Appears the whole issue at hand went right over “stone’s” head, let’s try it again
In Bruen, Thomas, authoring the majority opinion, wrote that NY could not make a person show proof of why he needed to carry because going back to the Founders there was no example of anyone being barred from carrying guns, pure Originalism, telling us what the Founders thought, kinda like you do often
And now they have a case infront of them where one with a history of domestic violence is being denied a gun due to the safety of his female companion. So if the Founders never even considered women as full citizens, and the thought at the time was that husbands owned their wives, meaning domestic violence wasn’t considered threatening, wouldn’t they have to rule that this dimwit can not be denied a gun?
If they don’t, aren’t they flat out contradicting themselves? Admitting gun rights are not absolute and can be regulated? And your supposed perspective into the Founders thinking of two hundred dred years ago is sketchy at best?