like to raise people's awareness that it's a right, and I hope to encourage others to exercise that right."

The brothers are stirring up concern about citizen safety and gun responsibility.

Residents have alerted police and complained to the city. Police officers have stopped the boys on several occasions in the past six weeks.

And city officials say the brothers' action may lead to restrictions on carrying weapons on public property within city limits. At this time, the city doesn't have an ordinance that prohibits firearms in most public buildings.

"It obviously has created some controversy in the community. …We are fielding a significant number of calls from concerned citizens about how we're going to react to this and how we're going to ensure their safety is upheld," Post Falls City Administrator Eric Keck said. "It really is a matter of defining things very carefully and balancing maintaining one's rights and what has become the norm of society. It's something we're really going to have to examine."


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism
KEYWORDS: banglist; bible; idaho; rifle; secondamendment
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To: robertpaulsen; beltfed308
"You, sir, are the reason we have so many damn laws."

Actually, you have it backwards. Your fear and distrust are what politicians use to install more control over their subjects, all in the name of the public good, of course.

"Corruptissima re publica plurimae leges."
(The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws.) -- Tacitus, Annales, 1st century A.D.

Moreover, your statements betray your utter distrust of your fellow citizens. While you may hold such feelings dear to your heart, there is nothing there to be proud of.

Stay well,

Click the Gadsden flag for pro-gun resources!

161 posted on 06/02/2007 12:56:17 PM PDT by Joe Brower (Sheep have three speeds: "graze", "stampede" and "cower".)
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To: philetus

And that was probably decades ago. I think that it’s a shame that the US has been ‘pussified’ and that many are affraid of guns. I own dozens of guns. However, if I am going to carry a gun today... it’s going to be concealed.


162 posted on 06/02/2007 1:26:02 PM PDT by BigTom85 (Proud Gun Owner and Member of NRA)
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To: em2vn
Find the phrase in the US constitution that GUARANTEES person the right to vote. There is none. Guidelines exist. However, it's not in the Constitution. Neal Boortz has written on this topic many times.

As far as your supreme court goes. I dont get what you're trying to say? What was the point of bringing that up?
163 posted on 06/02/2007 1:30:55 PM PDT by BigTom85 (Proud Gun Owner and Member of NRA)
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To: em2vn

Let me clarify.... there is NO mention of a right to vote in the US constitution.

However, the states include guidelines it in their constitutions. It’s better off that way anyway.


164 posted on 06/02/2007 1:37:25 PM PDT by BigTom85 (Proud Gun Owner and Member of NRA)
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To: SittinYonder
"No ... a right is a right. It's not a right that society grants, but a right from God."

It is so stated in the Shooter's Bible. Ooops. Wrong Bible lol.

165 posted on 06/02/2007 1:38:06 PM PDT by verity (Muhammed and Harry Reid are Dirt Bags)
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To: EEDUDE
Concealed carry means just that in some places. Here in Indiana, allowing someone to see that you are carrying can be considered “brandishing” a weapon, and can get you in trouble These two were "open" carrying. Permit for concealed not necessary when not concealed. If open carry is not illegal it is legal by default. Brandishing "usually" requires displaying in a "threatening manner". While it may be that the government in Indiana will harass someone, it is not necessarily illegal. Of course, I have not checked Indiana law, but am just addressing open and concealed carry concepts in general.
166 posted on 06/02/2007 4:19:30 PM PDT by School of Rational Thought (Looking for work)
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To: EEDUDE
Concealed carry means just that in some places. Here in Indiana, allowing someone to see that you are carrying can be considered “brandishing” a weapon, and can get you in trouble These two were "open" carrying. Permit for concealed not necessary when not concealed. If open carry is not illegal it is legal by default. Brandishing "usually" requires displaying in a "threatening manner". While it may be that the government in Indiana will harass someone, it is not necessarily illegal. Of course, I have not checked Indiana law, but am just addressing open and concealed carry concepts in general.
167 posted on 06/02/2007 4:19:37 PM PDT by School of Rational Thought (Looking for work)
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To: BigTom85

“Let me clarify.... there is NO mention of a right to vote in the US constitution.”

I believe you are correct. The federal constitution tells us that we will have two senators and a certain amount of congressman as determined by the census etc. It also tells us that the Pres and VP are elected by the electors chosen from each state. It is up to the states as to how the senators and electors are chosen. Obviously, all states currently do it by popular vote.

At one time, the senators were chosen by each states legislature and there was no popular election for them.

Another thing I learned from David McCollough’s pulitzer prize winning novel concerning Samuel Adams is that back during their time people did not openly campaign for President. It was considered unseemly. My how things have changed...


168 posted on 06/02/2007 7:31:48 PM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: Old Teufel Hunden
You are half correct. The other intent of our founding fathers in writing the bill of rights (that is part of the federal constitution) is to outline basic human rights that they stated did not come from the government, but come from your creator. The only role of the government in this case is to outline those rights and safeguard those rights for us. Rights such as free speech, unreasonable search and seizures, right against self incrimination, right to a speedy trial etc. Among those listed rights is also the right to keep and bear arms.

I'm afraid you'll have to dig a bit deeper than that. You are probably not aware that the Bill of Rights was a big controversy during ratification. You would probably think that there is no way freedom-loving colonials would ever object to having those rights enshrined like that, but they did. Here's why: a good number of men thought that outlining specific rights that the federal government could not violate would be mistakenly interpreted as meaning that those were the ONLY rights that the people had which were to be protected. However, others of the convention thought that those particular rights were so important to be protected from abuses by any central government, that they made the BOR anyway.

The most important concept to grasp is that the Founders were extremely fearful of a powerful centralized government. The Constitution was their effort to protect against this central government. The federal governments powers were to be "few and defined", so that they would not interfere with the sovereign States, nor exert any power over the people as individuals. Saying that the federal government has a bunch of rules that are supreme and that its own members would interpret that bunch of rules, is tantamount to saying that local governments have NO power, which is where we are finding ourselves today.

One more question for you: if the US Constitution, at the time of its ratification, was considered to overrule State law, then why would ANY state have bothered to create a state constitution, which usually mirrored the federal Constitution? There is only one reason, and that is that the States did not think the US federal government had authority over them, and therefore state constitutions were necessary to protect those very same rights for state citizens that were protected at the federal level.
169 posted on 06/02/2007 9:47:40 PM PDT by fr_freak
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To: Joe Brower
"Your fear and distrust are what politicians use to install more control over their subjects, all in the name of the public good, of course."

I see. The laws we now have against swearing in public in front of children came about because of my "fear and distrust". Not because some yahoo declared he had the constitutional "right" to say "F$%^ the Yankees" at a baseball game in front of my 8-year-old.

"Moreover, your statements betray your utter distrust of your fellow citizens."

More like disgust than distrust. Directed at those who lack the common sense and the common courtesy to honor the "rights" of others.

170 posted on 06/03/2007 5:59:14 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Old Teufel Hunden
"That means that the federal government has a duty to protect our civil rights as outlined in the bill of rights."

The Bill of Rights, as written, was to protect those rights from federal infringement only. States were free to infringe on those rights, and were guided only by their state constitution.

The concept is called "federalism". One of the things the 14th amendment destroyed.

171 posted on 06/03/2007 6:17:14 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Old Teufel Hunden
"The federal government does have a right to protect the first amendment if it is being violated in a public school."

That is true today. It wasn't always the case.

The U.S. Supreme Court also "protects" the first amendment by declaring that nude dancing is "speech" and now every state must allow it. They have also declared political ads 60 days before an election to NOT be protected speech. Go figure.

They have declared abortion to be a protected "right" that every state must now honor. Homosexual sodomy must also be allowed by every state. Private property taken by corporations? Sure, that's eminent domain.

It's not so much that the U.S. Supreme Court is misinterpreting the constitution. It's the fact that their decision affects every state rather than just federal law. Five justices run the entire United States. NOT what the Founding Fathers had in mind.

172 posted on 06/03/2007 6:27:12 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: fr_freak

“You are probably not aware that the Bill of Rights was a big controversy during ratification.”

I understand all of this. I did not think that my writing a novel on the whole subject of the constitution would prove anything. What you fail to understand is that most of the original 13 colonies state constitution were written before the federal constitution. That’s why they are similar.

James Madison is generally credited with writing the first 10 amendments or Bill of Rights. He patterned it after the Virginia constitution which he also had a major hand in writing.

The Bill of Rights was one of the first things that was passed in the first legislative session of Congress. Yes, it had a lot of different dissenters for many reasons. George Washington was against it because he felt that those things outlined in it were so self evident that they did not need to be codified.

All of these things miss the point I was trying to make to you. That is that there are two types of laws in the BOR. The first as you mentioned is to restrain the government. The second type of law is to codify civil liberties (or rights) that are guaranteed to every American citizen, not by the government but by their creator. The federal government’s only duty in these instances is to protect those rights (such as the second amendment). In other words, it would be illegal to completely ban the ownership of guns to law abiding American citizens by any state. That is essentially the ruling that came down in the recent Parker decision in Washington DC. The court in essence ruled that you can’t just ban guns. It was the correct lawful scholarly decision.


173 posted on 06/03/2007 6:30:23 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: robertpaulsen

“It’s not so much that the U.S. Supreme Court is misinterpreting the constitution. It’s the fact that their decision affects every state rather than just federal law. Five justices run the entire United States. NOT what the Founding Fathers had in mind.”

I agree with you about the SCOTUS. However, your beef with them is not in interpreting the law, but making new laws. Such as the Kilo decision and Roe vs. Wade. They essentially invented law and it’s ridiculous. We need to get more justices that understand that their job is to intrepret existing law and not make new ones. That is the legislature’s job...


174 posted on 06/03/2007 6:33:45 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: robertpaulsen

“States were free to infringe on those rights, and were guided only by their state constitution.”

So you believe that at one time a state could confiscate everyone’s guns if they wanted to? Violate other civil liberties as guaranteed in the constitution and set up a dictatorship? That the federal government would have nothing to say about that? I think you are mistaken.

Please don’t say that would violate their own state constitution. Acording to your reasoning, someone could come in and abolish the state constitution and the federal government would be okay with that also.

See my recent replies on this subject. The federal government guarantees certain liberties to all citizens and no other government underneath that could ever take those things away.


175 posted on 06/03/2007 6:38:20 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: beltfed308
"Incidentally for one who claims the 2nd is only protected by their state constitution your slip is showing."

I don't understand. I never said the kids couldn't carry openly. I just said it wasn't a good idea.

176 posted on 06/03/2007 6:38:24 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Responsibility2nd
These boys are screwing up.

what have they done that is irresponsible?

177 posted on 06/03/2007 6:41:51 AM PDT by cbkaty (I may not always post...but I am always here......)
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To: robertpaulsen
I just said it wasn't a good idea.

Honestly...why do you think this? Whether concealed or open carry, the defensive capability is the same.

Open carry, screams...DONT ATTEMPT TO ROB ME....DONT ATTEMPT TO KILL ME OR MY FAMILY....DONT JACK WITH ME!

178 posted on 06/03/2007 6:45:54 AM PDT by cbkaty (I may not always post...but I am always here......)
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To: Old Teufel Hunden
"Violate other civil liberties as guaranteed in the constitution and set up a dictatorship?"

No. The U.S. Constitution, Article IV, Section 4, guarantees to each state a republican form of government.

"So you believe that at one time a state could confiscate everyone’s guns if they wanted to?"

All guns? No. That would interfere with Congress' power to "call forth the Militia". Besides, what state would do that? What citizens would allow their state to do that?

But each state may reasonably regulate guns. Which is why some states, for example, allow concealed carry and some don't. If this right was protected by the second amendment, wouldn't every state have to allow it? Can you explain that please?

"The federal government guarantees certain liberties to all citizens and no other government underneath that could ever take those things away."

They do now. But that wasn't the way the Bill of Rights was written.

States were free to limit speech and the press. Many did. They were free to search without a warrant. Even for those states that required a warrant, evidence could be admitted in court that was obtained without a warrant. Some states still don't allow a jury trial in civil cases, though it's right there in the 7th amendment. Some states will try citizens for a capital crime, such as murder, without using a Grand Jury to indict, even though the 5th amendment requires one.

This should help, specifically the sections entitled "Bar to Federal Action" and "Incorporation".

179 posted on 06/03/2007 7:11:32 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: cbkaty
Honestly...why do you think this?"

Well, the fact that the local citizens are "alarmed", articles are being written, this has become national news, and we're now debating it, should be your first clues.

I suppose if your guideline in life is, "Is this legal or isn't it?", then I can understand why you're perplexed. But there are other factors -- morality, common sense, civility, courtesy, manners, respect for others, consideration, etc. -- that come into play when operating within a society.

If everyone in that city, or most everyone, walked around carrying guns I'd feel differently. But it appears as though these are the only two. Plus they're teens and they're doing it, not because they've been threatened or because they feel unsafe, but because they can.

Of course they have a right to do it. Just as you have the right to say "F$%^" in public. Just don't be surprised when your "right" to do that is curtailed because you've abused it once too often.

"Open carry, screams...DONT ATTEMPT TO ROB ME....DONT ATTEMPT TO KILL ME OR MY FAMILY....DONT JACK WITH ME!"

In their case, open carry screams, "Look at me!"

180 posted on 06/03/2007 7:30:05 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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