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View Full Version : 2026 Gun Grab..



def90
12-29-2025, 19:36
OK, any intel on what our state legislators will be passing this year? I've heard rumors of an NFA items ban..

kidicarus13
12-29-2025, 19:47
Hold on tight, it's about to get rocky!

https://youtu.be/A4oi9hHODBw?si=EFK3HyrCm1wH2DwG

DDT951
01-02-2026, 08:43
I am concerned about this “armory law” that is in the video.

How would this even be legal under the taking clauses for what already is owned by people?

bellavite1
01-02-2026, 09:21
They're doing it already with binary triggers, FRTs and bump stocks.
Yet I haven't heard a peep...
You may not care for them but it sets a precedent allowing the Dems to change the definition of "dangerous weapons".
Slippery slope.

Oscar77
01-02-2026, 12:39
I am concerned about this ?armory law? that is in the video.

How would this even be legal under the taking clauses for what already is owned by people?

Yes, that "Armory bill" cant be legal but that doesn't matter.
Its just another bill/law that we will have to fight and spend money on striking down.

BPTactical
01-02-2026, 14:12
I am concerned about this “armory law” that is in the video.

How would this even be legal under the taking clauses for what already is owned by people?


How about we be concerned with all of them?
They are all infringing on “Shall not be Infringed”

I’m really growing very weary of this shit.

Clint45
01-02-2026, 16:32
I am concerned about this “armory law” that is in the video.

How would this even be legal under the taking clauses for what already is owned by people?

Back during the Clinton administration, Joe Biden proposed an "armory law" before Congress I watched on CSPAN2. It was bizarre.

He insisted that a special federal "armory license" should be needed in order for a household (with multiple gun owners) to have more than 19 firearms or more than 999 rounds of ammunition. And he wanted to SPECIFICALLY ban commonly owned surplus olive drab metal ammunition cans because "scary lookin" or something.

Hardly a new concept, just on a back burner for decades.

Everything is a PSYOP, they just want to distract our attention from other things. It'll never pass.

FoxtArt
01-02-2026, 22:29
I wouldn't get too worked up on trying to predict what bills are introduced before they are introduced. If you were to do it, the most accurate prediction would be what was previously introduced but died in committee. Past failure predicts future reintroductions quite reliably.

The worst source of info to predict bill introduction is the clickbaity podcast or other randoms. Easy to say the sky is falling, much harder to have real information while doing so. Also easy to get worked up over shit that has 0% chance of passing in committee. Reserve energy and worry for actual risks, not hypothetical ones.

BPTactical
01-03-2026, 13:23
^^^^
As Rommel told junior staff who were ecstatic at victory over US troops at Kasserine Pass early in WWII-
“You can afford to be optimistic-I cannot”

This is the last year of being “weapons free” before mid terms for this legislative body. They went full court press last year and have nothing to stop them this session.

FromMyColdDeadHand
01-06-2026, 17:52
"more than 999 rounds of ammunition."

When I have 999 rounds, I consider myself out of ammo. You couldn't take a class with that kind of level.

kidicarus13
01-14-2026, 23:58
The Colorado Sun reports, "One public safety issue that doesn?t appear to be on Democrats? radar this year, after a series of major bills over the past decade, is guns."

We'll see [emoji102]

BPTactical
01-15-2026, 12:22
The Colorado Sun reports, "One public safety issue that doesn?t appear to be on Democrats? radar this year, after a series of major bills over the past decade, is guns."

We'll see [emoji102]

Awful early to make that prediction.....

DDT951
01-15-2026, 13:39
It is an election year for gov.

And mid terms

kidicarus13
01-16-2026, 07:37
That didn't take long...

SB26-004 Expand List of Petitioners for Protection Order | Colorado General Assembly https://share.google/ytQsH9T5UgrnRgkrk

The bill adds a health-care facility that employs a health-care professional or mental health professional and a co-responder who is part of a co-responder community response to the list of community members who may petition the court for an extreme risk protection order. The bill adds health-care facilities, behavioral health treatment facilities, K-12 schools, and institutions of higher education as institutional petitioners that may petition a court for an extreme risk protection order.

BPTactical
01-16-2026, 08:38
Aaaaaand here we go!

https://youtu.be/M4lrRL1wyC4



We aint even out of the gate yet![pileoshit]

eddiememphis
01-16-2026, 09:05
No chance of this one passing

https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/HB26-1021

The bill repeals various state laws related to firearms and other weapons. Specifically, the bill repeals provisions concerning:

Unlawfully carrying a firearm at a polling location or drop box offense;
The presumption that an individual engages in election-related intimidation if the individual carries a visible firearm, imitation firearm, or toy firearm while interacting with or observing specified election activities;
Firearm industry standards of responsible conduct enacted in Senate Bill 23-168, enacted in 2023, and the bill restores the firearms product liability provisions that existed prior to the enactment of Senate Bill 23-168;
Payment processing for retail sales of firearms;
Designating as peace officers the following personnel of the firearms dealer division within the department of revenue: The director, deputy directors, agents in charge, criminal investigator supervisors, and criminal investigators;
Including in a mandatory criminal protection order a requirement for a defendant to relinquish firearms and ammunition;
The classification of a rapid-fire device as a dangerous weapon;
Prohibitions on knowingly carrying a firearm in specified government buildings and licensed child care centers;
Unlawfully carrying a concealed weapon;
Unlawfully possessing explosive, incendiary, or other dangerous devices in certain legislative buildings;
Unlawfully carrying a firearm at a licensed child care center; a public or private elementary, middle, junior high, high, or vocational school; or a public or private college or university;
Requirements to store a firearm, including in a vehicle;
The requirement for the department of public health and environment to conduct a firearms safe storage education campaign;
Prohibitions on certain conduct involving an unserialized firearm, frame, or receiver;
The requirement to conduct a background check on the transferee in a private firearm transfer;
Setting the minimum age to buy a firearm at 21 years old;
The 3-day waiting period for firearm sales;
Certain prohibited activity involving semiautomatic firearms, including the prohibition on purchasing a firearm without having completed certain educational requirements, and the associated firearms training and safety course record system;
Ammunition sales;
Permitting local entities to prohibit carrying a concealed handgun in certain areas;
Prohibiting the possession of certain ammunition magazines, and marking requirements on certain ammunition magazines manufactured in Colorado on or after July 1, 2013;
The requirement to have a state permit to deal firearms in Colorado and the requirements for dealers and dealers' employees;
Gun show regulations;
Providing materials about gun violence prevention to parents with students in K-12 schools;
The authority of the Colorado bureau of investigation to investigate particular illegal activity involving firearms statewide;
The voluntary waiver of the right to purchase a firearm; and
The authority of a local government to enact an ordinance, regulation, or other law governing or prohibiting the sale, purchase, transfer, or possession of a firearm, ammunition, or firearm component or accessory.
The bill repeals the office of gun violence prevention.

OneGuy67
01-16-2026, 09:26
No chance of this one passing

https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/HB26-1021

The bill repeals various state laws related to firearms and other weapons. Specifically, the bill repeals provisions concerning:

Unlawfully carrying a firearm at a polling location or drop box offense;
The presumption that an individual engages in election-related intimidation if the individual carries a visible firearm, imitation firearm, or toy firearm while interacting with or observing specified election activities;
Firearm industry standards of responsible conduct enacted in Senate Bill 23-168, enacted in 2023, and the bill restores the firearms product liability provisions that existed prior to the enactment of Senate Bill 23-168;
Payment processing for retail sales of firearms;
Designating as peace officers the following personnel of the firearms dealer division within the department of revenue: The director, deputy directors, agents in charge, criminal investigator supervisors, and criminal investigators;
Including in a mandatory criminal protection order a requirement for a defendant to relinquish firearms and ammunition;
The classification of a rapid-fire device as a dangerous weapon;
Prohibitions on knowingly carrying a firearm in specified government buildings and licensed child care centers;
Unlawfully carrying a concealed weapon;
Unlawfully possessing explosive, incendiary, or other dangerous devices in certain legislative buildings;
Unlawfully carrying a firearm at a licensed child care center; a public or private elementary, middle, junior high, high, or vocational school; or a public or private college or university;
Requirements to store a firearm, including in a vehicle;
The requirement for the department of public health and environment to conduct a firearms safe storage education campaign;
Prohibitions on certain conduct involving an unserialized firearm, frame, or receiver;
The requirement to conduct a background check on the transferee in a private firearm transfer;
Setting the minimum age to buy a firearm at 21 years old;
The 3-day waiting period for firearm sales;
Certain prohibited activity involving semiautomatic firearms, including the prohibition on purchasing a firearm without having completed certain educational requirements, and the associated firearms training and safety course record system;
Ammunition sales;
Permitting local entities to prohibit carrying a concealed handgun in certain areas;
Prohibiting the possession of certain ammunition magazines, and marking requirements on certain ammunition magazines manufactured in Colorado on or after July 1, 2013;
The requirement to have a state permit to deal firearms in Colorado and the requirements for dealers and dealers' employees;
Gun show regulations;
Providing materials about gun violence prevention to parents with students in K-12 schools;
The authority of the Colorado bureau of investigation to investigate particular illegal activity involving firearms statewide;
The voluntary waiver of the right to purchase a firearm; and
The authority of a local government to enact an ordinance, regulation, or other law governing or prohibiting the sale, purchase, transfer, or possession of a firearm, ammunition, or firearm component or accessory.
The bill repeals the office of gun violence prevention.

That one will die a quick death in committee. I wouldn't waste any time in testifying for that bill.

eddiememphis
01-16-2026, 09:53
That didn't take long...

SB26-004 Expand List of Petitioners for Protection Order | Colorado General Assembly https://share.google/ytQsH9T5UgrnRgkrk

The bill adds a health-care facility that employs a health-care professional or mental health professional and a co-responder who is part of a co-responder community response to the list of community members who may petition the court for an extreme risk protection order. The bill adds health-care facilities, behavioral health treatment facilities, K-12 schools, and institutions of higher education as institutional petitioners that may petition a court for an extreme risk protection order.

And the bill's sponsor? That little puppet of Giffords, Tom Sullivan.