Things Get Messy Fast When You Dig Into the Numbers Behind the Gun Control Industry’s Favorite Talking Points
For decades, gun control advocates and their allies in “public health” have pushed a misleading factoid about children and firearms. […]
For decades, gun control advocates and their allies in “public health” have pushed a misleading factoid about children and firearms. […]
The Chicago registry was highly touted by its proponents and media cheerleaders as a major leap forward in fighting “gun violence.” Its failure is a lesson that should be remembered when the “next big thing” in “gun violence prevention” has its day in the public eye.
The Democratic National Committee has had their fill of young gun control activist and DNC vice-chair David Hogg, who was
“Well, I have a gun, so I think I’m ready.” Such was the response of one gentleman during a group
Mexico’s amorphous theory of liability is seriously in question after the Smith & Wesson decision. As was true in that case, Mexico’s allegations in the Arizona lawsuit likewise constitute a generalized complaint about how firearms are sold in the US.
Going forward, courts and would-be plaintiffs should heed the Supreme Court’s admonition that “capacious” interpretations of the PLCAA’s exceptions – especially those that “swallow most of the rule” – will not fly.
Antigun state governors tout their “leadership” and push to pass more gun control, but they ignore flaws in crime reporting data while dismissively ignoring law-abiding Americans using firearms in self-defense to deter criminals.
As the Court dithers, Rhode Islanders with magazines holding more than ten rounds and Marylanders owning a banned “assault rifle” face real felony charges. Those are charges that aren’t applicable to citizens in most of the rest of the United States.
The embarrassing exposure of a gun control activist’s tale about a school shooting in rural Pennsylvania — which never happened — illustrates just how far anti-gun fanatics will go in their crusade to disarm America.