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5 Alarming Ways Second Amendment Rights Under Threat in 2025

Jeffrey Thomas

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Second Amendment Rights Under Threat

America needs to pay attention. The 2024 election ink is barely dry, and the gun-control crowd is already racking up the next round. While people argue over winners and losers, the anti-Second Amendment machine keeps grinding along. Here are five of the biggest current threats to the right to keep and bear arms, all unfolding right now.

1. The Federal “Assault Weapons” Ban Returns, And This Version Is Worse

Kamala Harris may have lost, but her agenda did not disappear. Her allies are already pushing a new, harsher version of the 1994 Crime Bill-style ban to newly elected Democrats who owe them political favors.

Capitol Hill sources tell The Post that the draft bill runs about 400 pages and is packed with restrictions. It bans AR-15s by name, outlaws magazines over 10 rounds, and only lets current owners keep their rifles if they register them with the ATF under the National Firearms Act.

That means a $200 tax stamp for each gun, fingerprints, and a 6-to-12-month wait just to hang on to firearms already bought legally. One Senate staffer called it “the mother of all backdoor registries.”

With budget reconciliation still an option, supporters would only need 50 Senate votes plus the vice president to ram it through.

2. ATF On The Warpath, And The “Zero Tolerance” Crackdown Is Underway

Joe Biden may have failed to install David Chipman as head of the ATF, but the agency kept the aggressive playbook. Over the last 60 days, ATF has reportedly pulled more Federal Firearms Licenses than in all of 2019.

Their new favorite move is simple and brutal. One mistake on a single Form 4473, and a local gun shop can lose its license for good. Under this “zero tolerance” approach, small family-owned dealers are shutting down by the dozen.

Fewer FFLs means fewer places to buy guns and ammo. It is slow-motion gun control by bureaucracy.

And the pressure is not just on dealers. The same ATF that flip-flopped on pistol braces is said to be finishing a rule that would turn roughly 40 million pistol-braced firearms into unregistered short-barreled rifles overnight.

Merry Christmas from the federal government.

3. Turbocharged Red-Flag Laws Are Headed For Traditionally Pro-Gun States

Nineteen states and Washington, D.C. already have red-flag laws. Now the anti-gun lobby thinks it smells an opportunity in states that used to be safe. Everytown and Giffords are dumping tens of millions of dollars into campaigns in places like Missouri, Texas, and Georgia.

Their new talking point is simple: “Extreme Risk Protection Orders are just common sense.”

Translation in plain English: a hostile ex, bitter neighbor, or angry coworker can file a secret statement, a judge signs off without hearing from the gun owner, and a SWAT team shows up before sunrise to seize the guns.

No criminal charge. No conviction. No actual due process before the raid. The firearms are gone first, and the court fight comes later.

Getting them back is another nightmare. In many states, even if the owner wins, they still have to pay the storage bills to reclaim their own property.

4. The Hidden Credit-Card Gun Registry No One Wants To Admit Exists

Anyone who thinks the government cannot track gun and ammo purchases needs to rethink that belief. Starting next year, Visa, Mastercard, and American Express will use a new Merchant Category Code for gun stores.

Every purchase at a gun shop, from a case of 9mm to a simple cleaning kit, will be tagged in a separate category. Banks are already telling investors this will help with “risk mitigation.”

In practice, that means financial companies will know where someone shops, what type of products they buy at gun stores, and how often they spend money there. Pair that with a growing federal data appetite and an IRS boosted by 87,000 new agents, and it begins to look like the skeleton of a national registry created without a single vote in Congress.

That is not just slippery. That is a greased slide.

5. Supreme Court Packing, The Nuclear Option Still Waiting In The Wings

The left has not dropped its dream of expanding the Supreme Court. Progressive favorite Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez reintroduced her court-packing bill last week, and this time it has 72 co-sponsors.

Add four new justices who see the Second Amendment as a “colonial relic,” and landmark decisions like Bruen and Heller could vanish overnight. The entire modern foundation of gun rights could get shredded in a single term.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg once called Roe v. Wade a case of “heavy-handed judicial activism.” Imagine what a bench stacked with nine AOC-style justices would do to the right to keep and bear arms.

So What Now? Conservative Action Plan For 2025

First, join a gun-rights group today. NRA, GOA, or a strong state-level rifle association, they all count. Membership numbers are the headcount that politicians look at before they vote.

Second, light up the phones. Call both senators and make it clear that any “assault weapons” ban needs to die in committee, or they will face a primary challenge.

Third, buy standard-capacity magazines now, while they are still legal in most of the country. Waiting for a ban to pass is a losing plan.

Fourth, get a concealed-carry permit if possible, even in permitless-carry states. Constitutional carry is great until a big-city prosecutor decides to make an example out of a gun owner caught in a gray area.

Fifth, vote in every primary election, not just in November. The so-called moderates who cut deals on gun control usually win in low-turnout primaries that hardly anyone watches.

Last, talk to that anti-gun cousin at Thanksgiving. Share facts, not insults. If gun owners let the other side control the story, they lose the culture fight before the legal battle even starts.

The Second Amendment is not a favor from politicians. It is not a bargaining chip. It is the backbone that protects every other right written on that “parchment barrier” the Founders warned about.

Gun-control activists are not hiding their goals anymore. They are coming after firearms through laws, regulations, banks, and courts. The only real question is whether gun owners will still have their rights when that 3 a.m. knock hits the front door.

Stack up knowledge, stay informed, stock up on legal gear and ammo, and never hand over a right without a fight.

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Antifa Accused of Using Homeless Elderly as Human Shield Agianst Federal Agents

Jeffrey Thomas

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Antifa Portland

PORTLAND– Night after night, outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in southeast Portland, a stark scene plays out. Black-clad Antifa protesters in masks set off fireworks, shouted at federal agents, and chanted “Abolish ICE.”

The walls, layered with fresh graffiti, bounce sound back into the streets. Beneath the noise, a troubling pattern has emerged. Elderly homeless people are being pushed to the front, used as shields and distractions. Portland police warn that Antifa-linked organizers are preying on the most vulnerable, urging them to rattle gates and spark confrontations while others hang back.

Portland Police Sgt. John Edwards set out the concern in a September memo, later disclosed during Oregon’s lawsuit over the Trump administration’s National Guard deployment. He wrote that older rough sleepers had been coerced into walking up to the gate to cause a distraction, or told to shake it for effect.

These are not eager recruits. They are men and women in their 70s and 80s, found near shelters and lured with food or a bed for the night. In one case last week, a 78-year-old veteran in a thin coat was pushed forward to hammer at the fencing while explosives burst overhead.

Federal officers held back, a choice that highlights the cynicism of the tactic and the harm it risks.

Feds Crackdown on Antifa

The pattern is not a one-off. Since June, nightly actions at the ICE site have grown more aggressive. The FBI has recorded more than 147 arrests for offences that include arson and assaults on officers. The Department of Justice has brought several indictments, among them cases over lasers aimed at Border Patrol aircraft and attempted forced entries.

The White House amplified the alarm. Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller wrote on X that it was a coordinated campaign of domestic terrorism against federal operations. Nearby residents describe the area as a war zone. One woman said she keeps a gas mask inside her home to cope with tear gas and smoke. Shops close early, families move out, and the city’s homelessness crisis deepens as shelters strain to cope.

Antifa

Pro-Trump and pro-police demonstrators clashed with anti-fascist counterprotesters on the 87th day of protests against police violence and systemic racism. Despite violence in the streets, police were notably absent and never declared an unlawful assembly.

The city’s response faces further heat. Critics claim the Portland Police Bureau is compromised. Freelance reporters who have covered the clashes for years say there are ties between some officers and Antifa-aligned groups. The dispute flared after the 2 October arrest of conservative journalist Nick Sortor.

He had stepped in to put out a burning American flag during a march. Video shows masked attackers, identified by witnesses as Antifa, jumping him, then PPB officers detaining him for disorderly conduct. The charge was later dropped. Sortor says the police took sides, a claim that has fuelled wider anger.

Portland Police Accused of Working With Antifa

Those allegations helped trigger a federal backlash. On 3 October, the DOJ, led by Attorney General Pam Bondi, opened a civil rights investigation into the PPB. The inquiry is focused on viewpoint discrimination and possible coordination. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon said Portland officers had been lenient with Antifa rioters while targeting journalists.

The FBI joined in, seeking unredacted reports, emails, and records related to the city’s zoning enforcement against ICE. Critics argue these moves were designed to hinder federal work. PPB Chief Bob Day rejected the claims as biased from both camps, saying his officers keep to the fairway of neutrality. Yet doubts persist, with 26 federal cases brought since June that link rioters to explosives and assaults.

antifa

Momentum built at the White House this week. On 8 October, President Donald Trump hosted an unusual roundtable. He appeared with Bondi, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, FBI Director Kash Patel, and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche.

Several independent journalists who have been attacked while reporting joined the meeting, including Andy Ngo, Katie Daviscourt, Savanah Hernandez, and Sortor. Trump praised them as truth-tellers ignored by major outlets. Ngo revisited his 2019 beating in Portland, where he said milkshakes mixed with cement were thrown. Hernandez, who faced bear spray in Seattle, said the press had excused violence as protest.

Feds Focus on Antifa Funders

The discussion pulled back the curtain on alleged funding. Seamus Bruner of the Government Accountability Institute presented research claiming more than 100 million dollars had moved through NGOs such as George Soros’s Open Society Foundations, the Arabella Advisors network, and Swiss billionaire Hansjörg Wyss.

He said the money was laundering taxpayer funds into riot incubation, and cited links to European anarchist groups. Patel said investigators would map every donor, calling cross-border support a line that could reach treason. Noem compared Antifa to MS-13 and ISIS, calling it a sophisticated network that moves from city to city.

Trump moved quickly after the briefing. Building on a 22 September executive order that labelled Antifa a domestic terrorist organization, he told Secretary of State Marco Rubio to consider foreign terrorist organization status. He argued that European roots made the case, opening the door to sanctions, asset freezes, and material support prosecutions. These are tools usually applied to groups like al-Qaeda or Hamas.

Antifa

The order directs agencies to break up illegal operations, from recruitment to finance. Bondi promised a brick-by-brick takedown similar to cartel cases. DHS says arrests in Portland have surged, including suspects wanted for sex offences, murder, and trafficking, despite street blockades.

Opposition is fierce. Oregon Governor Tina Kotek and Portland Mayor Keith Wilson took legal action to stop the National Guard deployment, calling it a federal takeover in a city where most protests have eased since the summer.

Legal voices warn that an FTO label could chill speech and bring activists under material support laws. Faiza Patel of the Brennan Center said ideology cannot be prosecuted. Trump allies point to Antifa texts that call for overthrowing the government and say that it is enough to act.

Manstream Media Shading the Truth

The media’s role hangs over the debate. Fox News and reporters like Ngo have amplified accounts of injuries and intimidation. CNN and The New York Times have often framed the city’s protests as theatrical but not existential.

At the roundtable, Trump asked which network was the worst. The panel pointed to MSNBC, accusing it of running cover for assaults. A White House statement attacked Fake News for ignoring local voices. It said streets were dirty, shops were closing, and people were suffering. Ngo, attacked several times, accused pundits of deception that lets violence grow.

Federal forces are on standby. A deployment of 200 Oregon National Guard troops, paused by Judge Karin Immergut, is now under appeal. The city holds its breath. A trans activist named Cassandra Rose, who once slept rough, rails against ICE outside the fence with a shepherd’s crook in hand.

For the elderly pressed into frontline roles, ideology is not the point. Survival has been twisted into risk. Trump’s crackdown promises order, but the price for a city already split may be high. In the haze of tear gas, legal fights, and claims on both sides, one fact stands firm. Portland’s scars run deeper than any banner can cover.

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Bryan Kohberger Receives Four Life Sentences for Idaho Student Killings

VORNews

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Bryan Kohberger Receives Four Life Sentences

BOISE, Idaho — In a crowded Ada County Courthouse, Bryan Kohberger, the former Ph.D. criminology student found guilty of killing four University of Idaho students in 2022, was given four consecutive life sentences without parole.

The sentence followed a plea agreement that took the death penalty off the table, closing a legal process that stretched nearly three years. The murders, which drew national attention, forever altered the small university town of Moscow, Idaho.

During the sentencing, the courtroom was filled with emotion as families shared their pain, Judge Steven Hippler called out the cruelty of the acts, and the community faced the challenge of moving forward while many questions about Bryan Kohberger’s motive still linger.

Bryan Kohberger’s Crime That Stunned the Country

On November 13, 2022, Kaylee Goncalves (21), Madison Mogen (21), Xana Kernodle (20) and Ethan Chapin (20) were stabbed to death in a rental home near campus. It was the town’s first homicide in five years. Two roommates, Bethany Funke and Dylan Mortensen, survived.

Mortensen later told police she saw a masked man with “bushy eyebrows” in the house the night of the attack. The case quickly grew in the public eye, leading to an intense seven-week search. Kohberger was arrested at his parents’ home in Pennsylvania on December 30, 2022.

DNA on a KA-BAR knife sheath, phone records and video footage of his white Hyundai Elantra all tied him to the murders.

At the time, Bryan Kohberger was a 28-year-old graduate student at Washington State University. He first pleaded not guilty, and a high-profile trial was set for August 2025.

But on July 2, 2025, he changed his plea, admitting guilt to four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary. In exchange, prosecutors agreed not to seek the death penalty.

The sentencing hearing on July 23 gave the victims’ loved ones a chance to address Kohberger, while the judge and the community reflected on lasting pain and loss.

Voices of Loss and Strength at Sentencing

The hearing lasted more than three hours, with over a dozen people sharing victim impact statements. Their words painted a strong picture of the lives cut short and the deep wounds left behind.

Friends, relatives and surviving roommates spoke directly to Bryan Kohberger, their voices carrying sorrow, anger and sometimes forgiveness.

Dylan Mortensen, who survived the attack, spoke through tears. She described the heavy anxiety that’s followed her ever since. She said she should have been enjoying life at university and working on her future, but instead had to recover from the worst kind of trauma.

Bethany Funke’s statement, read by a friend, described guilt and fear that have changed her life. She said finding her friends after the attack left a mark that will never go away.

Madison Mogen’s stepfather, Scott Laramie, called Madison a source of joy who loved family above all else. He said the world was better when she was alive. Her grandmother, Kim Cheeley, explained the “debilitating fear” that filled her family after the murders.

She turned to grief classes and other support to help her cope, and told the court that their “world’s foundation fell out” after the tragedy.

Xana Kernodle’s uncle, Stratton, spoke with anger at Bryan Kohberger. He said Bryan Kohberger brought “contamination” to his own family’s name, adding that the shame of these acts would always be his burden to bear. Stratton told the court that Kohberger has to live with that pain.

As the town of Moscow tries to find peace, the impact of this crime is still felt every day. The sentencing closed a chapter, but healing will take time for everyone touched by the tragedy.

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