Things Get Messy Fast When You Dig Into the Numbers Behind the Gun Control Industry’s Favorite Talking Points
For decades, gun control advocates and their allies in “public health” have pushed a misleading factoid about children and firearms. […]
For decades, gun control advocates and their allies in “public health” have pushed a misleading factoid about children and firearms. […]
The Chicago registry was highly touted by its proponents and media cheerleaders as a major leap forward in fighting “gun violence.” Its failure is a lesson that should be remembered when the “next big thing” in “gun violence prevention” has its day in the public eye.
It is almost exactly three years ago that the United States Supreme Court ruled in the landmark case of NYSRPA v.
Residents of the Empire State can now rest easier knowing that their top law enforcement officer is on the job ridding the state of the scourge of toy guns that look fun enough for kids to actually want to play with them.
ATF has credited President Trump’s Feb. 7, 2025, executive order Protecting Second Amendment Rights as the basis for terminating zero tolerance, implementing a fairer enforcement policy, and reexamining the prior adverse licensing actions.
Marion Hammer is currently in a legal pissing match with the National Rifle Association…an organization for which she once served as president. The dispute is over the cancellation of a “consulting” contract that paid her hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.
None of this is terribly complicated. By continuing to throw their support behind gangsters, murderers and other criminals, observes one commentator, the Democrats are simply “digging a deeper and deeper political grave for themselves.
The procedural contortions in these various ongoing magazine ban cases grow more grating with each case. Recall that the U.S. Supreme Court rejected taking up the magazine ban issue in a Seventh Circuit ruling arising from an Illinois law.
SCOTUS refusing to take a challenge to a FOID Card scheme in Illinois would effectively mean that the US Supreme Court doesn’t have a problem with licensing people to exercise a fundamental constitutional right.
That a former president would sue the nonprofit association for back pay while touting her “virtue” for not selling out to gun control groups says more than she might realize.