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TX: 'Constitutional carry' bill approved by state House would allow unlicensed Texans to carry handguns
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Texans would be able to carry handguns in public places without a license under a bill that was approved by the state House of Representatives on Thursday.
Republican lawmakers are pushing to make Texas the largest of about 20 states to adopt the so-called “constitutional carry” law. The measure, which passed largely along party lines, is a win for the state’s conservative faction, which has promised to uphold Texas’ reputation as a pro-Second Amendment state even as Democratic President Joe Biden pushes for tighter gun restrictions.
Ed.: The senate has already killed its own version of constitutional carry for the year; it is vital Texans contact their senators to politely demand they pass HB1927. We have waited long enough. |
MN: As sales surge, bearing arms means bearing responsibility
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Americans are buying guns and ammunition at a clip rarely if ever seen in history, not only in this nation, but anywhere, at any time, worldwide.
Consider: In the first six months of last year, the FBI conducted more than 19 million background checks on Americans wanting to purchase or possess a gun. That's more background checks than were completed in the entirety of 2012 or any year before, dating to the system's origin in the late 1990s.
In June 2020 alone, 3.9 million background checks were completed, a record that topped the previous 30-day mark set three months previously. |
FL: Florida Senate sends Anti-rioting bill to the Governor’s desk
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“But I don’t see any reason from a common-sense perspective that it wouldn’t hold up,” said Simpson.
As soon as the bill is signed into law, the changes will take effect.
Along with enhanced penalties for crimes committed during a riot, the bill allows state attorneys to appeal reductions in local police budgets, creates an affirmative defense from civil lawsuits for people who injure rioters in self-defense, and waives sovereign immunity for local governments, allowing businesses to sue for damages if their government doesn’t take action to stop a riot. |
NY: Asian Women Don't Feel Safe In Public. Now Some Are Carrying Self-Defense Weapons.
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Amy Choi was assaulted and mugged at knifepoint in Manhattan’s West Village one morning six years ago. “I couldn’t leave the house for a few days,” she recalled in an essay for Shondaland. “I couldn’t walk alone for weeks.”
But Choi, who is 41 and lives in Brooklyn, said that attack and the trauma that followed did not spur her to buy any self-defense items. Rather, it was the recent string of crimes against women of Asian descent that made her feel more unsafe than ever, convincing her she needed to take steps to protect herself. She now carries around a kubotan, a pointy self-defense tool about the size of a pen, and a loud alarm button recommended by a self-defense instructor she worked with last month. |
NM: APD ruled March homicide as self-defense
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Detectives have ruled the fatal shooting of a man last month at a Northeast Albuquerque apartment complex as a justified homicide.
Gilbert Gallegos, an Albuquerque police spokesman, said the March 19 death of Dominic Lueras, 39, is being considered a self-defense shooting after “consulting with the District Attorney’s Office.”
Prosecutors dismissed the murder case against Manuel Vargas, 24, on March 31. Gallegos did not say why detectives ruled the case justifiable. |
MI: Michigan House passes bill to legalize stun guns
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Anyone 18 years and older would be allowed to possess and use a stun gun for self-defense in Michigan under legislation that passed this week in the House by a vote of 78-32.
The bill (HB 4029) now moves to the Senate where a similar bill died in committee last year.
Stun guns are devices that need to be held in direct contact with a person. They use an electrical current to create enough pain to temporarily disable an assailant. |
Federal Ammunition Introduces New 22 LR Punch Personal Defense
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Different shooters have different needs, different limitations, and different firearms. Yet for all those variables, 22 Long Rifle has never really been an option for personal defense—until now. Federal Premium introduces Punch 22 LR, a new load using a first-of-its-kind 29-grain nickel-plated lead-core bullet, pushed at maximum velocities for the deepest penetration through short-barrel handguns. Shipments of this product have begun to arrive at dealers. |
Man’s fondness for guns creates dangerous situations
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In a recent column Eugene Robinson asks why we can’t pass gun safety legislation in this country. He notes that guns killed over 43,000 Americans last year – more than 19,000 homicides and 24,000 suicides. We have a problem, yet we do nothing.
The facts are clear. Owning a gun does not make us safer. It makes us more likely to get murdered. It makes a member of our household far more likely to be shot by the gun we own than the very slim chance that we use it in self-defense. It makes us a target for theft because thieves like to steal guns. And a gun in the house dramatically increases the chance that a member of the household who tries to commit suicide will succeed. |
KY: Group organizes rally in support of 2nd amendment in Union Co.
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A group gathered in downtown Morganfield on Thursday evening to show support for the Second Amendment.
Getting grievances to the government is part of the goal that Union County United is pushing.
“Legal gun owners are not the issue,” local organization President Jeffery Hart expressed. “Some of these new draconian proposals on the federal level, like an $800 tax per firearm, that’s like taxing a sober driver because someone drove drunk. It’s unheard of.” |
TN: Permitless carry to become law Tennessee
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What is likely one of the most talked-about topics of the year is Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signing a bill allowing most adults to carry a handgun without a permit.
The effort reportedly has been at the top of Lee’s’ legislative agenda for the year. The law will take effect July 1 in Tennessee; officially joining 19 states where permitless gun carry will be the law.
In a Twitter statement last week, Lee thanked the Tennessee legislature and National Rifle Association for their work to pass the bill. |
These 11 Incidents Underscore Outrage of Biden’s Slap in Face to Gun Owners
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Just a little over halfway through its first 100 days, the Biden administration has made it very clear where it stands on the Second Amendment, releasing a slew of executive orders that are likely to punish responsible gun owners without meaningfully affecting crime rates.
Perhaps worse, President Joe Biden nominated gun control lobbyist David Chipman to head the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, a slap in the face to American gun owners. |
Joe Biden and guns
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President Joseph R. Biden Jr. recently announced his determination to use his powers as the chief executive of the federal government to infringe upon the right to keep and bear arms. This is a profound violation of his oath to uphold the Constitution.
It also perpetuates an attitude about the Second Amendment that was prevalent in state and federal officeholders in both major political parties from the FDR to the George W. Bush eras. That attitude was based on a misreading of the Second Amendment, which characterized the right to own a gun as a collective and not an individual, personal right. In 2008, the Supreme Court corrected that misreading. |
NE: Dawson County commissioners sign resolution supporting gun rights
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The Dawson County Commissioners joined with many other counties and unanimously signed a resolution supporting gun rights and the Second Amendment.
Around 30 other Nebraska counties, including neighbors Lincoln and Buffalo, have symbolically approved resolutions supporting the right to bear arms.
Commissioner P.J. Jacobson said he received more community input on this matter than any other in the past three to four years. Commissioner Dennis Rickertsen said he had a similar experience. |
Smith & Wesson Model 25
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While I have long been fascinated with N-Frame Smith & Wesson revolvers, I came to the party only after seeing the movie “Dirty Harry.” Prior to the movie, all my shooting was done single-action, influenced no doubt by having grown up in the 1950s watching cowboy shows on television. |
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QUOTES
TO REMEMBER |
Those, who have the command of the arms in a country are masters of the state, and have it in their power to make what revolutions they please. [Thus,] there is no end to observations on the difference between the measures likely to be pursued by a minister backed by a standing army, and those of a court awed by the fear of an armed people. — Aristotle, as quoted by John Trenchard and Water Moyle, An Argument Shewing, That a Standing Army Is Inconsistent with a Free Government, and Absolutely Destructive to the Constitution of the English Monarchy [London, 1697]. |
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