a film about nwo veri-chip and the coming forced chip implantand cop media you got to watch this and pass it on – resist the mark of the beast http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmvCFd866R8
U.S. Federal Gun Control Legislation, 1968 – present
Most Federal gun control legislation in the United States has been written, introduced, and sponsored by Jewish Congressmen and Jewish Senators.
1968: The Gun Control Act of 1968 comes from Representative Emanuel Celler’s House bill H.R. 17735. It expands legislation already attempted by the non-Jewish Sen. Thomas Dodd. America’s biggest and most far-reaching gun law came from a Jew.
1988: Senate bill S. 1523 is sponsored by Senator Howard Metzenbaum. It proposes legislation turning every violation of the Gun Control Act of 1968 into a RICO predicate offense, allowing a gun owner to be charged with federal racketeering offenses.
1988: Senator Metzenbaum co-sponsors a bill — S. 2180 — to ban, or limit/restrict, so-called “plastic guns.”
1990: Senator Herbert Kohl introduces bill S.2070, the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990, which bans gun possession in a school zone. The law will later be struck down in court as unconstitutional.
1993: Senate bill S.653 is sponsored by Senator Howard Metzenbaum. It bans specific semiautomatic rifles, but also gives the Secretary of the Treasury the power to add any semiautomatic firearm to the list at a later date.
February, 1994: The Brady Law, which requires waiting periods to buy handguns, becomes effective. Senator Metzenbaum wrote the Brady Bill. Metzenbaum sponsored the bill in the Senate. The sponsor of the bill in the House was Rep. Charles Schumer.
1994: Senator Metzenbaum introduces S.1878, the Gun Violence Prevention Act of 1994, aka “Brady II.” Representative Schumer sponsored “Brady II” sister legislation [H.R. 1321] in the U.S. House of Representatives.
September, 1994: The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 goes into effect, including a provision that bans the manufacture and possession of semiautomatic rifles described as “assault weapons.” [Note: true assault weapons are fully automatic, not semiautomatic]. That gun-ban provision was authored in the Senate by Senator Dianne Feinstein and authored in the House by Congressman Schumer.
1995: Senators Kohl, Specter, Feinstein, Lautenberg and others introduce the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1995, an amended version of the 1990 school-zone law which was struck down in court as being unconstitutional.
September, 1996: The Lautenberg Domestic Confiscation provision becomes law. It is part of a larger omnibus appropriations bill. It was sponsored by Senator Frank Lautenberg. It bans people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence from ever owning a gun.
1997: Senate bill S. 54, the Federal Gang Violence Act of 1997, proposes much harsher sentences for people violating minor gun laws, including mandatory prison sentences and forfeiture of property. It was introduced by Senator Dianne Feinstein and Senator Hatch, among others. It returns the idea of turning every violation of the Gun Control Act of 1968 into a RICO predicate offense.
January, 1999: Senator Barbara Boxer introduces bill S.193, the American Handgun Standards Act of 1999.
January, 1999: Senator Kohl introduces bill S.149, the Child Safety Lock Act of 1999. It would require a child safety lock in connection with transfer of a handgun.
February,1999: Senator Frank Lautenberg introduces bill S.407, the Stop Gun Trafficking Act of 1999.
February, 1999: Senator Lautenberg introduces S.443, the Gun Show Accountability Act of 1999.
March, 1999: Senator Lautenberg introduces bill S.560, the Gun Industry Accountability Act of 1999.
March, 1999: Senator Feinstein introduces bill S.594, the Large Capacity Ammunition Magazine Import Ban Act of 1999.
May, 2000: Senate bill S. 2515, Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act of 2000, is submitted by Senators Feinstein, Boxer, Lautenberg, and Schumer. It is a plan for a national firearms licensing system.
January, 2001: Senate bill S.25, Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act of 2001, is sponsored by Senators Feinstein, Schumer, and Boxer. It is a nation-wide gun registration plan [apparently there were two versions of that Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act bill].
May, 2003: Senators Feinstein, Schumer, Boxer and others introduce legislation that would reauthorize the 1994 federal assault weapons ban, and, close a loophole in the law that allows large-capacity ammunition magazines to be imported into the U.S. The ban expired in September, 2004.
October, 2003: Senators Feinstein, Lautenberg, Levin, and Schumer co-sponsor bill S.1774, designed to stop the sunset [ending] of the Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988.
March, 2005: Senator Lautenberg introduces bill S.645, “to reinstate the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act,” in other words, to reinstate the 1994 assault-rifle ban [also known as the “Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994”] which expired in late 2004.
March, 2005: Senator Feinstein introduces bill S.620, “to reinstate the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act,” in other words, to reinstate the 1994 assault-rifle ban [also known as the “Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994”] which expired in late 2004.
July, 2005: Senator Feinstein introduces bill SA1621 – Fifty-Caliber Sniper Weapons. This amendment would convert all .50 BMG firearms to NFA weapons.
July, 2005: Senator Feinstein introduces bill SA1622 – Fifty-Caliber Exclusion to S.397. This amendment would modify SB397 to allow suits when the firearm involved was a .50 caliber weapon.
July, 2005: Senator Boxer introduces bill SA1633 – BATFE Safety Standards SA1633 – BATFE Safety Standards. This amendment allows law suits to continue/be brought if the product did not meet the safety standards as defined by the BATFE.
July, 2005: Senator Boxer introduces bill SA1634 – ‘Sporting Use’ on Domestic Handguns. Applying ’sporting use’ clause requirements to domestic handguns could, almost completely, dry up the handgun availability in the United States.
Emanuel Celler, Democratic Representative from New York(1923 – 1973) Howard Metzenbaum, Democratic Senator from Ohio(1974, 1976 – 1995) Carl Levin, Democratic Senator from Michigan(1979 – present) Tom Lantos, Democratic Representative from California(1981 – 2008) Arlen Specter, Democratic Senator from Pennsylvania(1981 – present) Chuck Schumer, Democratic Senator from New York(1999 – present), Democratic Represenative from New York(1981-1999) Frank Lautenberg, Democratic Senator from New Jersey(1982 – 2001, 2003 – present) Barbara Boxer, Democratic Senator from California(1993 – present), Democratic Representative from California(1983 – 1993) Herb Kohl, Democratic Senator from Wisconsin(1989 – present) Jerrold Nadler, Democratic Representative from New York(1992 – present) Dianne Feinstein, Democratic Senator from California(1992 – present) Steve Rothman, Democratic Representative from New Jersey(1997 – present)
All anti-gun groups should see this video,Then maybe they would see that the criminals will allways have guns.All these laws just take the guns out of the peoples hands.AND QUIT SUPPORTING THE NRA AND SUPPORT GUN OWNERS OF AMERICA.
One question for the anti-gun people. If someone is about to due harm or even possible death to 1 of your love ones on your property , like the man said “What do you want a telephone or firearm” ? Of coarse the answer should be a firearm. Well I just hope these blind individauls do not find out the hard way. Guns save lives , Criminals take lives. That’s the truth.
true – but I am working on a prototype for a cellular ‘phone with a built in .22 LR mechanism. That way, after you shoot the criminal, you can call the morgue.
a film about nwo veri-chip and the coming forced chip implantand cop media you got to watch this and pass it on – resist the mark of the beast http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmvCFd866R8
[Reply]
No government or tribe can allow there slaves to have access to weapons.The hinge pin are the firearms,get those an GAME Over.
[Reply]
If an encounter puts you in fear for your life, its ok to shoot.
Remember, some bandits in ski masks cloak their activities behind
a badge.
[Reply]
inabox Reply:
November 10th, 2009 at 4:48 pm
Depth of defenses-no clear entry -always a way out
[Reply]
U.S. Federal Gun Control Legislation, 1968 – present
Most Federal gun control legislation in the United States has been written, introduced, and sponsored by Jewish Congressmen and Jewish Senators.
1968: The Gun Control Act of 1968 comes from Representative Emanuel Celler’s House bill H.R. 17735. It expands legislation already attempted by the non-Jewish Sen. Thomas Dodd. America’s biggest and most far-reaching gun law came from a Jew.
1988: Senate bill S. 1523 is sponsored by Senator Howard Metzenbaum. It proposes legislation turning every violation of the Gun Control Act of 1968 into a RICO predicate offense, allowing a gun owner to be charged with federal racketeering offenses.
1988: Senator Metzenbaum co-sponsors a bill — S. 2180 — to ban, or limit/restrict, so-called “plastic guns.”
1990: Senator Herbert Kohl introduces bill S.2070, the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990, which bans gun possession in a school zone. The law will later be struck down in court as unconstitutional.
1993: Senate bill S.653 is sponsored by Senator Howard Metzenbaum. It bans specific semiautomatic rifles, but also gives the Secretary of the Treasury the power to add any semiautomatic firearm to the list at a later date.
February, 1994: The Brady Law, which requires waiting periods to buy handguns, becomes effective. Senator Metzenbaum wrote the Brady Bill. Metzenbaum sponsored the bill in the Senate. The sponsor of the bill in the House was Rep. Charles Schumer.
1994: Senator Metzenbaum introduces S.1878, the Gun Violence Prevention Act of 1994, aka “Brady II.” Representative Schumer sponsored “Brady II” sister legislation [H.R. 1321] in the U.S. House of Representatives.
September, 1994: The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 goes into effect, including a provision that bans the manufacture and possession of semiautomatic rifles described as “assault weapons.” [Note: true assault weapons are fully automatic, not semiautomatic]. That gun-ban provision was authored in the Senate by Senator Dianne Feinstein and authored in the House by Congressman Schumer.
1995: Senators Kohl, Specter, Feinstein, Lautenberg and others introduce the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1995, an amended version of the 1990 school-zone law which was struck down in court as being unconstitutional.
September, 1996: The Lautenberg Domestic Confiscation provision becomes law. It is part of a larger omnibus appropriations bill. It was sponsored by Senator Frank Lautenberg. It bans people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence from ever owning a gun.
1997: Senate bill S. 54, the Federal Gang Violence Act of 1997, proposes much harsher sentences for people violating minor gun laws, including mandatory prison sentences and forfeiture of property. It was introduced by Senator Dianne Feinstein and Senator Hatch, among others. It returns the idea of turning every violation of the Gun Control Act of 1968 into a RICO predicate offense.
January, 1999: Senator Barbara Boxer introduces bill S.193, the American Handgun Standards Act of 1999.
January, 1999: Senator Kohl introduces bill S.149, the Child Safety Lock Act of 1999. It would require a child safety lock in connection with transfer of a handgun.
February,1999: Senator Frank Lautenberg introduces bill S.407, the Stop Gun Trafficking Act of 1999.
February, 1999: Senator Lautenberg introduces S.443, the Gun Show Accountability Act of 1999.
March, 1999: Senator Lautenberg introduces bill S.560, the Gun Industry Accountability Act of 1999.
March, 1999: Senator Feinstein introduces bill S.594, the Large Capacity Ammunition Magazine Import Ban Act of 1999.
May, 2000: Senate bill S. 2515, Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act of 2000, is submitted by Senators Feinstein, Boxer, Lautenberg, and Schumer. It is a plan for a national firearms licensing system.
January, 2001: Senate bill S.25, Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act of 2001, is sponsored by Senators Feinstein, Schumer, and Boxer. It is a nation-wide gun registration plan [apparently there were two versions of that Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act bill].
May, 2003: Senators Feinstein, Schumer, Boxer and others introduce legislation that would reauthorize the 1994 federal assault weapons ban, and, close a loophole in the law that allows large-capacity ammunition magazines to be imported into the U.S. The ban expired in September, 2004.
October, 2003: Senators Feinstein, Lautenberg, Levin, and Schumer co-sponsor bill S.1774, designed to stop the sunset [ending] of the Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988.
March, 2005: Senator Lautenberg introduces bill S.645, “to reinstate the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act,” in other words, to reinstate the 1994 assault-rifle ban [also known as the “Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994”] which expired in late 2004.
March, 2005: Senator Feinstein introduces bill S.620, “to reinstate the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act,” in other words, to reinstate the 1994 assault-rifle ban [also known as the “Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994”] which expired in late 2004.
July, 2005: Senator Feinstein introduces bill SA1621 – Fifty-Caliber Sniper Weapons. This amendment would convert all .50 BMG firearms to NFA weapons.
July, 2005: Senator Feinstein introduces bill SA1622 – Fifty-Caliber Exclusion to S.397. This amendment would modify SB397 to allow suits when the firearm involved was a .50 caliber weapon.
July, 2005: Senator Boxer introduces bill SA1633 – BATFE Safety Standards SA1633 – BATFE Safety Standards. This amendment allows law suits to continue/be brought if the product did not meet the safety standards as defined by the BATFE.
July, 2005: Senator Boxer introduces bill SA1634 – ‘Sporting Use’ on Domestic Handguns. Applying ’sporting use’ clause requirements to domestic handguns could, almost completely, dry up the handgun availability in the United States.
————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————-
Emanuel Celler, Democratic Representative from New York(1923 – 1973)
Howard Metzenbaum, Democratic Senator from Ohio(1974, 1976 – 1995)
Carl Levin, Democratic Senator from Michigan(1979 – present)
Tom Lantos, Democratic Representative from California(1981 – 2008)
Arlen Specter, Democratic Senator from Pennsylvania(1981 – present)
Chuck Schumer, Democratic Senator from New York(1999 – present), Democratic Represenative from New York(1981-1999)
Frank Lautenberg, Democratic Senator from New Jersey(1982 – 2001, 2003 – present)
Barbara Boxer, Democratic Senator from California(1993 – present), Democratic Representative from California(1983 – 1993)
Herb Kohl, Democratic Senator from Wisconsin(1989 – present)
Jerrold Nadler, Democratic Representative from New York(1992 – present)
Dianne Feinstein, Democratic Senator from California(1992 – present)
Steve Rothman, Democratic Representative from New Jersey(1997 – present)
[Reply]
dba Reply:
November 14th, 2009 at 11:59 am
excellent compilation of important data – thanks
[Reply]
All anti-gun groups should see this video,Then maybe they would see that the criminals will allways have guns.All these laws just take the guns out of the peoples hands.AND QUIT SUPPORTING THE NRA AND SUPPORT GUN OWNERS OF AMERICA.
[Reply]
dba Reply:
November 14th, 2009 at 12:05 pm
Anti-gunners don’t care about facts and they hate individual liberty. Thanks for helping spread the truth about the NRA. Give generously to GOA !
[Reply]
One question for the anti-gun people. If someone is about to due harm or even possible death to 1 of your love ones on your property , like the man said “What do you want a telephone or firearm” ? Of coarse the answer should be a firearm. Well I just hope these blind individauls do not find out the hard way. Guns save lives , Criminals take lives. That’s the truth.
[Reply]
dba Reply:
November 14th, 2009 at 12:02 pm
true – but I am working on a prototype for a cellular ‘phone with a built in .22 LR mechanism. That way, after you shoot the criminal, you can call the morgue.
[Reply]
jack brumby Reply:
November 14th, 2009 at 9:00 pm
No need to called the morgue , just drag his ass to the curb. Even dogs need to eat. Just think , save the horses , feed the criminals to the dogs.
[Reply]