Weer'd is feeling sick after his colonoscopy, but Erin, David, and Oddball have come to the rescue with an ACP Round Table.
In This Episode
We discuss:
- gun manufacturers handing over purchaser information taken from warranty cards to political groups;
- a historic rise in FFL revocations;
- a gun shop owner who was acquitted on charges of illegally acquiring a machine gun;
- a federal ruling against the ban on firearm ownership in public housing;
- Knife Rights suing the government to repeal the Federal Switchblade Act;
- Massachusetts gun owners delivering nearly 100,000 referendum signatures, along with a special gift, to Governor Maura Healey:
- the near-disaster at a staged shooting event by a politician who should have known better, and the longer you look, the worse it gets;
- Delaware being questioned about their AWB by the Supreme Court;
- and the mixed result on the appeal of the Washington, DC "high capacity magazine" ban.
Show Notes
- For years, America’s most iconic gun-makers turned over sensitive personal information on hundreds of thousands of customers to political operatives.
- Historic rise in the number of revoked FFL licenses. Even the Trace points out that many of them were unfair.
- Assorted Calibers Podcast Ep 294: An Eclipse, a Round Table, and Other Lunacy
- Frederick gun shop owner acquitted in machine gun conspiracy case
- Frederick gun store owner, charged with county sheriff, acquitted on all counts
- Federal judge strikes down public housing gun ban in New York
- Knife Rights files *another* lawsuit in hopes of getting rid of the Federal Switchblade Act
- Gun law opponents deliver boxes of signatures
- Delivering Gifts to the Governor’s Office
- "This is taking it a little far” - Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley mocks Democrat Lucas Kunce after TV reporter injured at campaign event
- My guy… here’s just three of the infinite number of problems:
- This Aged poorly
- Gun Range Organizer Says Reporter Got Shot Because He And Kunce ‘Didn’t Listen’ To Safety Advice, Messages Show
- Missouri Democrat's Gun Stunt That Led to a Reporter's Injury Just Got Even Worse
- SCOTUS asks for Delaware to respond to petition for writ of certiorari for Jennings v Gray (AWB case)
- Appeals court upholds DC’s high capacity magazine ban, but agrees that magazines count as “arms in common use.”
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