Hillary Reveals How She Wants To Confiscate Your Guns
“Well, I think we have to keep talking, but more importantly, we have to act”.
Hillary Rodham Clinton, speaking at a town hall meeting at Keene State College in Keene, N.H.
Buoyed by a well-received performance at this week’s first Democratic debate, and by a new opinion poll that narrowly puts her back in front in the critical early primary state of New Hampshire, Clinton moved her campaign against the notoriously aggressive NRA into higher gear.
For Clinton’s confiscatory fantasy to play out, she’d have to find a way to confiscate more than 100 million firearms (the sort of firearms the Australians banned are the most popular sold in the United States) from between 105-160 million highly-upset Americans-including several million combat veterans of recent wars- without triggering an full-on insurrection that would likely lead to assassination of government officials and a toppling of the federal government. “It’s not longer right”.
“As president I will push and achieve universal background checks”. And Hillary seems to think there are no legal issues involved in government efforts to restrict gun rights or institute forced buybacks; no mention of the Second Amendment and I suppose in her mind if she gets four years of picked Supreme Court justices, in effect we won’t have a Second Amendment. The Westmoreland resident was shot with a high-powered rifled used to hunt big game at age 13 and said bullet fragments remain in her back.
Clinton goes too far in saying the gun industry is “wholly protected from any kind of liability”.
The new video also uses a clip from Clinton’s rally in San Antonio on Thursday, where she also said: “I’ve been told by a few to quit shouting about this”, a veiled reference to a comment Sanders made during the debate.
“I’ve even gone duck hunting in Arkansas, standing in the cold water at sunrise”, Clinton added. I do not know enough detail to tell you how we would do it, or how would it work, but certainly your example is worth looking at.
Voters wanted to know what Clinton thought about the country’s nursing shortage (expand programs; increase the number of students in the pipeline, she said), genetically modified food (not completely in favor, but not totally against), and the Glass-Steagall law dealing with commercial banks (her plan, she says, is tougher and more comprehensive). She warned that the group would come after her with “scare tactics”.
The NRA, which acts as the mouthpiece of gun manufacturers and sellers, has held a virtual stranglehold over the debate on gun control in the U.S. over the past 20 years.