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MI: Hunters would be Protected from Cell Phone Harassment Under House Bill
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Corey Salo
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Hunters and fishermen would be protected from harassment from people recording their activity under a bill pending in the Michigan House.
House Bill 4340, sponsored by state Rep. John Reilly, R-Oakland Township, would amend the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act to make it illegal to record someone who is lawfully taking an animal or fish. Testifying before the House Natural Resources and Outdoor Recreation Committee, Reilly said the bill would protect hunters from being persecuted by activists who record and upload videos online.
�The important thing is hunting is lawful and legal,� Reilly said. |
U.S. Justice Department Submits Brief in Support of Second Amendment
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The United States Department of Justice has submitted an Amicus Curiae (friend of the court) brief on the New York Rifle and Pistol Club case. The Supreme Court has agreed to decide the case. It will likely be hearing oral arguments on the case in October of 2019. The brief, submitted by Solicitor General Noel J. Francisco, concludes the Supreme Court should reverse the appeals court ruling and hold the New York City law to be unconstitutional.
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How to Introduce a Kid to Hunting
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There was this 12-year-old boy with fearful, downcast eyes and stiff, robotic movements. He was trying to settle a rifle on a fold-out camp table so he could check his rifle�s zero on a paper target our outfitter had stapled to a box and placed across a sagebrush flat. Around the boy were a half-dozen men, all relatives, teasing him and talking down to him. The boy tried to settle the rifle on someone�s pack on the table, but the men just wouldn�t stop. I couldn�t even tell which man was his father. When the boy finally did shoot, he flinched and missed the box. |
MI: Hunting Will Continue in Ann Arbor, City Council Votes
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David Williamson
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Hunting deer in the city of Ann Arbor will continue as part of efforts to control the deer population. Officials report that City Council during a meeting that began Monday night rejected an amendment that would have put a stop to the culling of deer. The vote came after supporters and opponents of the hunts involving sharpshooters turned out to voice their opinions on the issue.
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The American Old West: How Hollywood Made It �Wild� to Make Money & Advance Gun Control
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David Williamson
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Hollywood has a clever way of distorting our perspective on history, and a great example of this is Western film � a movie genre we've all come to love. Cattle rustlers, guns blazing, outlaws running loose, and vigilantes dishing out vengeance indiscriminately. These scenes have become more synonymous with the American Frontier than Winchester and their "Cartridge That Won the West." But these fictional tales have produced more than entertainment for over a century; they've also contributed to an ongoing, subtle push for gun control, all while making Hollywood millions. |
Carlson at Crosscut: Why Arming Teachers Might Be Good Idea
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David Williamson
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Veteran conservative Seattle radio personality John Carlson could just as easily have kicked a hornet�s nest when he wrote in his column at the left-leaning �Crosscut� online news magazine that arming school officials �might not be a bad idea.�
According to several reader responses, it�s not a good idea, either. But those are reactions from people who most likely supported two anti-gun-rights citizen initiatives that have burdened law-abiding gun owners with paperwork that hasn�t demonstrably prevented a single crime (I-594 in 2014) and stripped young adults of Second Amendment rights while defining smallbore target and hunting rifles as �semiautomatic assault rifles� (I-1639 in 2018). |
WA: Federal Judge Refuses to Dismiss NRA/SAF Suit Against Washington Gun Control
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On Tuesday a federal judge rejected a motion to dismiss a lawsuit against Washington�s gun control Initiative 1639. I-1639 took effect January 1, 2019, and UPI reported that it �bans the sale of semi-automatic weapons to anyone under the age of 21.� I-1639 also put an enhanced background check in place for those still allowed to buy commonly-owned semiautomatic rifles and puts gun storage requirements in place, along with penalties for gun owners who fail to comply with those requirements. |
Social Media Abuzz Over Constitutional Carry Audits
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It is generally accepted that the First Amendment allows individuals to record videos of public officials in public places. A prime example of this is videos taken by individuals who have been pulled over by the police as a way to ensure their safety. However, most people would agree this is not an �audit.� Rather, a First Amendment audit is better described as the process of seeking out an interaction with either law enforcement or another group of public officials in an effort to assess the legality of the official's response to recording in public places.
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CO: Montrose County Reconsidering Open Carrying at Events Center
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Montrose County Commissioners are discussing a ban to open-carry gun rules at the Montrose County Event Center. They say some residents were concerned about firearms after incidents around the state, like the STEM School shooting on the front range. As it is now, you can open carry and concealed carry inside the event center. |
TX: Texas House Passes Bill Allowing Handgun Owners to Carry Weapons in Church
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More than a year after a gunman killed 26 in a Sutherland Springs church, the Texas House gave preliminary approval Monday to a bill that would allow licensed handgun owners to legally carry their weapons in places of worship. The legislation � Senate Bill 535 by Republican state Sen. Donna Campbell of New Braunfels � strikes a provision in current law that says handguns aren�t allowed in �churches, synagogues, or other places of worship.�
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NC: Class Teaches Kids as Young as 6 to Use Guns
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"There was no other class like this,� said Michael Pegram, firearm trainer. �So, I decided to come up with it." Aiden, 9, is a graduate of one of Pegram�s gun safety classes near Mint Hill, North Carolina. The children spend four hours both in classroom time and shooting. They start with a Nerf gun and work up to a .22 or a 9 mm.
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NY: New York Legislature Approves Bill Banning Undetecteable Firearms
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Making, selling, transporting or possessing 3D-printed guns and other undetectable firearms would be banned in New York under legislation approved by the Democrat-controlled state Legislature. The Assembly passed the bill Monday, five days after the legislation was approved by the Senate. The measure would ban all firearms whose components can't be detected by security screening technology such as X-rays and metal detectors typically used at airports. |
Sad Day: Swiss Voters Give In To EU's Pressure To Tighten Gun Laws
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On Sunday, Swiss voters moved to adopt stricter gun control laws. The measure passed with 64 percent of voters agreeing to the new set of regulations, Reuters reported. The main reason the Swiss moved to adopt the rules has to do with the visa system. Switzerland is currently part of Europe�s Schengen open-border system, despite not being a member of the European Union. |
FL: Florida Dems Launch Ad Campaign to Stop Counties from Arming Teachers
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Democrats lost the fight in the Legislature on the issue of allowing teachers to be armed. Now, the Florida Democratic Party (FDP) is turning to an ad campaign to push minority school districts not to sign off on such a move. It�s the start of a new yearlong ad series by the FDP targeted at minority voters. A bill approved by the GOP-controlled Legislature (SB 7030) allows for school districts to permit teachers to join the state�s Guardian Program. That would enable a teacher to be armed after undergoing a 144-hour training program. |
ME: Moose Permit Increase Approved, but Any-Deer Hunting Permits may be Reduced
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An additional 11 percent of hunters will receive permits for the fall moose hunt this year, but the number of any-deer hunting permits might be reduced by 20 percent because of the high number of does taken last season, state biologists announced Tuesday at the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Advisory Council meeting. The IFW Advisory Council unanimously approved the 2,820 moose permits proposed by state biologists in March, the second consecutive annual increase following a four-year stretch when permits were reduced by half because so many moose were killed by a winter tick parasite. |
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