Supreme Court Declines to Intervene… Where It Actually Belongs

Does the Supreme Court control the outcome of broad political and social questions? Not at all. The Constitution vests the high court with mandatory original jurisdiction over only four types cases, which tend to be pretty uncommon. But these very cases seem to be the only ones the Supreme Court declines to take.

There’s a dirty little secret about our political system that few realize. Congress has plenary power over the entirety of what is known as the Supreme Court’s “appellate jurisdiction.” That means that Congress can regulate or exclude any type of case from the Supreme Court’s reach through the appeals process, except for one of the four types where the Constitution vests it with “original jurisdiction.” One of those cases just came before the Supreme Court, and on Monday, the court finally showed humility at the wrong time and declined to take the appeal.

Art. III, § 2, cl. 1 of the Constitution vests the high court with original jurisdiction over “all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls;–to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction;–to controversies to which the United States shall be a party;–to controversies between two or more states.”

Well, Arizona has a complaint that California is taxing Arizona citizens who have nebulous ties to the Golden State and thereby draining Arizona’s government revenue. California assesses an $800 “doing business” tax against Arizona businesses and banks that conduct no real business in California, other than a passive investment in a California company. Since the “doing business” taxes are deductible, Arizona loses an estimated $484,000 in tax revenue every year. According to Arizona’s attorney general, Mark Brnovich, 13,300 Arizona-based LLCs pay about $10.6 million a year in California taxes without having any presence in California.

This case obviously opens up a nasty can of worms related to interstate taxation and the concept of taxation without representation. As the National Taxpayers Union warned in an amicus brief: “California’s cross-border seizure of funds from the bank accounts of Arizona residents amounts to casus belli in the classic sense of requiring collective self-defense. But unlike conventional cross-border raids that rely on physical mobilization, technological advances allow California to reach into Arizona bank accounts without physically traveling outside its own borders. This precedent, if allowed to stand, would allow any state with revenue aspirations to reach passive investors in every other state by using multistate banks as conduits for backdoor extractions.”

In other words, this is exactly why we have a federal government and more specifically why the Constitution mandated that the Supreme Court mediate these disputes.

Instead, the Supreme Court dismissed Arizona’s motion yesterday without offering any explanation. Now Arizona has no recourse but to sue in California state courts, which our Founders sought to avoid, for obvious reasons.

Justice Thomas, joined only by Justice Alito, tore into his colleagues for dismissing this case.

The Constitution establishes our original jurisdiction in mandatory terms. Article III states that, “[i]n all Cases . . . in which a State shall be [a] Party, the supreme Court shall have original Jurisdiction.” §2, cl. 2 (emphasis added). In this circumstance, “[w]e have no more right to decline the exercise of jurisdiction which is given, than to usurp that which is not given.” Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, 404 (1821) (Marshall, C. J., for the Court). Our original jurisdiction in suits between two States is also “exclusive.” §1251(a). As I have previously explained, “[i]f this Court does not exercise jurisdiction over a controversy between two States, then the complaining State has no judicial forum in which to seek relief.” Nebraska v. Colorado, 577 U. S. ___, ___ (2016) (opinion dissenting from denial of motion for leave to file complaint) (slip op., at 2). Denying leave to file in a case between two or more States is thus not only textually suspect, but also inequitable.

Well, indeed, the modus operandi of the federal courts these days is to “usurp what is not given” to them, while declining to exercise “the jurisdiction which is given.” It’s truly ironic to watch the federal courts insert themselves into all issues of internal order within a state where they doesn’t belong, be it life, marriage, election law, or internal economic issues. We have federal courts hearing cases that statute explicitly precludes them from hearing. We have federal courts abusing the rules of standing. And we have federal courts issuing injunctions outside the parties properly before the court.

Yet there is this erroneous perception that the federal courts reign supreme over the other branches and can usurp their power with impunity, when in fact the opposite is true. There can be no greater authority on this matter than Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth, who served as the first Senate Judiciary Committee chairman and is often called “the father of the national judiciary.” Writing an opinion in a 1796 case, Ellsworth authoritatively asserted, “If Congress has provided no rule to regulate our proceedings, we cannot exercise an appellate jurisdiction; and if the rule is provided, we cannot depart from it.”

As Clarence Thomas wrote in a 2018 case, “When Congress strips federal courts of jurisdiction, it exercises a valid legislative power no less than when it lays taxes, coins money, declares war, or invokes any other power that the Constitution grants it.”

For example, Congress stripped the federal courts of all power to block deportations under “expedited removal,” but the courts are issuing injunctions anyway. There is no apparent will on the part of the Supreme Court to remove its inferior courts from this realm.

Yet when it comes to an interstate dispute, the one area where the high court must insert itself, plaintiffs are told to go to the other state’s court for relief because the justices have washed their hands of the case. Truly a system upside down.

Perhaps, if the Supreme Court doesn’t want to use its power where the Constitution requires it, Congress should negative its power in all the cases where that authority exists solely at the discretion of Congress. (For more from the author of “Supreme Court Declines to Intervene… Where It Actually Belongs” please click HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

FBI Raids Fashion Mogul Peter Nygard’s NY Office After He Was Accused of Sex Assault and Sex Trafficking

By CNN. Fashion tycoon Peter Nygard’s New York office was raided Tuesday as the magnate faces allegations of sex trafficking in a civil lawsuit.

The FBI and New York police executed the search warrant, said Nicholas Biase, a spokesman for the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.

Nygard’s spokesman Ken Frydman said authorities executed search warrants on Nygard’s offices in New York and California, and he said his client is “not surprised” by the raids.

“Nygard welcomes the federal investigation and expects his name to be cleared,” Frydman said. “He has not been charged, is not in custody and is cooperating with the investigation.” (Read more from “FBI Raids Fashion Mogul Peter Nygard’s NY Office After He Was Accused of Sex Assault and Sex Trafficking” HERE)

___________________________________________________

Peter Nygard Resigns as Head of Fashion Company After Sex-Trafficking Raid

By New York Post. Fashion mogul Peter Nygard is stepping down as head of the international women’s clothing giant he founded, a spokesman for the Canadian-born multi-millionaire announced following an NYPD/FBI raid of Nygard’s Manhattan offices Tuesday.

“Recognizing the priority of the welfare of the thousands of Nygard employees, retail partners, loyal customers, vendors, suppliers, and business partners, Peter Nygard has made the decision to step down as chairman of the Nygard
Companies and will divest his ownership interest,” Ken Frydman, a spokesman for the wealthy playboy, said in a statement. (Read more from “Peter Nygard Resigns as Head of Fashion Company After Sex-Trafficking Raid” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

Democrats Block Bill Requiring Medical Care for Babies Who Survive Being Aborted (VIDEO)

Senate Democrats voted Tuesday to block legislation that would have required medical care be provided to babies who survive being aborted, stopping the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act. . .

Republican Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska sponsored the bill, which needed the support of 60 senators in order to advance. Ahead of the vote, Sasse took to the Senate floor to lambaste Democrats attempting to paint his legislation as an abortion bill.

“The piece of legislation we’re voting on today, the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, is not about abortion,” Sasse said, according to National Review. “The bill we’re voting on doesn’t change anyone’s access to abortion. It doesn’t have anything to do with Roe v Wade. It is about babies that are already born.”

Sasse pointed to CNN’s coverage of the measure, where the outlet described his bill as requiring “abortion providers to work to ‘preserve the life and health’ of a fetus that was born following an attempted abortion as they would for a newborn baby.” . . .

In the end, the final tally was 56-41, with every vote against coming from Democrats. Fox News noted that the only three senators who crossed party lines on the legislation were Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin (W.Va.), Doug Jones (Ala.), and Bob Casey (Pa.).

(Read more from “Democrats Block Bill Requiring Medical Care for Babies Who Survive Being Aborted” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

DHS Whistleblower Found Dead; Rep. Steve King: “Phil Haney Didn’t Kill Himself”; Scant MSM Coverage

Philip Haney, a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) whistleblower who was an outspoken critic of the administration of former President Barack Obama, was found dead Friday, about 40 miles east of Sacramento, Calif., local authorities said.

Haney, 66, “appeared to have suffered a single, self-inflicted gunshot wound,” the Amador County Sheriff’s Office said in a release. Sheriff and coroner Martin A. Ryan shared the initial details of the case.

“On February 21, 2020 at approximately 1012 hours, deputies and detectives responded to the area of Highway 124 and Highway 16 in Plymouth to the report of a male subject on the ground with a gunshot wound,” the release read.

“Upon their arrival, they located and identified 66-year-old Philip Haney, who was deceased and appeared to have suffered a single, self-inflicted gunshot wound. A firearm was located next to Haney and his vehicle. This investigation is active and ongoing. No further details will be released at this time,” the office added. . .

In June 2016, Haney testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee, where he alleged that the Obama-era DHS had ordered him to delete hundreds of files about reputed associates of Islamic terrorist groups. Haney made the case that several attacks in the U.S. could have been prevented if some of the files had not been deleted, the Examiner reported. (Read more from “DHS Whistleblower During Obama Era Found Dead” HERE)
___________________________


___________________________

Gunshot Wound to Chest, “Apparently Self-Inflicted”

By Edwin Mora. Although authorities have said the gunshot wound “appears” to be “self-inflicted,” stressing that the investigation is ongoing, 66-year-old Haney had been missing since February 19. and died from a gunshot wound to his chest two days later, Red State and Heavy reported.

Gunshot wounds to the chest are uncommon in the case of suicides, data reportedly show. Haney’s death has triggered a wave of claims suggesting he may have been a victim of foul play.

Echoing some of the whistleblower’s friends, a number of senior congressional officials have expressed alarm to Breitbart News about this, noting that they do no believe Haney was suicidal.

Law enforcement found Haney’s body 40 miles east of Sacramento, California. . .

“If I am found dead, it wasn’t suicide,” Haney told multiple people, confirmed by two anonymous sources, the NOQ Report learned. (Read more about the DHS Whistleblower who was shot and killed HERE)
___________________________

Multiple Friends: “No Way He Would Have Killed Himself”

Haney, 67, had many enemies. An outspoken critic of the Obama administration and supporter of President Trump, the Middle East expert has been fighting against radical Islamic terrorism since becoming a founding member of the Department of Homeland Security in 2002. He was reportedly in the middle of independent investigations to help “protect America from progressive leftist socialists” when he was found dead near his car outside of San Francisco.

He was scheduled to be married later this year. Friends who talked to him before his disappearance on February 19th say he’d “never been happier” and that there’s “no way he would have taken his own life.” But law enforcement appears to be treating this as a suicide. Hopefully, this is a smokescreen and they’re at least considering the possibility he was murdered. . .

If this is really a suicide, it comes at not only an odd time but also by an odd means. Nearly all suicides by firearms are committed at home. Allegedly, Haney drove out to the area of Highway 124 and Highway 16, got out of his car, and shot himself in the chest. The gun was found next to him and his car. No note has been reportedly found, nor are there social media posts indicating any preconceived notions of depression, let alone suicide. His last Facebook post was a meme ridiculing the impeachment saga. (Read more about the DHS Whistleblower HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

Mystery Deepens In Italy On How The Coronavirus Is Spreading – Alleged Patient Zero Tests ‘Negative’; China Pushes Factories To Reopen, Risking Renewed Virus Spread

By The Straits Times. Italy raced … to contain the biggest outbreak of coronavirus in Europe, sealing off the worst affected towns and banning public gatherings in much of the north as the number of those infected jumped above 100.

An elderly cancer patient became the third person known to be infected with the coronavirus to die, health officials said on Sunday. The woman had been in hospital in Crema, located in Lombardy, where most cases of infections have been reported. . .

Health authorities are struggling to work out how the outbreak started. The first cases were announced only on Friday and doctors do not know its source.

Initial suspicion in Lombardy fell on a businessman recently returned from China, the epicentre of the new virus, but he has tested negative. In Veneto, doctors tested a group of eight Chinese visitors who had been to the town that was home to the first fatality, but again, they all tested negative.

“We are (now) even more worried because if we cannot find ‘patient zero’ then it means the virus is even more ubiquitous than we thought,” Zaia said. (Read more from “Mystery Deepens In Italy On How The Coronavirus Is Spreading – Alleged Patient Zero Tests ‘Negative’” HERE)

____________________________________________________

China Discharges 22,888 Recovered Patients Of Coronavirus Infection

By The Jakarta Post. A total of 22,888 patients infected with the novel coronavirus had been discharged from hospital after recovery by the end of Saturday, the Chinese health authority said on Sunday.

Saturday saw 2,230 people walk out of hospital after recovery, the National Health Commission said in its daily report. (Read more from “China Discharges 22,888 Recovered Patients Of Coronavirus Infection” HERE)

____________________________________________________

China Pushes Factories To Reopen, Risking Renewed Virus Spread

By Bloomberg. China is trying to get people back to work, risking a renewed spread of the coronavirus.

Central and local governments are loosening the criteria for factories to resume operations as they walk a tightrope between containing a virus that has killed more than 2,400 people and preventing a slump in the world’s second-largest economy.

The rush to restart has been propelled by China’s leader Xi Jinping and top leaders, who are urging companies to resume production so the country can continue to meet lofty goals for growth and economic development in 2020. At stake are the fates of millions of Chinese businesses facing collapse because of the shutdowns, and the ability of companies across the globe from Apple Inc. to Nissan Motor Co. to access crucial components.

Officials in China’s provinces have taken up Xi’s call, with one region after another relaxing rules that had kept more than half the nation’s industrial base idle following the Lunar New Year holiday. After weeks of empty streets and shuttered shops, signs of life are emerging along the manufacturing belt in the country’s coastal regions. (Read more from “China Pushes Factories To Reopen, Risking Renewed Virus Spread” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

Ghislaine Maxwell Bragged ‘Jeffrey Epstein And I Have Everyone On Videotape’

Last month there were rumors that the personal emails of Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged fixer Ghislaine Maxwell could be released. If the emails were released, they could reveal power brokers from around the world. A new report that Ghsilane and Jeffrey recorded every encounter involving their associates could has influential people scared to their core.

Before Ghislaine Maxwell was known as the madam for Jeffrey Epstein, she was a British socialite. Fellow U.K. debutante Christina Oxenberg became friends with Maxwell since they ran in the same high society circles in the early 1990s.

Oxenberg, who is a relative of a royal family, was at Maxwell’s home in Britain. “We were alone,” Oxenberg said. “She said many things. All creepy. Unorthodox. Strange. I could not believe whatever she was saying was real. Stuff like: ‘Jeffrey and I have everyone on videotape.’”

Oxenberg didn’t really understand the implications of that statement at the time. But now she understands the meaning of the eery conversation.

There are widespread accusations that Maxwell supplied young women, sometimes underage girls, to Epstein. Before his bizarre and suspicious death in a prison cell in August, Epstein was on trial for federal charges of sex trafficking. In 2008, Epstein pleaded guilty in Florida for procuring an underage girl for prostitution and sentenced to 18 months in prison. (Read more from “Ghislaine Maxwell Bragged ‘Jeffrey Epstein And I Have Everyone On Videotape’” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

It’s Looking As Though One Super Tuesday State Is Setting Itself Up For Voter Fraud

By Townhall. While all eyes were on the Nevada Caucuses, people in Super Tuesday states started receiving their absentee ballots. In places like California, voters are encouraged to vote absentee. It’s been a way to garner greater political involvement and participation.

Adam Housley, a former correspondent for Fox News, said he received two ballots: one for non-party preference (NPP) and one for the libertarian ticket. What makes the scenario even more troubling? Housley said he has never registered as a libertarian.

In a state with millions of people, a small flub here and there is likely to happen, but it turns out Housley wasn’t the only one who received multiple ballots..

(Read more from “It’s Looking As Though One Super Tuesday State Is Setting Itself Up For Voter Fraud” HERE)

______________________________________________

Unthinkability Bias Comes for the Democrats

By Real Clear Politics. Voting in the Democratic Primary contest is getting ready to heat up, but the contest itself will be more-or-less over shortly after it begins. By the end of March, fully two-thirds of the delegates to the national convention will be awarded. Barring a major collapse in his poll numbers between now and then, Bernie Sanders is likely to win the lion’s share – perhaps even a majority – of these delegates. The results from Saturday’s Nevada caucuses certainly did nothing to suggest otherwise. At that point, denying him the nomination becomes an extremely tricky proposition.

If you are among those who believe Sanders is the strongest candidate Democrats could run against Donald Trump, then this is all for the good. If you think the outsider is a general election problem for the party, you may be wondering how it came to this, especially in an election where there seemed to be so many promising candidates. Particularly perplexing is the decision of the Democratic candidates to hammer Michael Bloomberg – who won’t be on the ballot for two more contests – at the most recent debate. . . Finally, beyond the enhanced fundraising and core of strong supporters, candidates like Trump and Sanders have benefitted from what I dubbed “unthinkability bias” in 2016. This is like a strong version of confirmation bias, where people set their prior probabilities of an event occurring to zero and refuse to update their priors because they just can’t conceive of the possibility coming to pass. In the summer of 2016, I wrote a series of pieces suggesting that Trump could win the general election; these were met such derision and invective that I took a month-long break from Twitter. In late 2019, I wrote a piece suggesting that people were underestimating Sanders’ chances of becoming the Democratic nominee. While the response was less angry, it was still met with a degree of skepticism that seems unwarranted today.

This is harmless in and of itself, but it has the potential to transform the trajectory of races. By writing off Trump and Sanders in the summer and fall before the election year, candidates allowed their candidacies to strengthen and their core bases of support to grow. In addition, by attacking each other, the more “traditional” candidates collectively weakened themselves, diminishing themselves compared to the insurgent. (Read more from “Unthinkability Bias Comes for the Democrats” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

Bernie Sanders’ Defense of Castro’s Cuba Evokes Socialism’s Brutal History

Self-described democratic socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders’ defense of the policies of the late Cuban dictator Fidel Castro drew swift and widespread condemnation and evoked memories of some of history’s bloodiest regimes. . .

In response, Rep. Donna Shalala, D-Fla., who represents a large population of Cuban-born residents in her district, tweeted: “I’m hoping that in the future, Senator Sanders will take time to speak to some of my constituents before he decides to sing the praises of a murderous tyrant like Fidel Castro.”

University of Hawaii historian R. J. Rummel, estimated in 1987 that the Castro regime was responsible for the deaths of between 35,000 to 141,000 of its own people. Worldwide, it is estimated that communist regimes have killed an estimated 100 million people.

In Fox Nation’s new six-part series, “The Unauthorized History of Socialism,” Fox News anchor Bret Baier re-examined the 200-year history of an idea that changed the world, starting from its roots in America in the early 1800’s, to its emergence in Europe and the collapse of the Soviet Union, to its apparent rebirth in the United States in 2020.

“By the end of the 20th century, many believed the historic struggle between socialism and capitalism was over,” narrated Baier in the Fox Nation series. “You might think the empirical case had been made and the door shut forever on the socialist dream, but you would be wrong.” (Read more from “Bernie Sanders’ Defense of Castro’s Cuba Evokes Socialism’s Brutal History” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

What to Expect From U.S. President Donald Trump’s Visit to India

American and Indian national interests are clearly converging.

President Donald Trump will, therefore, strive to enhance US – India bilateral relations with the context of a multilateral environment.

What does that mean?

I refer back to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s concept of Security and Growth for All in the Region (SAGAR), first articulated in 2015.

SAGAR stresses the importance of the Indian Ocean to India and the close alignment between Indian and global interests, as Dhruva Jaishankar outlined in his article “Indian Ocean Region: A Pivot for India’s Growth:

“(i) preserving freedom of navigation for commercial shipping, (ii) sustainably and equitably harnessing the Indian Ocean’s natural resources, (iii) establishing protocols for enhancing disaster prevention and relief as well as search and rescue operations, (iv) countering piracy, terrorism, smuggling, and illegal weapons proliferation, and (v) managing international naval competition.”

It is no accident that regional security is the fundamental component ensuring that the benefits of regional economic growth can be realized.

Acknowledging and de facto supporting Prime Minister Modi’s SAGAR strategy, it is also no accident that the United States recently renamed its military Pacific Command to the Indo-Pacific Command.

The foundation of growing US – India strategic convergence has been the recognition of potential Chinese economic hegemony and military expansion in South Asia, especially via China’s close alliance with Pakistan and Pakistan’s own obsession with the use of terrorism as an instrument of foreign policy, all threats to the Modi SAGAR goals.

It is, therefore, not surprising that increased US-India defence cooperation has been the leading element in the expanding relationship and a segue to a new trade agreement likely to be completed within the next year.

Last November, the US and India completed their most expansive joint military exercises in history amid efforts to coordinate more ambitiously on challenges in the Indo-Pacific region as outlined in the SAGAR doctrine.

Sales of American weapons systems to India have concomitantly increased, which has included Apache attack helicopters for anti-terrorist operations, Seahawk helicopters for the Indian navy, C-17 heavy air-lift sustainment and anti-surface warfare and anti-air defence MK 45 5 inch/62 calibre (MOD 4) naval guns.

The need for greater US – India coordination will only increase as the American forces withdraw from Afghanistan and the Trump legacy in that regard will be determined by ensuing regional events precipitated by that withdrawal.

Both India and the United States have a shared interest in preventing strategic adversaries, namely China and Pakistan, from unduly benefitting from that withdrawal at the expense of regional stability and a balance of power.

Make no mistake, China seeks global domination. One vehicle to achieve it is the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a collection of infrastructure projects and a network of commercial agreements in 152 countries designed to link the entire world directly to the Chinese economy through interconnected land-based and maritime routes.

A critical part of BRI is the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), an infrastructure and development project, the backbone of which is a transportation network connecting China to the Pakistani seaports of Gwadar and Karachi located on the Arabian Sea

The guarantor of that soft power approach is the hard power of Chinese military expansion.

China plans to establish a naval and air bases on the Arabian Sea within easy reach of the strategically important Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf. That military facility will complement China’s already operational naval base in Djibouti, located at another strategic chokepoint, the entrance to the Red Sea and the Suez Canal.

All of that is the opposite of what Prime Minister Modi seeks to achieve through SAGAR.

It may be that the outcome of the Modi-Trump meeting and subsequent greater US– India cooperation may largely determine peace, stability, economic prosperity and the democratic future of the Indo-Pacific region.

Both the stakes and the potential benefits are that high. (For more from the author of “What to Expect From U.S. President Donald Trump’s Visit to India” please click HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE

This State’s Pro-Gun Bill Will Keep Kids Safer

A new law in Kentucky will mandate that all school police officers must carry guns as part of an effort to secure the lives of the students.

Democratic Governor Andy Beshear signed the bill into law on Friday, ending months of controversy and protests from anti-gun groups and Democrats in the state legislature. The bill, however, received overwhelming bipartisan support in the Kentucky House and Senate.

Education Chairman of the Senate, Republican Max Wise, praised Beshear for signing the bill, citing the boost to school safety in the state. “This new legislation, which goes into effect immediately, is crucial to the General Assembly’s continued efforts to protect Kentucky’s children, teachers and staff by improving the safety of our schools,” he said. “I am appreciative of all those who provided the necessary input and support to see this measure come to fruition.”

Though the bill sailed through the House and Senate earlier this year on its way to the governor’s desk, the Black Caucus protested, citing what they felt was an added danger to black students in Kentucky schools. “I’m asking that you consider children that come from a different walk,” said Democratic House Rep. Charles Booker, who is launching a campaign for the U.S. Senate. He further expressed fear that minority students could be mistreated by armed police in the school.

A bipartisan committee was formed in the Kentucky General Assembly following the death of two students in 2018 shooting at Marshall County High School. That committee was tasked with talking to parents, teachers, students, and law enforcement in the state to determine the best solutions. “We have a responsibility to protect our children,” said a parent of a 15-year-old shooting victim at Marshall. “They are more important than anything.” (Read more from “This State’s Pro-Gun Bill Will Keep Kids Safer” HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE