As the Texas Senate Race Tightens, the Gun Vote Becomes Critical
The race for U.S. Senate in Texas is tightening on both sides of the aisle — and the latest polling makes one thing unmistakably clear: the gun vote will decide November.
The race for U.S. Senate in Texas is tightening on both sides of the aisle — and the latest polling makes one thing unmistakably clear: the gun vote will decide November.
Radical gun ban legislation is sailing through the Virginia legislature, offering a crystal-clear preview of what gun owners across the
Republicans can’t treat this as a minor messaging issue. Gun owners decide elections. And when gun owners stay home, gun ban politicians win.
The same institutions pushing global disarmament narratives always work their way down to the civilian level, using “international norms” as the wedge to attack private gun ownership.
The same agency that spent years acting like Biden’s personal enforcement arm is getting funded at near record levels, with few meaningful restrictions on how it can use that money.
A right you’re afraid to exercise — or defend — doesn’t stay a right for long.
In Washington, D.C., firearm registration isn’t optional. It’s mandatory. But under D.C. law, entire categories of common, modern firearms — including AR-15-style rifles — are simply ineligible for registration.
What Ilhan Omar is proposing is nothing less than the most sweeping power grab in modern American history…a federal map of every law-abiding gun owner in the country.
Bureaucracies don’t reform themselves and the DOJ will not suddenly start defending gun owners just because it created a new office with a nice title.
Calling for a complete ban of guns is not realistic in a country that loves to tout them as a symbol of freedom, but there must be a commitment to seek an alternative to our gun culture.