I wrote a letter to Bill McCollum, my Attorney General, thanking him for signing onto the Amicus Brief Supporting Second Amendment Incorporation.
If your AG has signed on, shouldn't you send them a letter with your appreciation?
If yours hasn't, have you let them know?
Update
I got a response
Thank you for contacting me on this vitally important matter of Second Amendment rights and the case of NRA v. Chicago. I am happy to have joined some of my Attorney General colleagues around the country in a brief in support of this matter and hope our side prevails when the court rules. Sincerely, Bill McCollum Attorney General
Thank you for contacting me on this vitally important matter of Second Amendment rights and the case of NRA v. Chicago. I am happy to have joined some of my Attorney General colleagues around the country in a brief in support of this matter and hope our side prevails when the court rules.
Sincerely,
Bill McCollum Attorney General
"The right to keep and bear arms under the Second Amendment is not just a 'fundamental' liberty interest. In the Anglo-American tradition, it is among the most fundamental of rights because it is essential to securing all our other liberties. The Founders well understood that, without the protections afforded by the Second Amendment, all of the other rights and privileges ordinarily enjoyed by Americans would be vulnerable to governmental acts of oppression. As St. George Tucker wrote, the right protected by the Second Amendment 'may be considered as the true palladium of liberty' because '[t]he right to self-defence is the first law of nature,' and wherever 'the right of the people to keep and bear arms is, under any colour or pretext whatsoever, prohibited, liberty, if not already annihilated, is on the brink of destruction.' St. George Tucker, View of the Constitution of the United States, in WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, 1 COMMENTARIES app., at 300 (Philadelphia, Birch & Small 1803) (1765).