Denver Post: This Really Isn’t a Good Time for the DOJ to Challenge the City’s ‘Assault Weapons’ Ban
The U.S. Department of Justice waited 37 years to challenge Denver’s gun control law, only to demand the law’s repeal just after […]
The U.S. Department of Justice waited 37 years to challenge Denver’s gun control law, only to demand the law’s repeal just after […]
She omits, of course, is that he bought his guns legally, and nobody has presented any evidence otherwise.
The shame here belongs to Bloomberg’s antigun mouthpiece, The Trace. It’s clear, though, they have no shame when it comes to ignoring the truth.
Everytown’s own disclaimer warns users that the tool’s outputs may be incomplete, inaccurate or otherwise unreliable.
It’s critical to acknowledge that, in terms of federal support of the Second Amendment, we’ve never had it so good in modern history.
“We should do something about that for everybody’s sake. For everybody’s sake.”
There’s a steady and increasing appetite among Americans for exercising their 2A. This is especially true in states where antigun lawmakers are threatening them.
The moment the political winds shift — the moment the left regains control of Washington — that same agency will be weaponized again. Stronger. Smarter. More efficient.
A bank that’s seeking approval for a merger, charter, branch opening or other significant transaction can no longer assume its record of politicized de-banking will remain buried.
The El Paso Democrat was chronically lacking the necessary cranial capacity needed to figure out that gun control doesn’t sell well here in Texas.