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Post by Admin on Aug 3, 2018 13:57:50 GMT -7
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Post by adr on Aug 3, 2018 16:05:10 GMT -7
Its unfortunate that "King" Cuomo has such contempt for the 2nd Amendment, without it he'd be leading the charge to abolish the 1st amendment!
IMO "King" Andy's tweets labeling the NRA as an "extremist organization" and has a "dangerous gun-peddling agenda" is going to give him a problem. This is typical NY State bully politics -- he pushed through the NY "SAFE" Act after Sandy Hook without following any normal legislative rule making procedure.
Even the anti-gun people should be worried about this. If this stands it means ANY organization can essentially be destroyed by what amounts to be a 'whisper" campaign Not good policy and certainly not good government.
Sad to know that "King" Andy will get reelected by a landslide by the welfare dopes in NY State. IMO he is a genuine "ALPHA-MIKE-FOXTROT"
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Post by roadking on Aug 3, 2018 16:19:19 GMT -7
Also shows you who really runs the country. Insurance companies risk management. Something should work out I hope. Same thing happened in Colorado when they legalized MJ. Banks and landlords were afraid. Yet they still managed to exist.
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Post by jmglasgow on Aug 9, 2018 17:55:32 GMT -7
There's always the GOA (Gun Owners Assn) which does a better job than the NRA in my opinion. As a former NRA member, I grew tired of the constant begging for money, weekly phone calls, and general fear mongering from them. They also compromise too much on gun laws, and support measures I'm against such as background checks, and registration certain firearms and accessories.
There's also the SAF (Second Amendment Foundation).
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Post by Admin on Nov 10, 2018 17:21:05 GMT -7
I know I am beating a drum that most have already heard. Read this article, if it does not make you think again about supprting the NRA as far as I am concernd you are part of the problem facing gun owners. I am not saying other gun organizations are not helpful but no organization has the strength of the NRA to fight what faces us in the months and years ahead. Consider all the money you spend in a year on your firearms hobby, is a year membership that much of a financial drain. Hell a life membership probably pales when weighed against everything you spend in a year. www.wsj.com/articles/democrats-plan-to-pursue-most-aggressive-gun-control-legislation-in-decades-1541791440
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Post by tom on Nov 10, 2018 21:14:46 GMT -7
I'll renew. The cognitive dissonance some folks overcome so they can believe their individual freedoms are protected by laws or a social contract with the very police and gov that they claim are rascist and militarized is astounding.
Just today I had to inform the Cheyenne County sheriff about a lumbering deaf/mute fella from Nevada who got very irate with me for not giving him cash. He had been loitering outside our restaurant asking customers for handouts as they left, using a long note to outline why he needed help. Obviously the guy couldn't exactly yell, but it was pretty clear from his signing and facial expressions that he was very upset and was used to folks just handing over cash. The takeaway is that the Sheriff wasn't remotely interested in investigating whatever the hell this guy was doing in Nebraska. I get it: There are most likely more pressing things going on..but unless this guy was actively assaulting me or had already assaulted me or my family or a customer, the police weren't going to do anything and if they did it'd almost certainly be too late. And there is nothing to do but accept that.
All that said, I hope the guy gets far down the road and that his story was true and I'm the big asshole.
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Post by adr on Nov 10, 2018 21:33:38 GMT -7
I agree --the NRA isn't perfect but there is no other gun rights organization that has the lobby power of the NRA. And -- the NRA is highly respected on Capitol Hill because they lobby lawmakers without all the noisemaking and door banging nonsense that the gun grabbers employ. If not a member then join. If you are a member extend it and consider Life membership -- the NRA has a variety of payment plans available to achieve Life member status.
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Post by adr on Nov 14, 2018 9:32:49 GMT -7
Legislation outlook for the upcoming Congress. From the Tactical Wire website:
Yesterday, the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) hosted a pair of webinars that looked at the outcomes of last week’s national and state elections and the likely potential impacts that might have in the year ahead.
With the Democratic party now in control of the House of Representatives, the unvarnished truth is that gun owners and the firearms industry should expect noting positive. After all, presumptive House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi has guaranteed that “we’re going after guns right out of the gate.”
Meaning?
Concealed carry reciprocity and the Hearing Protection Act are now officially dead.
The last thing the House is going to approve will be the rights for citizens to move around freely with guns, especially guns with “silencers” on them.
So what might we see? How about House-passed legislation that would limit magazine capacities, restrict modern sporting rifles, ban “bump stocks” and 3D printing technology while mandating “smart gun” technology. And a restoration of funding for anti-gun research. Another likely candidate for introduction and passage: age-based gun bans.
Republicans control of the Senate should prevent the majority of these ideas from becoming law. I say should because there’s no guarantee that some of this legislation won’t get enough bipartisan support to pass both sides of Congress. On the state side of the political ledger, the picture is no more optimistic. In fact, there’s little that anyone can do to reverse the likely legislative initiatives against guns and gun owners in California, Illinois and New York. In those states, Democrats who have run on platforms of gun control, now hold both the governorships and super-majorities in their upper and lower houses. Legislation passed there will be veto-proof.
In fact, the NSSF’s Jake McGuigan says the loss of “firewalls” - shifts in the makeup of legislatures now mean fewer safeguards against irrational gun legislation. In addition to California, Illinois, and New York, Colorado, Connecticut, New Mexico, Nevada and Oregon now lack enough votes to derail anything from increases in the minimum age of gun ownership to outright bans on categories of guns, magazine capacities or mandated microstamping.
From the NSSF’s perspective, it seems we can look forward to a long list of gun control policies on the state level in 2019. Broken out by policy and state, here are a few:
Age-based gun bans in Connecticut, Maryland, Oregon, Washington, New York, Nevada and New Mexico, bans on certain guns/magazines in Oregon, Illinois, Minnesota and Nevada,
universal background checks in Pennsylvania, New Mexico and Nevada, “smart” gun mandates in New Jersey, and waiting periods on purchases in Oregon and Washington.
So what does all this mean?
If you’re a company located in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, New Mexico, New York, Nevada or Oregon, it’s likely that 2019 is when newly-elected officials will commence efforts to regulate you out of business - or try to make it impossible for you to exist there. And they’ll be using your tax dollars to fund those efforts. I’d be reminding my employees that their tax dollars will be helping fund the efforts to put them out of work, too.
There were state wins last week. North Carolina’s passage of a state constitutional right to hunt, fish and harvest wildlife is one example of positive legislation designed protect our heritage, not constrain it.
Washington, conversely, passed significant restrictions on the purchase and ownership of firearms, raising the minimum age to purchase to 21, mandating waiting periods, and setting strict storage requirements.
Nationally, everything isn’t bad. The Senate still must pass House legislation -and the Senate is still in control of the more conservative elements -barring another national tragedy, that is.
But this “new” House of Representatives has promised that “where they can’t legislate, they’ll investigate.” So it’s reasonable to expect seeing plenty of industry faces testifying before hostile committee chairs starting in 2019.
As we hear newly-elected officials telling anyone who’ll listen they’re going into office charged up to pass new “gun laws” it brings up a question: now who speaks for gun owners, hunters, recreational shooters or even people who don’t think that owning a gun automatically means you should be subjected to what are, in effect, discriminatory laws?
You do. That’s never changed. And it’s time that everyone who believes in the right to keep and bear arms step up and demand that legislators - all legislators, from the local courthouse to Congress- start to address the “other” problems blamed on the tools rather than the disturbed people using them.
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Post by jmglasgow on Dec 3, 2018 19:39:25 GMT -7
With the recent rumors of Trump wanting to ban bump fire stocks, I heard that the NRA supports regulation of this accessory. home.nra.org/joint-statementThis is a direct quote from the link: "The NRA believes that devices designed to allow semi-automatic rifles to function like fully-automatic rifles should be subject to additional regulations." They are not looking out for our best interests. And before you make an excuse for them about picking the right battle, remember that this type of tactic has slowly eroded our freedoms and NRA backed compromises have got us to where we are now. They will never see another dime of my money as long as I live. Shall not be infringed means exactly that. Any firearm law or regulation is an infringement.
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