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The Range
Law & Order
Wyoming proposes law defying potential assault weapon ban
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<blockquote data-quote="tulsamal" data-source="post: 2056626" data-attributes="member: 571"><p>I don't think so. If various states can sell pot or legalize it like Colorado... it seems like a possible answer. Federal law enforcement types are thin on the ground in most states. The FBI isn't going to stop me for a speeding ticket and then arrest me for having a "high capacity magazine" in my carry gun. I'm 51 years old and I've only had to deal with an FBI agent once in my whole life. So if the states basically tell the Feds, "It's your law, lets see you enforce it," that has potential. Same thing happened in many parts of the country during Prohibition. Or the last year of the Federally mandated 55 mph speed limit. People just ignored these Federal laws because they realized they weren't going to get arrested for violating them.</p><p></p><p>IMO, it has a lot more potential than individuals here and there barricading themselves into their houses and shooting the local deputy. The individual can be depicted in the news as some "survivalist nut case." Entire states formally notifying the Feds that they refuse to go along with their unconstitutional laws is quite another.</p><p></p><p>Gregg</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tulsamal, post: 2056626, member: 571"] I don't think so. If various states can sell pot or legalize it like Colorado... it seems like a possible answer. Federal law enforcement types are thin on the ground in most states. The FBI isn't going to stop me for a speeding ticket and then arrest me for having a "high capacity magazine" in my carry gun. I'm 51 years old and I've only had to deal with an FBI agent once in my whole life. So if the states basically tell the Feds, "It's your law, lets see you enforce it," that has potential. Same thing happened in many parts of the country during Prohibition. Or the last year of the Federally mandated 55 mph speed limit. People just ignored these Federal laws because they realized they weren't going to get arrested for violating them. IMO, it has a lot more potential than individuals here and there barricading themselves into their houses and shooting the local deputy. The individual can be depicted in the news as some "survivalist nut case." Entire states formally notifying the Feds that they refuse to go along with their unconstitutional laws is quite another. Gregg [/QUOTE]
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Wyoming proposes law defying potential assault weapon ban
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