All the Right People are Panicking That Non-Violent Felons Could Have Their Gun Rights Restored
The gun gun control industry is melting down. They’re claiming this will, “make communities less safe,” and, “put guns in dangerous hands.”
The gun gun control industry is melting down. They’re claiming this will, “make communities less safe,” and, “put guns in dangerous hands.”
Bad facts drive bad policy. The issue here is not whether crime near schools is serious. The issue is whether the public is being told the truth.
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear’s veto of House Bill 312 was a deplorable act of sexism.
Gov. Spanberger might have lied about how she intends to govern, but the numbers don’t.
Ultimately, these latest actions reflect a broader federal willingness to treat the RKBA as a core civil liberty demanding affirmative protection through policymaking and the courts.
Much of social science is of dubious value, even when its practitioners aren’t politically or financially-biased (which, in the real world, is rarely ever the case).
The hunting community can’t afford to keep playing defense.
The entire premise of Canada’s confiscation scheme would be laughable if it didn’t demonstrate how utterly unserious its elected officials are about public safety.
Senator Warren and Rep. Meeks invoked their oversight authority to demand a sweeping accounting of semi-automatic firearm export licenses approved since January 2025.
Frequent horror stories serve as testament to the NYC Subways’ decidedly insensitive character and the need for the law-abiding to have access to the means of self-defense.