
A government that intended to protect the liberty of the people would not disarm them. A government planning the opposite most certainly and logically would disarm them. And so it has been in the twentieth century. Check out the history of Germany, the Soviet Union, Cuba, China and Cambodia.
-Charlie Reese
May 5, 2026
Here’s the Background on the Two American Soldiers Who Went Missing Over the Weekend
Two American service members went missing over the weekend while participating in a joint military exercise with partner nations in North Africa. Search and rescue efforts are still underway.
Two U.S. service members have been reported missing while participating in exercise African Lion 2026 in Morocco, according to a release from U.S. Africa Command. The service members were last known to be in the area of Cap Draa Training Area, near the city of Tan Tan, Morocco… pic.twitter.com/oCWkIHVlYt
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) May 3, 2026
CBS has reported that the two soldiers were off-duty and had decided to go on a hike to observe the sunset when one fell off of a cliff and into the water below. A number of soldiers then attempted to form a human chain to rescue their comrade in the water, but failed to pull them up. The second soldier then jumped into the water for a rescue attempt, but failed. A third soldier also attempted a rescue, but returned to shore after likewise failing.
🚨 BREAKING NEWS!@AAGDhillon just dropped a cease-and-desist on the City of Denver.
Ordering them to get rid of their AR-15 ban, or the DOJ WILL be suing to enforce the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens.
You love to see it! pic.twitter.com/yq3jU54U0c
— National Association for Gun Rights (@gunrights) May 4, 2026

Not surprisingly
Tim Walz’s Daughter Just As Dumb As Dad on Gun Control
Gov. Tim Walz was in a position to become vice president. I think I speak for most of us when I say that I’m glad he’s still governor of Minnesota. It’s not because he’s been stellar at his job there, mind you, as the Minneapolis day care scandal, and Walz’s reaction to it, amply illustrates that he sucks at it. It’s because it means he and Kamala Harris aren’t in charge in Washington.
Both were terrible on gun issues, despite Walz trying to portray himself as a macho man who could out shoot any of us. In fact, when he tried to act big and bad, he just embarassed himself.
When it comes to guns, though, it seems the apple doesn’t fall very far from the tree.
Hope Walz, the daughter of disgraced Minnesota governor and failed vice presidential candidate Tim Walz, called for gun control this week in the aftermath of another attempted assassination attempt on President Donald Trump.
“Gun control doesn’t just save Democrats’ lives. It also saves Republican lives,” she said in a TikTok video posted this week, apparently attempting to position herself as a leftist taking moral high ground.
“You’d think we’d be at a point now where we could call for some common sense legislation, but I don’t know. I don’t know,” she said sarcastically. “Also here to say that political violence is never ok. Duh. That’s the difference between us and them. It’s never ok.”
Walz continued, “But there’s something we can do about it: common sense gun legislation.”
She ultimately called on her audience to “do something about that for everybody’s “For everybody’s sake, yeah. Yeah. Happy Tuesday,” she added. “Feeling a little anxious today, but we’re going to get through it.”
Notably, this is the same “anxious” Walz who described Trump’s previous crackdown on crime in the nation’s capital as nothing more than “bitch baby, wussy, scaredy cat behavior.”
Fascinating, ain’t it?
Look, I agree that political violence isn’t OK. I’ll point out, though, that the left hasn’t exactly been showing any belief in that position. How many have been upset that Thomas Crooks missed, or that this guy didn’t get a shot at the president? How many celebrated the assassinations of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson and Charlie Kirk?
Yeah, don’t do the “That’s the difference between us and them” bit. It’s not going to fly.
But let’s talk about “common sense gun legislation” for a moment. We keep having people bring this up, including people with much higher profiles that Hope Walz, but have you noticed how absolutely no one gives us any real concrete suggestions that would have made a difference? Rep. Jamie Raskins suggested universal background checks, but with the would-be assassin getting his guns in California, he passed background checks. That’s ridiculous.
Beyond that, though, most people are just braying about how we need gun control, but no one seems to have anything real to propose. Maybe because they know that nothing they could propose would have done anything and they don’t want people like me to rip it apart for being moronic.
Look, I actually do get her being anxious. Her dad is still governor of a state that’s the center of a lot of strife. People on both sides are antsy and the idea of someone going after her father doesn’t seem so farfetched as it should be. I sincerely don’t want to see that, and I know good and well that she doesn’t, so I’m not going to mock her anxiety here.
But I’ll also repeat that this guy gun his weapons in the most gun-controlled state in the nation, a state that has laws that would never fly anywhere else in the United States, so let’s not pretend this is the result of too few gun control laws. It’s not. It’s the result of leftist talking points and inflamatory rhetoric radicalizing someone to try and rid the nation of a tyrant who is nothing of the sort.
Trump OCC Gives Customers New Tools to Hold Banks Accountable for Anti-Gun Discrimination.
By Larry Keane
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is giving bank customers, including firearm industry members, a clearer path to document politicized de-banking and enter those concerns into the regulatory record. The move is a welcome development to further implement President Donald Trump’s Executive Order 14331, “Guaranteeing Fair Banking for All Americans,” and marks another needed step toward ending the practice of denying lawful businesses access to essential financial services because “woke” banks disfavor the firearm industry.
NSSF has long reported on banks using vague “reputational risk” excuses and woke boardroom gun control policies to choke off access to accounts, loans, credit, payment processing and other essential financial services. That discrimination hit lawful, highly regulated businesses whose only offense was serving Americans who choose to exercise their Second Amendment rights.
President Trump’s order states banking decisions must be based on individualized, objective and risk-based analysis, not politics, ideology or hostility toward lawful business activity. The order specifically cited the former Obama administration-era Operation Choke Point as a “well-documented and systemic” effort by federal regulators to pressure banks away from serving lawful industries that are disfavored by the political left…like the firearm industry.
That insidious practice was discontinued under President Trump’s first term but returned anew in a privatized form under former President Joe Biden.
The OCC’s new public comment guidance, however, gives President Trump’s executive order practical force. The agency says bank customers and stakeholders can share de-banking experiences with the OCC and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and those complaints may be considered when the agency reviews bank licensing filings. They may also be considered during Community Reinvestment Act examinations.

Patrick Harris, Sr – Collectivist Wanna-Be tyrant, pandering to greed and envy.
“Safety is something that happens between your ears, not something you hold in your hands.” – Jeff Cooper
May 4, 2026
If you don’t defend your own family, who is going to do it? The cops?
– Tony Moon; THE rooftop Korean from the 1992 Rodney King riots.
May 3, 2026
There has never been a better example for how the entire ideological movement has one weakness, the follow up question. The entire party just says things and then gets mad when you ask them to clarify. https://t.co/SBmzd3OsHZ
— Carl Paulus (@CarlPaulus) May 2, 2026

Associated Press caught producing anti-gun advocacy
Traditional journalism is pretty simple, really. If you’re writing about a complex issue, make sure to include all of the sides.
For example, most political stories usually involve two sides. A good reporter will include both sides in their fair and balanced story and then let the readers decide whom to believe. If the journalist only includes one side in their story, it becomes advocacy instead of journalism, which should be avoided.
No one should know this better than the Associated Press, which was founded in 1846—15 years before the start of the Civil War. During the AP’s vast 180-year history, they’ve had a bit of experience producing good journalism, at least until now it appears.
AP reporters Josh Funk and Claudia Lauer published a story Thursday titled: “Amtrak may make it easier to bring guns on its trains despite the alleged attempt on Trump’s life.”
Quite frankly, it needed a bit of work.
Their story only includes comments from one side, John Feinblatt, whom the reporters only identified as the “president of the advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety.”
The AP reporters never mentioned that Feinblatt is also president of the Trace, which is paid to produce anti-gun propaganda, or that both anti-gun groups are funded by former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Certainly, these omissions would have helped Funk’s and Lauer’s readers put Feinblatt’s comments into better context.
Feinblatt, of course, used the story to further erode our Second Amendment rights.
“Just days after a man took an Amtrak train to Washington with a shotgun and pistol and tried to assassinate the president and other federal officials, the Trump Administration is trying to open the floodgates for firearms on every Amtrak route, while also moving to hollow out the agency responsible for enforcing gun laws and preventing gun trafficking. This will only make Americans less safe and Congress must step in before the next tragedy,” the AP quoted him as saying.
A pro-gun voice could have pointed out Feinblatt’s dual anti-gun roles, or that millions of riders have safely carried firearms aboard Amtrak for years, or that Congress has far more important things to occupy its time than turning trains into yet another anti-gun zone.
Funk, who was evidently the lead reporter, did not return emails seeking to interview him about his story. Unfortunately, that was expected, since the AP is not nearly what it used to be.
Since the mid-19th century, the AP served a vital role for newspapers, but not anymore. Print readership has tanked. The two largest newspaper chains in the country, Gannett and McClatchy, both dropped AP in 2024. The third largest newspaper firm, Lee Enterprises, announced it will be dropping AP at the end of this year.
Just last month the AP announced it was offering buyouts to a large number of its U.S. staff. They did not publish the number of staffers who would be losing their jobs.
Takeaways
One thing is certain: There will always be a market for factual and accurate journalism, but by publishing only one side of an important issue with layoffs looming, the Associated Press may get what it certainly deserves.
I’ve got a phone number for him: 1-800-CRY-BABY.
Amtrak May Soon Expand Policy on Firearms, and Gun Control Advocates are Fuming
Amtrak could soon be expanding the number of routes where gun owners can bring their firearms in their checked baggage, and one anti-gun activist has gone off the rails with his response.
Amtrak currently allows gun owners to bring their firearms along when they’re passengers on trains that have locked baggage cars. According to the Associated Press, the Trump administration has been pushing Amtrak to expand that access by putting lockboxes on most trains. Passengers still couldn’t carry their firearms on board, but they could at least store them until they get to their destination.
This seems fairly reasonable, unlike the reaction from the head of Everytown.
John Feinblatt, president of the advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety, said doing this would decrease safety.
“Just days after a man took an Amtrak train to Washington with a shotgun and pistol and tried to assassinate the president and other federal officials, the Trump Administration is trying to open the floodgates for firearms on every Amtrak route, while also moving to hollow out the agency responsible for enforcing gun laws and preventing gun trafficking,” he said. “This will only make Americans less safe and Congress must step in before the next tragedy.”
Allowing guns in locked boxes on trains is going to make Americans less safe? I thought Everytown was in favor of locking up unloaded firearms.
This policy, if enacted, would simply bring Amtrak in line with the rules for transporting firearms while flying. Given that the rail system operated $1.76 billion in the red in last fiscal year, Amtrak needs to be doing everything possible to be competitive with airlines, and making it possible for lawful gun owners to travel with their firearms on more trains is a small step in the right direction.
If the man accused of trying to assassinate President Trump had flown from Los Angeles to D.C., would Feinblatt be demanding airlines stop allowing guns in checked baggage? If he’d driven cross-country, would Everytown’s president be calling for a repeal of the Firearm Owners Protection Act? I wouldn’t put it past him, to be honest.
But here’s what Feinblatt is ignoring: there is no TSA for Amtrak. No baggage screening. No magnetometers or body scans before passengers get on board. There’s nothing stopping someone from carrying a gun on board an Amtrak train at the moment, except for Amtrak’s policy about keeping guns in locked luggage.
Security expert Sheldon Jacobson, whose research contributed to the design of the TSA PreCheck system used in aviation, said railroads should do more to screen their passengers ahead of time by collecting more information when they sell the tickets and checking passengers’ backgrounds. But he said it’s not possible to eliminate guns on trains when there is no way to enforce the rule.
“The initial condition is that there’s almost 400 million guns in this country,” he said. “Then work from there as opposed to trying to create a utopian environment where there’s not guns and we’re going to keep it that way.”
Rail travel poses fewer risks than air travel, so it wouldn’t be worth the investment needed to create a strict passenger screening system at every train station similar to what TSA does at airports, Jacobson said. But he acknowledged that calculation could change if there ever were a major tragedy on a passenger train.
“You have to weigh the risks and rewards. And you have to say, ‘Where are we going to put our money to get the greatest risk reduction for the greatest benefit with the least inconvenience to people?'” he said.
If Congress wants to step in, it should be to demand Amtrak allow lawful concealed carry as well. I don’t think that’s going to happen anytime soon, but that would be a major policy change. What Amtrak is considering now is basically expanding its current policy to cover more routes in order to serve more customers. That shouldn’t alarm anyone, but activists like Feinblatt will do whatever they can to convince Americans to join their freak out… including hiding the facts from their audience.
Every member of the State ought diligently to read and to study the constitution of his country and teach the rising generation to be free. By knowing their rights, they will sooner perceive when they are violated, and be the better prepared to defend and assert them. – U.S. Chief Justice John Jay
May 2, 2026
