Florida Gun Rights 2020 – SB 634 – Restricting Open Carry Even More – BAD BILL
Lawful Ownership, Possession, and Use of Firearms and Weapons: Prohibiting a person from owning, possessing, and lawfully using firearms and other weapons, ammunition, and supplies while engaging in certain lawful uses if he or she is within a specified distance of the real property of certain locations, etc.Effective Date: 07/01/2020Last Event: 11/06/19 S Referred to Infrastructure and Security; Judiciary; Rules on Wednesday, November 6, 2019 10:40 AM
A lawful activity under this paragraph may not be conducted within 1,500 feet of the real property comprising any school, house of worship, government building, or guarded beach.
Florida Gun Rights 2020 – SB 634 – Restricting Open Carry Even More – BAD BILL
Florida Gun Rights 2020 – HB 631 – Sale, Transfer, or Storage of Firearms. FFL must sell a safety brochure – BAD BILL.
General Bill by Polsky (CO-SPONSORS) Smith, C.Sale, Transfer, or Storage of Firearms: Revises requirements for storage of firearms; provides criminal penalties if minor access stored firearm & uses it in specified ways; revises definition of “minor”; requires seller or transferor of firearm to provide specified information; provides immunity for certain providers of information; revises standard for adults & minors to be criminally negligent in storage of firearms in certain circumstances.Effective Date: October 1, 2020Last Event: Now in Criminal Justice Subcommittee on Monday, November 25, 2019 4:09 PM
Florida Gun Rights 2020 – HB 631 – Sale, Transfer, or Storage of Firearms. FFL must sell a safety brochure – BAD BILL.
How is this much crazy allowed to walk around unmedicated?
A buddy of mine sent me this he got off the Zuckerberg privacy invasion network Facebook.
I don’t even know where to begin with this.
I went to an Episcopal school from the 6th through 12th grade. I was taught all about the Christan duty to help others. But other people need to want to be helped. Kinnunen went into that Church in disguise with a shotgun to cause some shit and kill people, not seek shelter and redemption.
This post victim blames the parishioners there for apparently not being Christian enough to offer the gunman sanctuary and salvation. Considering that Kinnunen shot the first person who talked to him, I can’t blame them.
After Kinnunen shot and killed two people (one was wounded and died later) it was not a safe assumption to make that he was just going to walk away and not harm anybody else. Saying that “Kinnunen killed everyone he was going to and should just be allowed to mosey on out of the Church” is an insane proposition.
Wilson is not a murderer, he is a hero. Nothing in the Abrahamic tradition that prohibits self-defense or the defense of others. There is nothing Christian about watching as a madman guns down a church full of parishioners.
Wilson did not endanger anybody else in the church. Even the anti-gun media had to begrudgingly admit that Wilson was a hero – even if they had to constantly remind everyone that he had the magic fairy dust of government sprinkled on him for a few years in the 1980s.
To reverse the situation to make Wilson the mad gunman and Kinnunen a victim who was treated poorly by the Church is unmoored from both reality and morality.
This is a level of anti-gun and anti-CCW that I didn’t know it was possible to achieve but apparently someone did.
I just want to know how someone so disconnected from reality is allowed to go around unmedicated.
I wonder if this includes the cost of body bags and survivor benefits?
A buddy of mine sent me some information about Virginia that I wanted to confirm before posting.
From the Washington Examiner:
Virginia governor’s call for 18-person gun ban force comes under fire
If I may say, that sounds like a very predictive headline.
Virginia’s pop-up gun sanctuary movement has turned its attention to fighting the governor’s call for a $4.8 million, 18-officer team to enforce his proposed “assault weapons” ban.
Two key groups issued an alert this week to push gun owners to four budget hearings Thursday around the state, asking them to quiz state legislators if they will vote to ban or confiscate weapons.
“We understand that this is short notice. But it would have a significant impact if many of our members could show up and make a 3-minute statement and ask questions of the legislators in attendance,” said the Virginia Citizens Defense League.
“We see in the governor’s proposed budget that he wants $4 million and 18 new law-enforcement positions to enforce a ban on commonly-owned firearms,” said Erich Pratt, Gun Owners of America senior vice president.
I wanted to confirm this allegation. It is (mostly) true.
From the 2020 Executive Budget Document, Part B: Office of Public Safety and Homeland Security:
By my count, that is 28 people, 18 for direct assault weapon ban enforcers, and 10 for bureaucrats for background checks, and other gun legislation enforcement.
The total cost is around $7.5 million dollars for two years.
Consider this information of the state of Virginia’s gun sanctuary movement:
For starters, the sanctuaries have spread dramatically. They’re up to 93 jurisdictions — covering roughly 40 percent of the population, by my quick spreadsheet tally. That’s huge, though the biggest victory, in Prince William County, is likely to be overturned when the county board flips to the Democrats, and some of these places have passed vague resolutions in support of the Constitution rather than the more aggressive language proposed by the Virginia Citizens Defense League.
Here is a map:
So my first question is: “how will 18 law enforcement officers and 10 bureaucrats police that much ground and 40% of the population?”
My next question is: “does that budget number include the cost of body bags, funerals, and survivor benefits for the widows and orphans?”
There is no way only 18 LEOs are going to be able to avoid serious “resistance” if in some of those rural counties.
My last question is: “who will be the 18 people that apply for the job of being one of the guys who go door to door to enforce an assault weapon ban?”
I can’t answer these questions, but nevertheless, it’s on the budget.
They are coming hard for Florida.
You have seen all the posts I have been making and I promise, I will have one page where all the bills will be consolidated for easy reference.
Unfortunately, the total of Gun Control bills has climbed now to 39. I found more bills I have missed earlier and none are mild either.
Thirty Nine Gun Control Bills. Digest that for a second.
Today, I am not even bothering to wish for a good bill to pass. I think they are gonna be swallowed in the tsunami of Bloomberg-Backed crap we are about to surf. And truthfully I do not see Florida Gun owners motivated and much less scared about what we are about to face in the legislative trenches.
But apparently fishing in Palm Beach has been great.
Florida Gun Rights 2020 – HB 629 – Pub. Rec./Personal Identifying Information of Assault Weapon or Large-capacity Magazine Possession Certificateholder – BAD BILL
Pub. Rec./Personal Identifying Information of Assault Weapon or Large-capacity Magazine Possession Certificateholder: Provides exemption from public records requirements for personal identifying information of person issued certificate of possession with respect to an assault weapon or large-capacity ammunition magazine; provides for access to exempt information for specified purposes; provides for future legislative review & repeal of exemption; provides statement of public necessity.Effective Date: on the same date that HB 627 or similar legislation takes effectLast Event: Now in Criminal Justice Subcommittee on Monday, November 25, 2019 4:09 PM