It’s all the rage now, gun control at the state level, when many gun owners have been focused on federal gun laws. First up, Arizona has already completed a major infringement and has it in its rear view mirror.
Nevada’s governor on Friday signed into law a bill expanding background checks to private gun sales and transfers, taking advantage of a Democrat-controlled Legislature to approve the first gun-related bill to cross his desk.
Lawmakers say the bill is a fix to a 2016 gun background check measure that was narrowly approved by voters. Former Gov. Brian Sandoval and former Attorney General Adam Laxalt, both Republicans, opposed the law and said it could not be implemented because it required the FBI to conduct the checks.
Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat who took office last month, signed the legislation shortly after Assembly Democrats easily passed the measure. The legislation fulfills a campaign promise of his to address firearm background checks. He described the legislation as “long overdue.”
The bill closes a loophole that allows gun buyers to avoid background checks by going through unlicensed gun sellers. Senate Majority Leader Kelvin Atkinson said the bill addresses an issue with the 2016 measure by allowing Nevada to conduct its own background checks.
All that is subterfuge. It infringes God-given rights by making person-to-person sales illegal, plain and simple. Next up, Tennessee.
HB1049/SB0943, also known as the “Families Know First Act,” would allow for an “Extreme Risk Protection Order” to be presented by police then issued by a court for those deemed a risk to themselves or others if in possession of a firearm(s).
Under the bill, a law enforcement officer or agency could seek an extreme risk protection order if based on an investigation police find the individual poses an “immediate and present danger of causing personal injury to the subject or to another by having in the subject’s custody or control, owning, purchasing, possessing, or receiving a firearm.”
[ … ]
If ordered, subjects would have to surrender firearms and ammunition to law enforcement for safekeeping or sell the firearms and ammunition to a licensed dealer.
Say, I’m sure “safe keeping” means that the firearms will be stored in a humidity controlled environment and will work just great when they are returned, which will be immediately when ordered? And I’m sure that families know best means that no one will use this as a prank or simply because they’re pissed off to have property taken away from people, right?
Next up, even South Carolina.
Law enforcement across South Carolina may soon have the right to seize firearms and ammunition.
A bill filed at the State House provides law enforcement with tools to intervene if someone has mental health or substance abuse issues.
Probable cause must be established and presented to a judge before anything is seized.
The bill’s sponsor says he simply wants to provide officers with tools to keep people safe.
Say, I haven’t heard much about open carry in South Carolina. Where does that stand? Oh yea, nowhere. We’re fighting the controllers on just about everything else, so South Carolina is one of only a handful of states, like California and New York, that don’t allow open carry.
What a sad state of affairs, but involvement in local and state politics is absolutely necessary. The war for tyranny is first fought politically, and the controllers will only proceed to the next steps if they win the first skirmishes.