Senator Mazie Hirono of Hawaii posted on X, criticizing a recent Supreme Court ruling on gun rights that originated from a case in the state. In the post, Hirono stated that the decision prioritized the right to carry a gun over a state’s right to protect its people, adding that the country is awash in guns and that such rulings do not make the public safer. Online users reacted strongly to the comments, with many defending the Second Amendment and the court’s interpretation.
The video shows Senator Hirono seated at a table and speaking directly to the camera in a room decorated with colorful leis. She describes a recent Supreme Court decision that affected Hawaii’s gun laws. In the clip, Hirono states that the Court “tossed out Hawaii gun safety law that required people who want to carry a gun to let’s say a Walmart, to get the owner of Walmart to say, ‘Okay, you can do that.’” She adds, “So here’s Hawaii trying to enact gun safety laws for the protection of our people.”
According to her remarks, the Supreme Court decided “that the right to carry a gun was more important than the rights of the state of Hawaii to provide gun safety protections to our people.” Hirono refers to “an out-of-control Supreme Court majority” with “strong dissents” and says she wants people “to understand that our country, which is awash in guns, has certainly not been helped by these kinds of decisions.”
It is not clear from the footage what the exact statutory language of the overturned law was or the full text of the Court’s majority opinion and dissenting views. The remarks characterize the decision as prioritizing individual carry rights over state gun safety measures.
X Users Push Back Against Senator Hirono’s Supreme Court Critique
Several commenters questioned the senator’s characterization of the ruling and the Constitution. One wrote, “So either you have never read the Constitution, or you want to ignore it.”
Another stated, “They didn’t make the ruling you are claiming they did. Any location can still simply put up a sign to bar weapons. This prevents only a blanket ban without positive consent.”
Other users focused on the specifics of the Hawaii case and the balance between individual rights and state authority. One reply read, “Well, genius, let’s take your statement apart. The SCOTUS decision came from a Hawaiian case that infringed on the public’s right to self-defense in public spaces. Individual rights are supreme. A state has no right to protect its citizens. It has a duty to protect its citizens.”
Another commenter used Chicago as an example, noting that cities with strict gun laws “have more crime, murders, and violent criminal acts than most any other city.”
Additional responses highlighted broader views on the Constitution and policy priorities. One user described the approach as, “This is what fanaticism looks like. The Constitution is only The Constitution when they agree with it.”
Others pointed to enforcement issues, with one stating that the country is not “awash in guns” because of the Court but due to “soft-on-crime policies [that] let repeat violent offenders walk free.”
The senator’s video and post have added to the ongoing national debate over the Supreme Court’s interpretation of gun rights and state authority. Discussion of the ruling and its implications continues across X and other platforms.







