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350 Legend vs. 30-30: Which Hunting Legend Prevails?
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Many deer have been harvested using a 30-30. It was marketed as a sporting cartridge, and it's held that reputation for over 100 years. A new cartridge on the market is ready to challenge the legendary 30-30. The 350 legend is eerily similar, with a few slight modifications to meet hunting regulations.
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April Warehouse Picks: Unique H&K Imports and a Swiss SIG
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David Williamson
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SIG is a world-renowned brand; however, few people know that there are technically two different SIG companies. Domestically, the United States is familiar with SIG Sauer, a former German company that is now headquartered in New Hampshire making firearms like the P320, the MCX, and the SIG Cross. In Switzerland, SIG has a sister company owned by the same holding group, generally recognized as SIG AG. |
New: Colt Python .357 Magnum in 2.5- and 5-Inch Barrel Lengths
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Colt continues to grow its family tree of the reborn Python six-shot revolver line to now include models covering a half dozen barrel lengths ranging from 2.5 to 8 inches. Long seen as the "Cadillac of .357 Magnum Revolvers," the Python was first introduced in 1955 and concluded its original run in 2006. Bowing to overwhelming customer demand for a return of its most popular "snake gun," Colt resurrected the design, equipped with a laundry list of subtle design improvements, in 2020.
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Ohio's Yost, other attorneys general urge DOJ to scrap ‘red flag’ gun-confiscation program
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Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost and 18 other state attorneys general are opposing a new federal program that promotes aggressive enforcement of “red flag” gun-confiscation laws. Yost and his counterparts argue in a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland that the National Extreme Risk Protection Order (ERPO) Resource Center, launched in March by the Department of Justice, undermines the Second Amendment and other fundamental rights in a flawed attempt to reduce gun violence, according to an April 11 news release from Yost's office. |
AL: Alabama House committee OKs bill requiring safe storage of firearms
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David Williamson
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A divided House Judiciary Committee Wednesday approved a bill that could subject parents who do not safely secure firearms to criminal penalties. HB 414, sponsored by Rep. Barbara Drummond, D-Mobile, passed on a voice vote out of the committee. With only five legislative days left in the 2024 session, its chances of passage appear slim; it needs at least three legislative days to get to Gov. Kay Ivey’s desk. |
New Study Reinforces Reports About Washington Gun Control Failure
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The Tacoma, Washington News Tribune is reporting that while crime rates nationally are decreasing, Evergreen State crime has increased, and now Washington is the eighth-most dangerous state in the country, according to a new analysis of data by the California-based Simmrin Law Group. The report lends credence to stories published by Ammoland News and TheGunMag (formerly GUN WEEK), an online news publication owned by the Second Amendment Foundation, that violent crime has gone up as the state ratcheted down on the rights protected by the Second Amendment and Article 1, Section 24 of the state constitution. |
CO: Colorado Democrats advance 2 gun bills, including proposal to ban firearms in 'sensitive' spaces
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Colorado House Democrats on Friday gave preliminary approval to a pair of firearms bills from the state Senate, including legislation that would prohibit lawmakers from bringing guns into the Capitol. Senate Bill 131, which seeks to ban guns in "sensitive spaces," initially prohibited firearms in 19 locations. The bill was amended by its sponsors to limit those locations to just a handful, including polling places, child care, schools, public college and university campuses, and local government offices and courthouses. |
OH: Ohio purchases ‘shoot houses’ to use for armed teacher training
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Ohio has approved the purchase of so-called “shoot houses” to train school staff who are permitted to carry guns on school grounds. The Ohio Controlling Board approved the $78,000 purchase of two moveable training centers last month, with the goal of providing better tactical training for armed teachers and staff. The Ohio School Safety Center, a state-run program dedicated to improving security measures at schools, said the shoot houses will allow for armed staff to simulate encounters with an active shooter. |
NM: Senior Olympics offers air gun competition
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Corey Salo
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It may be one of the least physically demanding of the 13 sports offered by Valencia County Senior Olympics during its spring games, but the air gun competition is certainly taken seriously.
That was easy to see from the start of the 20-minute rifle supported, sitting-position contest held in the 4-H building at the Valencia County Fairgrounds.
“For a few minutes, it can be very tense,” said Juanita Flores Hull, of Los Chavez, who is taking part in her first tournament. “For me, it’s intense in the sense that I’m not completely educated on everything yet.”
It was happenstance that brought the sport to Flores Hull, who heard some odd noises coming from the nearby residence of Bob Peterson.
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