2A Rights that need to be handled in 2025

Fellow Patriot,

As we enter 2025, it is absolutely vital for Second Amendment supporters to maintain our momentum.

We must:

  • Block any Congressional gun control “deals,”
  • Go on the offense with bold pro-gun rights legislation, and
  • Keep fighting in the courts to eliminate all so-called “Assault Weapons” bans once and for all.

We must remain vigilant and actively engage with both the Senate and the House of Representatives to ensure our voices are heard loud and clear. It’s our responsibility as American citizens to communicate exactly what we expect from our elected officials—to urge them to support and prioritize the policies and actions that align with the will of the people.

This requires each and every one of us to take initiative. We need to articulate our concerns, goals, and expectations directly to our representatives. Whether it’s through phone calls, emails, letters, or town hall meetings, consistent and unified communication is the key to holding them accountable and driving the action we want to see.

Our collective efforts can make a significant impact, but only if we work together and make our voices impossible to ignore. It’s not just about advocacy—it’s about shaping the future we want for our country.


Check out the latest list of 119th Congress bills impacting the Second Amendment community by visiting this link: https://gunrights.org/bill-watch/ (FREE)


EXAMPLE EMAIL

Dear {Representative},

These bills pose significant challenges and opportunities for the Second Amendment community. I urge you to oppose any measures that threaten our rights and to support legislation that upholds and strengthens our constitutional freedoms.

Visit the website to view the list of bills and our recommended actions for each one.

https://gunrights.org/bill-watch/

Thank you for standing with us in support of our constitutional right to bear arms.

Be sure to sign it and include any personal comments or thoughts you’d like to share.


Let’s stand together to protect our freedoms!

Call 202-224-3121 to find your representative.


Contact Me: [email protected]

About anything, comments to articles, questions you may have, etc.


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Revoke Gun Free Zones

Wayne Thorn

The 2025 Wyoming House Bill HB0172 is currently progressing toward approval, and if it passes, it has the potential to spark a ripple effect across the nation.

While there are certain aspects of the bill that I believe could be improved or adjusted, its overall objective is a step in the right direction. The bill aims to reduce restrictions on law-abiding Americans with concealed carry permits, ensuring they are not unfairly limited by the numerous locations currently designated as gun-free zones.

I strongly encourage everyone to reach out to their state government representatives and advocate for similar legislation in our own states. By doing so, we can work toward creating policies that respect the rights of responsible gun owners while promoting public safety.


Here is a link to the Bill: Click Here


My Letter to the Governor of Florida

Dear Governor Ron DeSantis,

I would like you to review the 2025 Wyoming House Bill HB0172, which seeks to eliminate gun-free zones, and evaluate whether we could implement something similar here in Florida. It’s worth exploring how such legislation might enhance safety and whether it aligns with the needs and values of our state.

The concept of a “Gun-Free Zone” is intended to create safe spaces where firearms are prohibited, but in practice, it can often have unintended consequences. Many argue that posting such zones can inadvertently signal vulnerability to individuals intent on causing harm. Instead of deterring violent actions, these signs may be perceived as an invitation, suggesting a lack of immediate resistance.

For example, designating schools as gun-free zones has not prevented tragic mass shootings from occurring. These areas are often targeted because the likelihood of encountering armed opposition is significantly reduced. This has raised critical questions about whether such policies genuinely enhance safety or if they create environments that unintentionally attract those with malicious intent.

To address this issue, many advocate for alternative solutions, such as implementing stronger security measures, allowing trained personnel to carry firearms, and investing in mental health resources to address the root causes of violence. The debate is complex, but one thing is clear: simply declaring an area a gun-free zone is not enough to ensure the safety of those within it. A multifaceted approach is needed to protect vulnerable spaces effectively and to prevent future tragedies. 

Thank you for your consideration,

Dr. Cecil Wayne Thorn


My Thought

The only way to fully restore our firearm rights is to ensure that our state government representatives understand where we stand. We must demand the removal of unnecessary restrictions and advocate for the complete restoration of our Second Amendment rights. It’s time to take a firm stand and remind our leaders that these rights are fundamental to our freedom and security.


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Colorado’s “The Fight For Freedom”: Bill Seeks To Ban All Semi-Autos That Take Magazines

Colorado’s new bill to ban all semi-autos that take magazines wants to strip away at 2nd Amendment RIGHTS.

On January 8, 2025, Colorado Democrats introduced Senate Bill 25-003, aiming to ban the manufacture, distribution, transfer, and sale of semiautomatic firearms that accept detachable magazines. This legislation targets a wide range of pistols and rifles, including popular models like the AR-15, which are commonly owned by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes. Critics argue that such a sweeping ban infringes upon Second Amendment rights, as it would prohibit the acquisition of firearms that are in common use for self-defense and other legal activities. The bill also seeks to outlaw rapid-fire trigger activators and bump stocks, further expanding its reach. While proponents believe the measure will enhance public safety, opponents contend that it overreaches by restricting access to firearms traditionally used for lawful purposes, thus undermining constitutionally protected rights.

Supporters of the Second Amendment are encouraged to reach out to their Colorado representatives and voice opposition to the proposed bill to ban semiautomatic firearms with detachable magazines. Advocates argue that if such legislation is enacted, it may set a precedent for similar measures in other states, potentially creating a ripple effect nationwide. Engaging with lawmakers at the state level is a key step in influencing the legislative process and ensuring the representation of diverse perspectives.

Go to this YouTube link for more detailed information on this bill: View here


Here is a list of sources related to Colorado’s proposed ban on semiautomatic firearms with detachable magazines:

1. The Colorado Sun Colorado Democrats introduce a bill to ban semiautomatic firearms with detachable magazines
Read here

2. National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) Colorado lawmakers propose semiautomatic ban bill, sparking Second Amendment concerns
Read here

3. Colorado’s Senate Bill 25-003 Colorado lawmakers propose semiautomatic ban bill
Read here

4. Colorado Legislators Legislators membership list Read here


My Thoughts

Colorado’s proposed bill to ban semiautomatic firearms with detachable magazines represents a contentious debate over public safety and constitutional rights. While supporters see it as a step toward reducing gun violence, critics view it as an overreach that infringes on the Second Amendment and limits access to firearms commonly used for lawful purposes. The outcome of this legislation could have far-reaching implications, not only for Colorado but also for other states considering similar measures. It underscores the importance of civic engagement, urging individuals to advocate for their perspectives and actively participate in shaping the laws that affect their rights and communities.

Note: The percentage of homicides in Colorado in 2022, relative to its population of 5,850,935, is approximately 0.0052% or 304 homicides. (2023 and 2024 records were not available as of this posting)


In the United States, there are over 2.5 million instances annually where firearms are used for self-defense, including situations where the weapon is fired or simply displayed to deter a threat.


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Write me with your comments, questions, or concerns.


193 countries and we in the United States are 3rd in gun violence.

Stop Gun Violence

Listen to this. You will be surprised we could be 189th see how.


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Gun lovers like me should be advocates for sensible regulation

Here is an article on MSN News, I think Wes Siler did a great job about Gun owners and advocating for sensible regulation.

Story by Wes Siler.

Wes Siler is an American outdoorsman, hunter, and writer. He lives in Montana with his wife, Virginia, and their three rescue dogs

It’s a common refrain among responsible American gun owners like myself that mass shootings are not our fault, and we should not be penalized with burdensome restrictions as a result of them.

I get where that argument comes from. I use the AR-15 I carefully custom-built for target practice at gun ranges. Its low recoil makes it easy to shoot, its modular design means it’s simple to maintain, and since it’s the same caliber as military weapons of a similar pattern, ammunition for it is very affordable. When I’m not at one of those ranges, it stays locked up in a multi-thousand-dollar safe, or a secure travel case.

As a keen hunter, I use some of my other much more powerful weapons to put the healthiest and most ethical form of protein on my family’s plates and in their dog bowls – and to ensure our safety both in our homes and in public. The closest any of this gets to a mass shooting is that I’d like to think I’ll be prepared to defend our lives should we ever find ourselves caught in one.

How would restricting my ability to train, hunt, or defend my loved ones help keep other people safe?

I ask that question rhetorically because I believe this is an inherently flawed argument, created and spread for the express purpose of manipulating how gun owners vote. By participating widely in the culture wars dividing American society, and by remaining absurdly absolute in its opposition to gun safety reform of any kind, I fear that the National Rifle Association (NRA) is actually going to achieve the very thing it says it stands against, and wind up compromising our Second Amendment right to own guns.

The NRA’s century-long progression from an organization promoting marksmanship into a wholly political entity is well documented elsewhere. The organization does not disclose membership statistics but is today believed to count only two or three million dues-paying members in its ranks. The NRA’s single largest donor is the oil and gas industry, and the organization spends much time lobbying against animal conservation and environmental causes as a result: in effect, it lobbies against the interests of hunters, often enough.

Perhaps the most succinct description of the NRA’s current purpose comes from convicted Russian spy Maria Butina, who infiltrated the organization and in 2018 described it to her handlers as “the largest sponsor of the elections to the US Congress.”

In the wake of the 2012 school shooting in Sandy Hook, Connecticut, in which 20-year-old Adam Lanza murdered 20 school children and five adults with an AR-15 he obtained from his mother, who he also killed, the NRA famously declared: “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.”

The organization opposes gun safety reform of any kind, instead arguing that more guns are the solution to mass shootings.

And the NRA takes those views further as it participates in the culture wars. Its representatives have mocked teenage survivors of the Parkland, Florida school shooting; likened gay soldiers to pedophiles; and aired an illustration of Thomas the Tank Engine wearing a white Ku Klux Klan hood on NRA TV, a streaming video channel. Amid all that, one thing remains glaringly absent: any argument for what role guns might play in a healthier society.

“The NRA figured out that radicalization, hate, fear, racism – those things could gin up a populace to vote in irrational ways,” writes former firearms industry executive Ryan Busse in his tell-all book “Gunfight.”

Busse goes on to describe a culture within the gun industry that uses any attempt at gun safety legislation to raise money, drive sales, and politically radicalize gun owners. Rather than lend its expertise to any discussion about saving children’s lives, the NRA and the gun industry it’s intertwined with instead profit from mass shootings.

While it is extremely unlikely that any significant gun safety reform will become law in the immediate future, this sort of behavior virtually guarantees that gun rights will be on the chopping block – wholesale – at some point not that far down the road.

In 2020, one in ten eligible voters were members of Generation Z – people born between 1995 and 2012. In the 2022 midterms, which typically see lower turnout than Presidential elections, that number was one in eight. Some 27 percent of the entire generation turned out for that election, one of the highest voter participation rates for any generation in an American election. While Baby Boomers – the generation born between 1946 and 1964 – still far outnumber young people at the polls, that will continue to change. The average life expectancy for Americans has fallen to just 77 years, the same age as the oldest Boomers.

And Gen Z is not pro-guns. According to a poll conducted by Harvard’s Institute of Politics before last year’s election, 70 percent of likely voters aged 18-29 favor stricter gun laws, a 15-point increase since Sandy Hook. 58 percent support banning assault weapons (like my AR-15) altogether. A hefty 47 percent support changing the Second Amendment. And 53 percent have an unfavorable view of the NRA.  

Similar statistics hold true for other issues in which the NRA has sought to align the identity of guns and gun owners on the side repugnant to American young people. Where only 18 percent of Baby Boomers told a Walton Family Foundation to study that their 2022 vote was influenced by concerns about racism, 30 percent of Generation Z said that it was a critical issue. According to a Gallup poll conducted in February, only 2.8 percent of Baby Boomers identify as LGBT. That number for Gen Z is 20.8 percent. Fully 40 percent of Gen Z identify climate change as one of the top three most important issues facing the world. Generation Z is the first to grow up with mass shooting drills throughout their entire career as students. Guns are now the most common cause of death for children in this country.

By resisting gun safety reform altogether, while aligning the public image of guns with racism, homophobia, environmental destruction, and dead kids, the NRA and the firearms industry have positioned guns and gun rights in opposition to an entire generation of politically active voters. The writing is written on the wall, and as a keen gun owner that makes me mad.

There’s another problem. By doing everything it can to prevent people who actually know something about guns from getting involved with firearms legislation in any way, the NRA has helped to make sure that the few gun laws which have passed are ill-conceived, useless, and burdensome. Perhaps the most obvious example is California’s assault-weapon regulations, requiring foolish plastic fins to be added to the grips of guns such as the AR-15. This affects the weapon’s deadliness not at all and actually makes it less safe and controllable.

The NRA would regard this as a success, as such rules polarise American gun owners against any form of regulation, driving them into the hardline camp. However, it has also drastically limited the public’s imagination about what might be possible if we all worked together to create sensible and effective change.

Right now, it’s common to think that “gun control,” means attempts to ban certain types of firearm – or maybe all of them. What if, instead, the debate was around mandatory training, insurance, and tiered licensing?

Subsidizing gun ranges and employing trainers would expand opportunities to shoot, and create more expert shooters. Sales of ammunition and quality firearms and their components would benefit. Insurance rates would financially incentivize responsible practices like safe storage. Accidental gun deaths would fall. And tiered licensing would encourage practice, again bringing a net financial gain to the industry.

Unlike geographic bans on gun ownership, or the types of people who can own guns, or on specific types of firearms, there is a Constitutional precedent for mandatory training. When the Second Amendment was written, individual gun ownership was considered important so that the nation as a whole could resist the tyrannical aspirations of European empires. And it was critical to the success of those militias that members were proficient with their weapons. The “well-regulated militia” that our forefathers wrote of, as being necessary to the security of a free State, is a well-trained militia.

Training, responsibility, and civic participation wouldn’t just make the presence of guns safer for all Americans, it would help us gun owners create a cogent argument for why guns still belong in our society, in the coming decades when Gen Z with its values comes to dominate the electorate.

Why isn’t that a part of the conversation right now?

Because the organization which claims to represent gun owners, and does represent gun makers and the fossil fuels industry, is preventing such mature discourse from taking place.

Unless we change things, we risk that grown-up discussion never happening at all. If us gun owners are not going to be the ones to stand up and start the conversation, who will?


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More than 1 million guns were stolen from private citizens from 2017 to 2021

stolen guns

A huge way those legally purchased firearms get into the hands of criminals is through theft, the ATF said. In five years, there were more than 1 million firearms stolen from private citizens and reported to authorities.

There’s a caveat here, however. Federal law doesn’t require individual gun owners to report the loss or theft of their firearms to the police. And while local laws vary, it also isn’t a requirement in many states to report a stolen gun, either — so the number of gun thefts could be much higher.

Regardless, Nichols, with Giffords, called this number “horrifying.”

“It shows that we really have a serious problem with guns that are not being stored safely in order to prevent this,” she said.

Research done in recent years has emphasized the importance of safely storing guns.

Everytown for Gun Safety, a nonprofit that advocates for gun control, reports that “households that locked both firearms and ammunition were associated with a 78 percent lower risk of self-inflicted firearm injuries and an 85 percent lower risk of unintentional firearm injuries among children and teens, compared to those that locked neither.”

But state laws vary widely on mandates for secure storage.

This new data from the ATF can further educate policymakers on the need for regulations mandating safe storage, Nichols said.

Roughly 4.6 million children live in a home with loaded and unlocked firearms, studies have shown.


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UVALDE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SHOOTING

The U.S. is uniquely terrible at protecting children from gun violence

And over 80% of mass shooters at K-12 schools stole guns from family members, according to research funded by the National Institute of Justice (a program of the U.S. Justice Department) that examined mass shootings that took place from 1966 to 2019.


Gun Deaths Among Kids

Gun death kids

Check out these stats, we should be addressing, why these kids are losing their lives, and how and in what ways we can help reduce them.

Look at the video clips on NBC’s DATA DOWNLOAD.


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Florida Sheriff says Gun Control Cannot stop criminals from getting Guns.

criminals and guns

Watch the video…

This is what is going on in our country, 2 minors stole Guns (burglaries) and then used them to do harm to others.

Florida sheriff went on a rant against gun restrictions Friday while announcing the arrests of two minors in connection with a string of shootings that left three teenagers dead.

We do not need more gun control over lawful gun ownership and what weapons they can have, it is the criminals that need to be controlled, not us.


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Justice Department asks Supreme Court to overturn domestic violence gun ruling.

The appeals court said people under domestic violence restraining order retain Second Amendment rights

Click here to see video

Montana AG to sue Biden administration over gun executive order

Republican Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen is prepping a lawsuit against the Biden administration over its gun violence executive order, saying the president “should know better” than to enact “draconian gun control measures.”


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