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Stephens v. State of Georgia

2025-05-28

Summary

Holding. The judgment is affirmed. The court rejected Stephens's state constitutional challenge to the age-21 restriction on public handgun carry licenses because he failed to demonstrate that the statute clearly and palpably violates the Georgia Constitution or that the court's century-long precedent construing the state's right to bear arms was erroneous.

Thomas Stephens, a 20-year-old, challenged a Georgia law that prohibits citizens under 21 from obtaining a public handgun carry license, arguing it violates the Georgia Constitution's right to bear arms. Georgia law permits 18- to 20-year-olds to possess and carry long guns in public and to possess handguns in limited settings (home, vehicle, workplace), with self-defense use serving as an absolute legal defense. Stephens did not argue the law violates the federal Second Amendment but only Georgia's state constitutional provision, and he asked the court to overturn more than a century of established precedent interpreting that provision.

The Georgia Supreme Court rejected Stephens's challenge, finding he failed to meet the heavy burden required to overturn a statute presumed constitutional. The court emphasized that Stephens offered no serious historical or textual analysis showing the court's longstanding construction of Georgia's constitutional right to bear arms was wrong. Instead of engaging with over 150 years of state precedent or explaining how the original public meaning differed from existing doctrine, Stephens simply asked the court to adopt federal legal standards developed much later than Georgia's constitutional text. The court declined to import federal frameworks into Georgia constitutional interpretation, particularly given Georgia's unique "manner clause" expressly authorizing legislative regulation of how arms may be borne.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether Georgia's prohibition on public handgun carry for persons under 21 violates the Georgia Constitution's right to bear arms
  • Standard for overturning longstanding state constitutional precedent
  • Proper methodology for interpreting state constitutional text through original public meaning
  • Appropriate role of federal constitutional standards in state constitutional analysis

Procedural posture

Stephens appealed the trial court's dismissal of his constitutional challenge to Georgia Code § 16-11-126(g)(1) after being denied a weapons carry license at age 18 due to the age requirement.

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

Decided: May 28, 2025

S25A0334. STEPHENS v. STATE OF GEORGIA.

PINSON, Justice.

Under Georgia law, a person between the ages of 18 and 21

may possess long guns and carry them in public. See OCGA §§ 16-11-126 (b), 16-11-132. He may also possess handguns and carry

them on his own property, in his home, in his car and in his place of

business, and he may use both long guns and handguns for hunting,

fishing, or sport shooting with the associated license. Id. § 16-11-126

(a), (e). That said, unless he has received weapons training as part

of his military service, a person may not carry a handgun in public

as a general matter until he is 21. Id. § 16-11-129 (b) (2). But even

then, if a person uses a handgun for self-defense or to defend others,

it is an absolute defense under Georgia law for any alleged violation

of state firearm regulations. Id. § 16-11-138.

The plaintiff here, Thomas Stephens, is 20 years old and wants

to carry a handgun in public beyond the limited ways he can under

current Georgia law. So he sued. Along with Georgia Second Amendment, Inc., which has since voluntarily dismissed its appeal, Stephens filed an action to challenge the state statute that allows public

carry of handguns as a general matter only for people over the age

of 21. See OCGA § 16-11-126 (g).1 His challenge, however, is quite

narrow. He does not allege that this statute violates the Second

Amendment to the United States Constitution, but only that it violates Article I, Section I, Paragraph VIII of the Georgia Constitution

of 1983. And he does not argue that the statute violates Paragraph

VIII as it has been construed and applied under precedent of this

Court that spans well over a century, but instead asks that we reconsider and overrule all of that precedent and replace it with legal

1 The complaint and initial appeal were jointly filed by Stephens and

Georgia Second Amendment, Inc. On February 26, 2025, after we asked the

parties to address their standing in light of Wasserman v. Franklin County,

320 Ga. 624 (911 SE2d 583) (2025), Georgia Second Amendment moved to withdraw its appeal and we granted the motion, leaving Stephens as the only appellant. So we refer only to Stephens in this opinion, even though the filings

below and the briefing in this Court were filed jointly by Stephens and Georgia

Second Amendment.

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tests developed in the federal courts for assessing federal constitutional rights.

We decline the invitation. State statutes are presumed constitutional, and the challenger faces a heavy burden to prove otherwise: he must establish that the conflict between the challenged law

and our Constitution is “clear and palpable,” and we must be “clearly

satisfied of its unconstitutionality” to declare it so. Ammons v. State,

315 Ga. 149, 163 (3) (880 SE2d 544) (2022). Stephens has not met

that burden. Demonstrating the original public meaning of constitutional text that first appeared in one of our constitutions in the

1860s (and has since been readopted into each new one) is a difficult

task that requires careful attention to not only the language of the

clause in question, but also its broader legal and historical context

and applicable rules of constitutional construction. But Stephens

largely fails to engage with that work, or with our longstanding precedent that sets out a consistent construction of Paragraph VIII. See

Hill v. State, 53 Ga. 472, 480-483 (2) (1874); Strickland v. State, 137

Ga. 1, 7, 11 (1) (72 SE 260) (1911); Carson v. State, 241 Ga. 622, 628

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(5) (a) (247 SE2d 68) (1978); Landers v. State, 250 Ga. 501, 503 (3)

(299 SE2d 707) (1983); Hertz v. Bennett, 294 Ga. 62, 69 (3) (751 SE2d

90) (2013). Most problematic, Stephens does not even say how or

why that construction is not consistent with the provision’s original

public meaning — at least not with any detail or real authority in

support — and he offers no serious alternative construction that

would establish what, in his view, the correct understanding of that

original public meaning is. Instead, he asks us to uncritically import

federal standards to guide the application of a provision unique to

Georgia’s Constitution — a practice we have regularly criticized and

disapproved. Because Stephens has not offered a compelling argument to reconsider our consistent construction of Paragraph VIII,

which he made a necessary part of his constitutional claim here, his

claim fails.

1. Background

(a) Statutory Framework

Georgia law allows law-abiding citizens to carry firearms with

few restrictions. Georgians over the age of 21 may carry handguns

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or long guns in most places, openly or concealed, and with or without

a license. See OCGA § 16-11-125.1 (2.1) (any person who is licensed

or eligible to get a weapons carry license is a “lawful weapons carrier”); id. §§ 16-11-126, 16-11-127 (c) (authorizing lawful weapons

carriers to carry handguns in most public and private places). The

only exceptions to this permissive scheme are people who have been

convicted of certain crimes, those adjudicated mentally incompetent

or insane, and people under 21 years old, all of whom are generally

not eligible for a weapons-carry license. See id. § 16-11-129 (b) (2).

Among Georgians younger than 21 years old, those under the

age of 18 cannot “possess” a handgun or have it under their “control.”

OCGA § 16-11-132. But people from 18 to 20 years old retain substantial ability to carry firearms. They are eligible for a Georgia

weapons carry license if they have completed basic training in the

armed forces of the United States and are actively serving in or have

been honorably discharged from the armed forces of the United

States. See id. § 16-11-129 (b) (2) (A). And even without a license,

young adults ages 18 to 20 may possess long guns and carry them in

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public because, unlike minors, they are “not prohibited by law from

possessing a handgun or long gun,” see id. § 16-11-126, so they “may

have or carry on [their] person a long gun,” see id. § 16-11-132. For

the same reason, see id. § 16-11-132, adults in this age bracket may

possess and carry handguns on their own property and in their

home, keep them in their car and place of business, see id. § 16-11-126 (a), and they may use handguns and long guns for hunting, fishing, or sport shooting with the appropriate hunting or fishing license

(or when a hunting or fishing license is not required to engage in

those activities), see id. § 16-11-126 (e). Finally, the necessary use of

a long gun or handgun in any circumstances for defense of self or

others will be an absolute defense to violating any provisions that

restrict their ability to carry. Id. § 16-11-138. See also id. §§ 16-3-20,

16-3-21.

(b) Proceedings Below

Stephens applied for a weapons carry license when he was 18,

and his application was denied because he was not 21. Stephens

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then sued the State, contending that OCGA § 16-11-126 (g) (1) violates Paragraph VIII to the extent it prohibits Stephens and other

18- to 20-year-olds from obtaining Georgia weapons licenses and carrying handguns in public. As relief, Stephens sought a permanent

injunction prohibiting the State from enforcing OCGA § 16-11-126

(g) (1).

As relevant here, the State moved to dismiss Stephens’s complaint, contending that the statutory scheme prohibiting 18- to 20-year-olds from carrying handguns in public was a reasonable safety

measure, that the age cut-off was not arbitrary, and that the regulation was not a complete prohibition on the right to keep and bear

arms given the numerous statutory exceptions that allow these

young adults to carry handguns in some places. The State also noted

that someone in this age group is generally not prohibited from carrying a long gun in public, see OCGA § 16-11-126 (b), and self-defense and the defense of others is an absolute defense to a violation

of OCGA § 16-11-126 (g) (1). So, the State contended, the statute was

a permissible exercise of the police power authorized by the last

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clause in Paragraph VIII of the Georgia Constitution, which authorizes the General Assembly “to prescribe the manner in which arms

may be borne.” Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. VIII.

The trial court granted the State’s motion to dismiss, agreeing

with the State’s arguments and citing this Court’s opinion in Strickland v. State, 137 Ga. 1 (72 SE 260) (1911), and decisions that followed it.

Stephens appealed.

2. Analysis

(a) We interpret and apply language of the Georgia Constitution according to the meaning it had to members of the public at the

time it was ratified — that is, its original public meaning. Elliott v.

State, 305 Ga. 179, 181 (II) (824 SE2d 265) (2019). But when it comes

to Georgia’s constitutional right to bear arms, found at Article I, Section I, Paragraph VIII of the current Georgia Constitution, we do not

start the search for its meaning from scratch. Paragraph VIII of our

current Constitution says that “[t]he right of the people to keep and

bear arms shall not be infringed, but the General Assembly shall

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have power to prescribe the manner in which arms may be borne.”

Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. VIII. This language first entered a Georgia Constitution in the 1860s,2 and since then, our Court

has interpreted and applied the provision a number of times, starting in 1874 and continuing up through 2013.

We interpreted our state constitutional right to bear arms in

two early decisions, Hill v. State, 53 Ga. 472 (1874), and Strickland

v. State, 137 Ga. 1 (72 SE 260) (1911). 3 In both decisions, we focused

2 The first part of the provision, the guarantee of the right to keep and

bear arms, was added to the Constitution of 1861. See Ga. Const. of 1861, Art.

I, Sec. 6. (“The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”). In 1865, a “militia clause” was added to the Constitution of 1865,

making Georgia’s constitutional right to bear arms identical to the Second

Amendment of the United States Constitution. See Ga. Const. of 1865, Art. I,

Sec. 4 (“A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”). In 1868,

the clause we interpret today was added to the new Constitution of 1868. Ga.

Const. of 1868, Art. I, Sec. XIV (“A well regulated Militia being necessary to

the security of a free people, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed; but the General Assembly shall have power to prescribe by law

the manner in which arms may be borne.” (change emphasized)). And in the

Georgia Constitution of 1877, the militia clause was removed, leaving the language as it stands today. See Georgia Constitution of 1877, Art. I, Sec. I, Para.

XXII.

3 Hill addressed that right as it appeared in our 1868 Constitution, which

included the same language that appears in our current Constitution along

with the prefatory “militia clause” that mirrors that of the Second Amendment

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on the last clause of what is now Paragraph VIII, which grants the

General Assembly “power to prescribe the manner in which arms

may be borne.” After thorough and deliberate analysis of the text,

relevant context, and precedent, we recognized in these decisions

that this clause — call it the “manner clause” — operates as an express “qualification to the very guarantee itself” that was “intended

to limit the broad words of the previous guarantee.” Hill, 53 Ga. at

479-480 (2). See also Strickland, 137 Ga. at 6 (1) (“Where a State

constitution in terms provides, in connection with the right to bear

arms, that the State may regulate this right, or may regulate the

manner of bearing arms, these words expressly recognize the police

power in direct connection with the constitutional declaration as to

the right.”). Applying the “ordinary signification” of the phrase

“manner in which arms may be borne,” we held that this clause

grants the General Assembly “the power to regulate the whole subject of using arms”: not only whether they may be borne “openly or

to the United States Constitution. Strickland addressed our 1877 Constitution’s version of the right, the language of which is identical to the right as it exists in our 1983 Constitution.

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secretly, on the shoulder or in the hand, loaded or unloaded, cocked

or uncocked, capped or uncapped,” but also the “times and places”

and “circumstances” of bearing arms. Hill, 53 Ga. at 480-483 (2).

And we reasoned that such regulations would not violate the constitutional right to bear arms as long as they were not “unreasonable”

or “arbitrary” and did not “amount[ ] in effect, to a deprivation of the

constitutional right,” Strickland, 137 Ga. at 7, 11 (1). See also Hill,

53 Ga. at 481 (2) (purported regulations of the “manner” of bearing

arms that “would, in effect, be a denial of the right to bear arms

altogether” would violate the right). Applying these standards, we

upheld a law that banned the carrying of firearms in certain places,

like churches and courts, see Hill, 53 Ga. at 474, 480, 482-483 (2),

and a law requiring Georgians to get a license to carry a pistol or

revolver on their persons, see Strickland, 137 Ga. at 11 (1).

The interpretation and legal standards set out in these prece11

dents have been the consistent construction of our state constitutional right to bear arms for well over a century,4 and we have applied that standard in each case since that time asking whether a

4 This understanding of our state constitutional right to bear arms has

even deeper roots. Both Hill and Strickland cite one of the earliest opinions of

this Court, Nunn v. State, 1 Ga. 243 (1846), which pre-dated the addition of an

explicit right to bear arms to the Georgia Constitution. That decision, which

interpreted the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution, explained that the Second Amendment protected the pre-existing “natural right

of self-defence.” Id. at 251 (emphasis omitted). In addressing the scope of this

right, we explained that the right to bear arms did not take from the legislature

the power to “enact laws in regard to the manner in which arms shall be borne.”

Id. at 249. That said, we reasoned that “[a] statute which, under the pretence

of regulating, amounts to a destruction of the right, or which requires arms to

be so borne as to render them wholly useless for the purpose of defence, would

be clearly unconstitutional.” Id. at 249. The language that Nunn uses to describe the power reserved to the legislature to regulate the manner of bearing

arms was included almost verbatim when Georgia added the language protecting the right to bear arms to our Constitution in the 1860s, and it remains in

our Constitution today. And Nunn’s reasoning that such regulations could not

“amount[ ] to a destruction of the right” is the basis for the legal standard our

precedent has now consistently applied. Compare id. (“We do not desire to be

understood as maintaining, that in regulating the manner of bearing arms, the

authority of the Legislature has no other limit than its own discretion. A statute which, under the pretence of regulating, amounts to a destruction of the

right, or which requires arms to be so borne as to render them wholly useless

for the purpose of defense, would be clearly unconstitutional. But a law which

is merely intended to promote personal security, and to put down lawless aggression and violence, and to this end prohibits the wearing of certain weapons

in such a manner as is calculated to exert an unhappy influence upon the moral

feelings of the wearer, by making him less regardful of the personal security of

others, does not come in collision with the Constitution.”) with Hill, 53 Ga. at

482-483 (2) (the legislature may limit the right to bear arms to “such times and

places, and under such circumstances, as is necessary for the preservation of

the peace, the protection of the person and property of the citizens, and the

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regulation violates that right. See Carson, 241 Ga. at 628 (5) (a) (upholding ban on possessing sawed-off shotguns); Landers, 250 Ga. at

503 (3) (upholding law prohibiting convicted felons from possessing

firearms); Hertz, 294 Ga. at 69 (3) (upholding denial of firearms license application by person who had pleaded nolo contendere to five

felony charges in Florida).

(b) In his principal brief before this Court, Stephens makes no

argument that his constitutional challenge can succeed under this

fulfillment of the other constitutional duties of the legislature, provided the

restriction does not interfere with the ordinary bearing and using arms, so that

the ‘people’ shall become familiar with the use of them.”); Strickland, 137 Ga.

at 11 (“We think, upon careful consideration, that the [challenged] regulatory

provisions of the act of 1910 are not so arbitrary or unreasonable as to amount,

in effect, to a prohibition of the right to bear arms, or an infringement of that

right as protected by the [C]onstitution.”); Carson, 241 Ga. at 628 (5) (a) (“It

was not arbitrary or unreasonable to prohibit the keeping and carrying of

sawed-off shotguns . . . [and t]he Act does not prohibit the bearing of all arms.”); Landers, 250 Ga. at 503 (3) (applying Strickland, “[w]e find the statute [prohibiting possession of a firearm by a convicted felon] is a reasonable regulation

authorized by the police power and thus not violative of our Constitution”); and

Hertz, 294 Ga. at 69 (3) (“Since our decision in Strickland, we have rejected

similar state constitutional challenges to laws regulating the possession of firearms” and, given appellant’s nolo contendere plea to a felony offense, holding

that “denying him a license to carry a weapon outside of his home, car, and

place of business does not violate” Paragraph VIII).

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consistent construction of Paragraph VIII. 5 In other words, as Stephens has argued that claim before us, it can succeed only if he can

establish that this consistent construction of Paragraph VIII’s language is wrong, that the entire line of longstanding precedent that

arrived at and applied this construction must be reconsidered and

overruled, and that his claim would succeed if that language were

construed differently. And as a constitutional challenge to a statute,

this claim is even harder than usual to win. It is well established

that state statutes are presumed constitutional, and the burden is

on the challenger to prove otherwise. Ammons v. State, 315 Ga. 149,

163 (3) (880 SE2d 544) (2022). That burden is a heavy one: to prove

that a law is unconstitutional, the challenger must establish that

the conflict between the challenged law and our Constitution is

“clear and palpable,” and we must be “clearly satisfied of its unconstitutionality” to declare it so. Id.

Stephens fails to meet that heavy burden here.

5 To the extent that Stephens makes any such argument in his reply

brief, we generally do not consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief. See City of Atlanta v. Mays, 301 Ga. 367, 372 (3) (801 SE2d 1) (2017).

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For starters, even if this Court got the original public meaning

of the relevant language wrong when it first construed that language in Hill (1874) and Strickland (1911), there is a good argument

that the construction is now a settled part of the meaning of that

language as it exists in our current Constitution of 1983. When we

ask what that language meant at the time it was ratified in 1983,

we have to consider two important pieces of legal context. First, if

that language appeared in an earlier Georgia Constitution and was

readopted without material change, it is “generally presume[d]” that

the language “has retained the original public meaning that provision had at the time it first entered a Georgia Constitution, absent

some indication to the contrary.” Elliott, 305 Ga. at 183 (II) (A) (explaining this “presumption of constitutional continuity”). Second, if

that readopted language was construed by our Court before it was

readopted, it is presumed that the prior construction of that language is adopted along with the readopted language if that prior

construction is considered “consistent and definitive.” Id. at 184 (II)

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(B) (explaining this presumption). The first presumption of constitutional continuity no doubt applies here, because Paragraph VIII

consists of language that has been readopted from the 1877 Constitution (and the 1868 Constitution included that language as well).

And the second presumption likely applies, too: Hill definitively construed the manner clause of what is now Paragraph VIII, which first

appeared in the 1868 Constitution and has been readopted in five

more Georgia Constitutions since then, including the current one,

53 Ga. at 479-483 (2); Strickland applied Hill and definitively construed the same language that was readopted into the next four constitutions including the current one, 137 Ga. at 11-12 (1); and Carson confirmed and applied that construction to the same language

in 1978, just five years before our current constitution readopted

that language, 241 Ga. at 627-628 (5) (a). If that set of precedents

amounts to a “consistent and definitive” construction of our state

constitutional right to bear arms, that construction is effectively

baked into the meaning of the language as readopted into our current constitution.

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But we need not decide here whether this construction is now

definitive as to the meaning of Paragraph VIII because Stephens has

not made “even the prima facie showing” to meet his heavy burden

here. Ammons, 315 Ga. at 163 (3). As we have explained here and

elsewhere, “[c]onstruing a constitutional provision, especially as an

original matter, requires careful attention to not only the language

of the clause in question, but also its broader legal and historical

context, which are the primary determinants of a text’s meaning.”

Id. Here, that would mean, at the least, addressing how best to understand the particular language of Paragraph VIII as an original

matter given its broader legal and historical context and in light of

our various canons and presumptions of constitutional construction.

Stephens simply has not done that. Other than a conclusory argument that the manner clause “codifies the common understanding

of the limit of the right,” he does not say how exactly this Court’s

consistent construction of Paragraph VIII is not also consistent with

its original public meaning. And even more problematic, he offers no

serious alternative construction that would establish what, in his

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view, the correct understanding of that original public meaning is.

Instead, he merely asks us to import a choice of two legal standards

from federal law: either “strict scrutiny,” or the United States Supreme Court’s recently minted “history and tradition” test for assessing Second Amendment challenges, see N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol

Ass’n v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 24-25 (II) (C) (142 SCt 2111, 213 LE2d

387) (2022). These are not viable substitutes for a serious and considered attempt at determining the original public meaning of Georgia’s constitutional text — particularly text that is notably different

from the Second Amendment, which has no similar clause that expressly grants to the legislature the power to regulate the manner

of bearing firearms. See Wasserman v. Franklin County, 320 Ga.

624, 626 (II) (911 SE2d 583) (2025) (explaining that “[t]ime and

again we have criticized our own past practice of ‘uncritically importing’ holdings of federal courts to resolve questions about the

meaning of Georgia law”).6

6 The invitation to adopt strict scrutiny is subject to special doubt. Federal courts first came up with and applied strict scrutiny almost a century after

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In sum, Stephens has not offered a compelling argument that

the original public meaning of Paragraph VIII is meaningfully different from the construction developed through our Court’s consistent precedent addressing the language of that provision over

more than a century. Because he has not established that our precedent construing this language is clearly wrong, we decline his invitation to reconsider it. And because his only argument that the statute he has challenged violates Paragraph VIII requires that we reconsider that precedent, his constitutional challenge to the statute

fails.

Judgment affirmed. Peterson, CJ, Warren, PJ, and Bethel,

Ellington, McMillian, LaGrua, and Colvin, JJ, concur.

Georgians ratified the constitutional language at issue here, see Richard H.

Fallon, Jr., Strict Judicial Scrutiny, 54 UCLA L. Rev. 1267, 1275 (2007) (tracing the history of strict scrutiny to the 1960s), so any argument that the strict

scrutiny standard is somehow the best construction of the original public

meaning of the language now found in Paragraph VIII of our Constitution has

an awful lot of work to do. See Elliott, 305 Ga. at 188 (II) (C). (For what it is

worth, neither the United States Supreme Court nor this Court have applied

strict scrutiny to laws that implicate the right to bear arms. See Bruen, 597

U.S. at 17-31 (II) (declining to apply strict scrutiny to a challenge brought under the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution); Elliott, 305 Ga.

at 222 (IV) (E) (discussing strict scrutiny in the context of Georgia constitutional law at large).

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