Buzzwords Don’t Build Guns
Every time the industry goes into a downturn, the critiques grow louder. The funny thing is, they don’t come from anyone with a track record of successfully navigating one.
Every time the industry goes into a downturn, the critiques grow louder. The funny thing is, they don’t come from anyone with a track record of successfully navigating one.
Israel has seen a mix of good and bad when it comes to gun control. In March, we reported Iranian-linked hackers were able to penetrate Israel’s databases containing sensitive gun owner data and leaked the information online in early February.
The calls for more restrictions on law-abiding Americans’ Second Amendment rights by gun control activists in the aftermath of a tragedy aren’t surprising or new.
Many in Gun World like to frame these fights as an us-versus-them issue. It’s those damn liberals, they say, who hate guns.
“Constitution Day serves as a great reminder that the Second Amendment stands on equal footing as all other rights afforded American citizens.”
After a simple, cursory examination of the Johns Hopkins survey, the final product makes more sense. It’s a gun control product performed by gun control advocates.
If citizens can’t count on courts or policymakers to prioritize their safety, they’re left to their own devices when situational awareness is simply not enough.
If a journalist wants to show that the work the commission produced is deficient, maybe she should use voices more potent than an aging thespian and a physician with an axe to grind to support her narrative.
The judge’s remark, perhaps unintentionally, casts aspersions on tens of millions of law-abiding gun owners who own firearms for personal protection and the defense of their families and other loved ones.
The assassination of Charlie Kirk hits hard, not only because I’m a 33-year-old married man hoping to start a family, but also as a man of faith who attended university at various levels.