Oral argument in Wolford v. Lopez, heard on January 20, 2026, is well worth taking the time to watch. Wolford v. Lopez Oral Argument The Supreme Court heard oral argument in Wolford v. Lopez, a case examining whether Hawaii may prohibit the carry of handguns on private property that is open to the public, such as
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Wolford v. Lopez was argued before the Supreme Court this Tuesday. This case challenges Hawaii’s “Vampire Rule,” which makes it a crime for licensed concealed-carry permit holders to bring a handgun onto private property open to the public (e.g., stores, restaurants, etc.) without the owner’s explicit permission. Hawaii essentially inverted the default to “no guns allowed” unless the
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The nation’s top court appeared doubtful that the Aloha State’s expansive gun-carry ban is compatible with the Second Amendment. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) held oral arguments in Wolford v. Lopez. That’s the case that challenges Hawaii’s law that reverses the typical presumption and requires those with concealed carry permits to obtain
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New York – -(AmmoLand.com)- At first glance, Wolford v. Lopez appears to present a narrow, technical dispute about firearms carried on private property open to the public. But appearances can be deceiving. As Attorney Roger J. Katz explains in his full legal analysis, the case before the U.S. Supreme Court is far more consequential—and potentially far more dangerous—than the
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The Second Amendment is not a suggestion, not a privilege, and not a right that evaporates when lawmakers grow uncomfortable with armed citizens. As the Supreme Court prepares to hear Wolford v. Lopez, No. 24-1046, this case is about far more than Hawaii’s so-called “Vampire Rule.” It is about whether states—and the federal courts that enable
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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court heard nearly two hours of argument Tuesday, January 20, 2026, in Wolford v. Lopez, a Second Amendment case that could decide whether states can make “no guns” the default rule for private property that’s open to the public—unless the owner gives express permission. At the center is a Hawaii law passed after New York State Rifle & Pistol
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A bee does not waste its energy trying to convince a fly that honey is better than shit. I often see pro-gun rights posts get the same response: “You’re preaching to the choir. How do we reach the anti-gunners?” Here’s the truth: most anti-gunners aren’t interested in facts that would change their minds. Some arguments
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The big takeaway is that you can’t win a confrontation with someone who has nothing to lose. When you decide to trade insults or posture back at an enraged person, you’re handing them the keys to your future. You might be “right” about the car accident, but being right doesn’t matter if you’re not around
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You shouldn’t become a criminal because someone else committed a crime. Georgia’s bill stops local governments from punishing lawful gun owners after theft and restores statewide constitutional protections. The Georgia Senate on Tuesday passed its first bill of the session, which would ban local governments from requiring gun owners to lock their firearms in vehicles.
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Hawaii’s modern gun-control narrative traces back to its monarchy and, in doing so underscores the very principle behind the Second Amendment. Firearms first entered the islands under Kamehameha the Great, who acquired them from foreigners and used them to conquer rival chiefs and consolidate power. Fully aware of the advantage weapons had given his dynasty,
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