California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
Who doesn't? Tanks are not illegal. If it has a functional canon or machine gun, you need licenses for those things.
California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
I was talking about lawnsSpeaker to Animals wrote:California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
Who doesn't? Tanks are not illegal. If it has a functional canon or machine gun, you need licenses for those things.
California wrote:I was talking about lawnsSpeaker to Animals wrote:California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
Who doesn't? Tanks are not illegal. If it has a functional canon or machine gun, you need licenses for those things.
#Droughtshaming became a thing last year
California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
GrumpyCatFace wrote:Dumb slut partied too hard and woke up in a weird house. Ran out the door, weeping for her failed life choices, concerned townsfolk notes her appearance and alerted the fuzz.
viewtopic.php?p=60751#p60751
Yeah that's true. Green lawns are the new evil. Still 4-5 years of non rain rainy seasons.California wrote:I was talking about lawnsSpeaker to Animals wrote:California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
Who doesn't? Tanks are not illegal. If it has a functional canon or machine gun, you need licenses for those things.
#Droughtshaming became a thing last year
It's a joke but it's not a joke!Okeefenokee wrote:California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
I live in El Paso. I know.jbird4049 wrote:It's a joke but it's not a joke!Okeefenokee wrote:California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
It depends where in California you are, and how badly the drought has ruined the local water supply. Some places seem to have the water police. Extra charges, fines, water throttling, or just cut.
Unless you're agribusiness. Those people seem to get unlimited amounts of water. It couldn't have anything with their political donations.
GrumpyCatFace wrote:Dumb slut partied too hard and woke up in a weird house. Ran out the door, weeping for her failed life choices, concerned townsfolk notes her appearance and alerted the fuzz.
viewtopic.php?p=60751#p60751
Good god, man, if we don't grow Walnuts RIGHT FUCKING HERE, then what would that mean for our economy?!? You don't need water anyway, drink your piss.jbird4049 wrote:It's a joke but it's not a joke!Okeefenokee wrote:California wrote:They don't allow us to have those anymore either
It depends where in California you are, and how badly the drought has ruined the local water supply. Some places seem to have the water police. Extra charges, fines, water throttling, or just cut.
Unless you're agribusiness. Those people seem to get unlimited amounts of water. It couldn't have anything with their political donations.
http://www.californialawreview.org/caet ... in-heller/The Supreme Court addressed the scope of the Second Amendment in a pair of opinions, Heller and McDonald, that moved the nexus of judicial review away from antiquated notions of an arm’s reasonable relation to the militia towards a modernized conception of an arm’s relationship to the individual right of self-defense. The opinions, though steeped deeply in historical context, sought to modernize Second Amendment review, but in doing so raised new questions about the scope of protection they provide. Much attention has focused, appropriately, on the opinions’ impact on firearms. Yet the framework’s impact on nonlethal weapons has gone nearly unexplored, leaving a hodge-podge of contradictory regulations in place around the nation. Owning a stun gun is a crime in at least seven states, and in numerous municipalities, yet owning a firearm is protected within those same jurisdictions. In Caetano v. Massachusetts, Massachusetts’s highest court took up the question of whether a stun gun is a protected arm under the Second Amendment, yet it engaged in a selective reading of precedent to avoid recognizing a broadened right to bear arms. In late March of this year the Supreme Court issued a per curiam decision, without oral argument or full briefing, remanding the case to be reconsidered. This comment contends that the Court’s opinion in Caetano signals that nonlethal weapons are the rare class of weapons that both liberals and conservatives alike can support protecting, making the subject a ripe vehicle to revisit and clarify the protections provided under the Second Amendment.