We’ve Arrived at the Spaghetti Phase of the Gun Control Movement in America

gun control spaghetti

We have officially entered the spaghetti phase of gun control. This is when those in favor of reducing or eliminating Americans’ gun rights introduce all manner of legislative schemes to restrict law-abiding citizens from purchasing, selling, making, and probably soon inheriting firearms, in the hope that something sticks to the wall.

Sometimes it’s a specific firearm, like the AR-15 rifle or a GLOCK pistol. Other efforts target broader categories of firearms such as all semi-automatic firearms.

Thanks to the Supreme Court of the United States and major legal opinions such as Heller and Bruen, gun control efforts have been hitting a brick wall.

That wall was erected in large part through the efforts of organizations like the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the NRA, the Second Amendment Foundation, Firearms Policy Coalition, Gun Owners of America and others. Those groups have taken on cases like these, pushing them up the judicial chain to the highest court in the land.

But alas, that hasn’t stopped state legislatures and candidates for public office from making up, well, effluvia. It’s as if they have a team sitting around just dreaming stuff up, which they clearly do.

Going Mental

Dan Osborn, an independent candidate for U.S. Senate in Nebraska told attendees at a town hall he would call for a “mandatory five-year mental health checks for owners of AR-15s and similar ‘assault-style’ rifles.” The Plains Sentinel reported that “Osborn proposed a preemptive “red flag” law targeting owners of “assault-style rifles,” which would require gun owners to undergo a mental health evaluation every five years to re-register those weapons.”

Read that one more time because it’s almost too absurd to believe.

Calling for mental health checks in order to own a rifle—ownership of which is clearly protected by the Second Amendment and subsequent SCOTUS and lower-court rulings—is itself remarkable. One could argue it’s evidence that the person proposing such restrictions, not the gun owner, who needs the screening.

Overlooking the obvious, that this would be unconstitutional, the idea of any state or Congress imposing a preemptive mental health check in order to exercise an enumerated civil right opens a massive can of worms for other civil rights.

Imagine imposing the same kind of requirement for those who comment online—about anything they disagree with that Congress does. That would be an American spin on Great Britain’s restrictive social media laws that have resulted in an estimated 12,000 arrests annually for online comments.

Or perhaps mental health screening could be required when people register to vote. Imagine the hysteria that would result from such a proposal (not to mention how that might change the outcome of elections in this country).

But the same idea for gun owners is apparently perfectly fine as far as Senate candidate Osborn is concerned. He and his ilk don’t see that violation of privacy as a real problem when it’s applied to gun owners.

Have You Signed Our Registry?

In the Centennial State, the Colorado State Shooting Association is challenging House Bill 26-1126, which Governor Jared Polis has signed into law, in the courts. The bill forces firearms retailers to maintain detailed records of purchasers such as name, age and address. It also catalogs the make, caliber, and finish of the gun, as well as the firearm’s serial number.

David Price, an attorney for CSSA, told Colorado Newsline . . .

This new law requires firearm dealers to turn over their purchase records containing information regarding their customers to a broad array of government employees who may request them without a warrant, without probable cause, without giving any reason.

He added that . . .

We have carefully examined the legal authorities that govern this type of law, and firmly believe that it violates the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable search and seizure.

Once all these records are turned over to state government, they’ll be subject to any number of Freedom of Information requests—and there will be many.

A database like this would certainly prove useful if and when a state of emergency occurs and Colorado wants to locate gun owners and take their guns just like New Orleans did in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Again, no one in Colorado’s government is proposing a database of alcohol or marijuana buyers. Or one of DUI convictions so alcohol and pot retailers can run background checks so as not to sell to known impaired drivers. But when it comes to guns, all’s fair in hate and war.

Every blue state is, or soon will be, rolling out its own exceptionally stupid bills designed to impinge on the right to keep and bear arms. These measures are red meat for liberal voting bases and — more importantly — secure donations from anti-gun donors and Super PACs.

Most of all, though, these legislative attacks—which directly hinder the exercise of a constitutional right—ultimately force organizations like the NSSF, NRA, SAF, FPC, and GOA into court in order to drain the coffers of pro-Second Amendment groups. Especially because those organizations continue to win key legal battles defending the right of law-abiding Americans to own and use firearms.

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1 thought on “We’ve Arrived at the Spaghetti Phase of the Gun Control Movement in America”

  1. .40 cal Booger

    “Or perhaps mental health screening could be required when people register to vote. …”

    If that were to happen, if it were an honest screening, there would never be another left wing politician voted into office and here is why…

    A New Study Just Confirmed the Left’s Worst-Kept Secret > ht* tps://pjmedia.com/matt-margolis/2026/06/14/a-new-study-just-confirmed-the-lefts-worst-kept-secret-n4953961

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