Friday, March 19, 2010

5th state passes Firearms Freedom Act

Rebellion in America heats up as 5th state exempts guns

Gun rights states

A fifth state – South Dakota – has decided that guns made, sold and used within its borders no longer are subject to the whims of the federal government through its rule-making arm in the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and two supporters of the growing groundswell say they hope Washington soon will be taking note.

South Dakota Gov. Mike Rounds has signed into law his state’s version of a Firearms Freedom Act that first was launched in Montana. It already is law there, in Tennessee, Utah and Wyoming, which took the unusual step of specifying criminal penalties – including both fines and jail time – for federal agents attempting to enforce a federal law on a “personal firearm” in the Cowboy State.

According to a report in the Dakota Voice, the new South Dakota law addresses the “rights of states which have been carelessly trampled by the federal government for decades.”

“As the federal government has radically overstepped is constitutional limitations in the past year or so, an explosion of states have begun re-asserting their rights not only with regard to firearms, but also in shielding themselves against government health care, cap and trade global warming taxes, and more,” the report said.

3 comments:

  1. Nothing introduced in Arkansas yet. We're in the "Interim Study Proposal" stage.

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  2. Tell them to hurry up, Lady Red.

    Only question I have is how many states have factories that manufacture guns?

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  3. Good question, Matt.

    We should all make a point to find out who manufactures guns in our state, and support them.

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