Spiking the Hearing Protection and SHORT Acts in the Senate Isn’t Enough for the Gun Control Industry

Giffords tweet big beautiful bill NFA silencers hearing protection act short act

Giffords has a problem with the latest provision the Senate has inserted in the Big Beautiful Bill, even after it’s been weakened dramatically, keeping registration of silencers, SBRs and SBSs and only getting rid of the NFA’s $200 tax.

Registration alone isn’t enough for them, of course. They also want to price people out of their Second Amendment rights.

I suppose that makes sense. They are supporting exactly the sorts of gun control tactics their heroes in the Jim Crow south did. They cite those racist laws today in their briefs defending gun control laws, and they still want them in place today.

It’s not about guns. It’s not about safety. It’s about control. It always has been.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

16 thoughts on “Spiking the Hearing Protection and SHORT Acts in the Senate Isn’t Enough for the Gun Control Industry”

  1. .40 cal Booger

    The bill passed. Its over Giffords so quit crying, I’d play the worlds smallest violin for you but they don’t make one that small. The HPA and SHORT act and deregulation from NFA will be back, and it will pass, just not the way it was tried this time.

    The BBB has officially passed!

    Trump Scores Win as BBB Clears Procedural Vote Hurdle After 82-Hour Showdown.

    “After 82 grueling hours of debate, delay tactics, and amendment marathons on the Senate floor, President Donald Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ has officially passed, marking a significant victory for his administration and the American people. The comprehensive tax and spending package, which includes historic tax relief, border enforcement measures, and pro-growth economic reforms, cleared the Senate hurdle late Saturday night. In a triumphant statement, Trump praised Republicans for their resolve and blasted Democrats for trying to obstruct what he called ‘a bill that delivers real results for real Americans.’

    Trump is expected to sign the legislation into law on July 2, just in time for the July 4 deadline.
    …”

    https://townhall.com/tipsheet/saraharnold/2025/06/29/trump-great-victory-in-the-senate-n2659624

    1. Geoff "I'm getting too old for this shit" PR

      “The BBB has officially passed!”

      After Trump signs it, will it be immediate, or after 30 days?

      I do believe I will hit a pawn shop for a beater 12 gauge double-barrel SXS to convert into my very own ‘Army of Darkness’ “Boom Stick”… 😉

      1. @Geoff, It is my understanding that a bill is in force the date the President signs it unless there is some stipulation contained within the bill relative to a later effective date.

        Did all of the 2A changes remain in the final version?

        1. .40 cal Booger

          “Did all of the 2A changes remain in the final version?”

          No. The HPA and SHORT were lost, removing suppressors and SBR from NFA were lost but they did remove the $200.00 tax. Its possible HPA and SHORT provisions can be added back in the house in reconciliation conference, and its possible that suppressors and SBR can be removed from the NFA in the house in reconciliation conference – need to wait and see.

          1. I would leave at least one SBR as a pistol so you don’t have to worry about permission slips to cross state lines with it.

          2. Geoff "FREE NFA transfers for all!" PR

            “Free form 1’s? Gonna form 1 all the things.”

            A few things, for myself… 😉

        2. Geoff "FREE NFA transfers for all!" PR

          “Did all of the 2A changes remain in the final version?”

          Removing them entirely from the NFA is currently out, but MIGHT get re-added later, before Trump signs it, as I understand it.

          Solidly, we have the 200-dollar tax killed, on all but full-auto…

      2. .40 cal Booger

        When the bill is signed it goes into effect, but signing it does not mean everything in the bill goes into effect right then – it only means the bill becomes ‘law’ in effect. I’m not exactly sure on when whatever in the bill takes effect. There are a couple of provisions (not 2A/gun stuff) that were not going to take effect until the end of 2026, for example, Medicaid work requirements originally slated to start in 2029 were in May moved up to end of 2026 in the BBB but that was in May and its a month later now with changes having been made every day so really its hard to tell right now when anything actually takes effect. My initial understanding was the NFA tax thing would take effect as soon as the bill is signed by Trump, but I don’t know that to be fact yet. In short, I guess we need to wait until it gets through the House to get all the details.

  2. .40 cal Booger

    Its passed senate. Its set for further debate and a final vote, likely June 30 or July 1, 2025. It will pass final vote, we have the votes for it. This is probably why Trump said he’d sign it on 2 July.

    1. .40 cal Booger

      After passing senate, it has to go to the house where it gets debate and a vote and if it passes that vote it goes to Trump for signature. Its been indicated there are the votes to pass it and it will pass – we shall see. Its possible, maybe, we might see something added back in conference while its at the house.

      1. .40 cal Booger

        It was a very close butt-clinching vote. Some are saying it was so tense in the senate its a wonder all of them did not have major stress induced heart failure.

        The vote in senate passed it out of senate with 51-49. Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Rand Paul (R-KY) voted against the bill. All democrats opposed the bill. It was close, Ron Johnson (R-WI) had voted against it in an earlier vote and had he continued to vote against it by joining democrats in the final vote to vote ‘No’ there would have been a 50-50 tie. Vice President Vance was called in and standing by to break that possible tie in which case it would have passed 51-50, but Ron Johnson changed his vote ‘Yes’ to pass the bill so a tie breaker wasn’t needed. There were five who had not yet voted by the time Vance arrived around 8:30’ish PM ET. The final vote was about 11 PM’ish ET.

        Democrats have 47 seats in the senate, all the democrats voted against the bill so that gave them 47 votes against the bill – with Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Rand Paul (R-KY) voting against it that gave 49 votes against the bill.

        The Republicans have 53 seats in the senate, all republicans voted for it except Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Rand Paul (R-KY) voted against the bill with democrats. This gave 51 votes to pass the bill out of senate and send it to the house.

        1. .40 cal Booger

          Correction, maybe: It turns out the VP did cast a tie breaker vote (according to some) that was not reported earlier. Any way, it passed.

  3. .40 cal Booger

    RINO Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) gave a ‘No’ vote to debate the BBB.

    His senator career is at an end, he burned his final bridge with that vote.

    Tillis was set to run for another term in the 2026 midterms, but he faced a two-front battle, one of which was created solely by his own poor decisions to be a RINO and on the Democratic side he was going to face a tough challenge from former Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper.

    Within the Republican Party, Tillis did wonders to destroy his base of support. He did nothing when people in NC faced devastating flooding, he tried to nuke the nomination of Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense, then he nixed the nomination of Ed Martin as DC Attorney. His vote against advancing the reconciliation package (AKA the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’) sealed his fate. Then after Tillis trying to be the best Democrat the Democrats had, President Trump has threatened to primary him and will meet with contenders who expressed interest.

    Although previously announcing he was going to run, after getting called out on his actions for the BBB and Trump threatening to primary him – he has decided he will not be running for office again.

  4. .40 cal Booger

    Law Enforcement Ignored Dire Threats Against Pennsylvania Trump Voters’ Families, Property, And Pets.

    ” ‘We know where you live. … In the dead of a cold winters [sic] night, this year, or next and beyond, there is no knowing what may happen. Your property, your family may be impacted, your cat may get shot. And more. … Your vote for this guy [Trump] is seen as treading on my rights. You tread on me at your peril, motherf-cker. We look forward to visiting in the future.’

    That is language from the nasty, vile letter that Pennsylvania voters received through the U.S. mail in October 2024, just prior to the presidential election. What was their crime? They had Trump signs in their yards.

    And what did local law enforcement, the Pennsylvania state police, the FBI, the U.S. Justice Department, and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service do about this intimidation and threats of violence against voters in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and various Pennsylvania counties?

    Apparently, nothing at all.
    …”

    (note: the above happened during Bidens term. Although the article is specific to those incidents, it was actually pretty common for Trump supporters all over the country to get threats – the Biden admin did nothing about it and in fact facilitated it by doing nothing about it, instead the Biden admin went after parents trying to protect their kids from an insane left-wing school board by speaking out in the meetings and Catholics practicing their religion and children who did not wish to be an imaginary gender. Some of the mentally ill left wing tried to carry out their threats, and attacked Trump supports and their family members and thankfully these victims were able to defend them selves, and shot these left wing attackers with two of them deleted from the gene pool and three more wounded and thus able to rethink their life choices.)

    https://thefederalist.com/2025/06/30/law-enforcement-ignored-dire-threats-against-pennsylvania-trump-voters-families-property-and-pets/

Scroll to Top