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Dueling Final Briefs Filed in Minnesota Switchblade Ban Lawsuit

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Final briefs are in the ring, and the Second Amendment showdown over Minnesota’s switchblade ban is heating up like a well-oiled chamber. Knife Rights, the relentless warriors against pointless blade restrictions, just dropped their closing salvo in federal court, hammering home that the state utterly flunked its historical tradition test from Bruen. No dusty 1791 analogs for banning flick-open folders? Check. No real public safety gain from hobbling everyday carry tools? Double check. This isn’t just legalese—it’s a textbook takedown of nanny-state overreach, where Minnesota’s attorneys recycled their tired knives are scary playbook without fresh evidence. Judge Patrick J. Schiltz gets the gavel on April 24th in Minneapolis; mark your calendars, because this could be the spark that ignites nationwide switchblade sanity.

Zoom out, and this case is pure Bruen ripple effect gold for the 2A community. Post-2022, courts are shredding sensitive places and assault weapon bans left and right by demanding historical analogs—think Rahimi flipping the script on domestic violence gun grabs. Switchblades? They’ve been vindicated everywhere from New York to California as common carry since the Founding era, with bans born from mid-20th-century moral panics, not musket-age threats. If Schiltz rules for Knife Rights (and the precedent screams he should), expect a domino cascade: gravity knives, balisongs, and maybe even those pesky one-hand openers could tumble free across red and blue states alike. It’s not hyperbole— this lawsuit threads the needle between guns and blades, reminding lawmakers that the right to bear arms (yes, including edged ones) isn’t negotiable.

The stakes? Monumental for self-defense realists who know a quality switchblade beats fumbling with a folder in a dark alley. A win here bolsters the full-spectrum 2A arsenal, pressuring holdout states and fortifying challenges to butterfly knife bans or even AR-15 registries. Knife Rights has a flawless track record dismantling these relics—over 20 states reformed in a decade—so optimism is warranted. Stay locked in; if Minnesota folds, it’s open season on common-sense carry reform. Who’s ready to flip the script?

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