What the Internet was Made For
The spreading of information. Friend Kevin Creighton, who works now for Ammoland, generated this and posted a link to it on the Book of Face. I’m posting it here. Please spread it around.
State Gun Rights Matter
From the repeal of onerous gun regulations in Illinois to the opening up of permit-free concealed carry in states like Missouri and Kentucky to the unfortunate losses of Constitutional rights in California and Washington state, the fight to keep our right to keep and bear arms is often fought on a smaller scale by state level gun rights groups, rather than at a national level.
This is why we’ve built this handy interactive map to help you find the gun rights organizations in your state. The people in these groups are the ones who are knocking on the office doors of the politicians in your state, doing their best to preserve and expand your right to keep and bear arms. Support them, along with supporting your favorite nationally-based gun rights group, because we need to win the fight to preserve (and maybe expand) our right to keep and bear arms everywhere we can.
State
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Organization
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Mailing Address
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URL
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Alabama
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Alabama Gun Rights Network
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2009 Rodgers Drive, Huntsville, AL 35811
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Alaska
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Alaska Outdoor Council, Inc.
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310 K Street, Suite 200, Anchorage, AK 99501
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Arkansas
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Arkansas Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 2348, Conway AR 72033
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Arizona
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Arizona Citizens Defense League
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P.O. Box 86256, Tucson, AZ 85754
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Arizona
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Arizona State Rifle and Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 74424, Phoenix, AZ 85087
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California
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California Rifle and Pistol Association
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271 E. Imperial Highway, Suite 630, Fullerton, California 92835
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California
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Gun Owners of California
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P.O. Box 278120, Sacramento, CA 95827-9932
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California
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Calguns
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4212 North Freeway Blvd., Suite 6, Sacramento, CA 95834
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Colorado
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Colorado State Shooting Association
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510 Wilcox St., Suite C, Castle Rock, CO 80104
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Colorado
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Rocky Mountain Gun Owners
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P.O. Box 357, Loveland, CO 80539
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Connecticut
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Connecticut State Rifle And Revolver Association
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P.O. Box 754, North Haven, CT 06473
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Connecticut
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Connecticut Citizens Defense League
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P.O. Box 642, Groton, CT 06340
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Delaware
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Delaware State Sportsmen’s Association
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P.O. Box 94, Lincoln, DE 19960
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Florida
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Florida Gun Rights
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2910 Kerry Forest Parkway D-4, Suite 361, Tallahassee, FL 32309
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Florida
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Florida Sport Shooting Association Inc.
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4105 Saltwater Boulevard, Tampa, FL 33615
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Georgia
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Georgia Sport Shooting Association
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880 Marietta Highway, Box 351, Roswell, GA 30075
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Georgia
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Georgia Carry
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P.O. Box 142924, Fayetteville, GA 30214
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Hawaii
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Hawaii Rifle Association
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P.O. Box 543, Kailua, HI 96734
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Iowa
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Iowa State Rifle And Pistol Association
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240 Prospect Rd North Liberty IA 52317
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Iowa
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Iowa Gun Owners
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P.O. Box 3585 Des Moines, IA 50323
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Idaho
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Idaho State Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 140293, Boise, ID 83714-0293
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Idano
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Idaho Second Amendment Alliance
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P.O. Box 4292, Boise, Idaho 83711
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Illinois
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Illinois State Rifle Association Inc.
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1589 N 7000 W Road, Bonfield, IL 60913
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Indiana
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Indiana State Rifle And Pistol Association Inc.
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P.O. Box 40025 Indianapolis, IN 46240
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Kansas
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Kansas State Rifle Association
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P.O. Box 219, Bonner Springs, KS 66012
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Kentucky
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Kentucky State Rifle And Pistol Association Inc.
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P.O. Box 241, Elizabethtown, KY 42702
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Kentucky
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Kentucky Concealed Carry Association
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P.O. Box 1269, Frankfort KY 40602-1269
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Louisiana
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Louisiana Shooting Association
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350 Quill Court, Slidell LA 70461
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Massachusetts
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Gun Owners Action League of Massachusetts
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361 W. Main ST Northborough, MA. 01532
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Massachusetts
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Massachusetts Gun Rights
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P.O. Box 785 Worcester MA, 01613
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Maryland
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Maryland State Rifle And Pistol Association
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341 Whitfield Road, Catonsville, MD 21228-1808
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Maryland
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Maryland Shall Issue
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1332 Cape St. Claire Rd #342, Annapolis, MD 21409
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Maine
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Maine Rifle and Pistols Association
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14 Pine Street, Wiscasset, ME 04578
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Maine
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Gun Owners of Maine
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P.O. Box 65, China, ME 04358
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Michigan
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Michigan Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 71, Marshall, MI 49068-0071
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Michigan
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Michigan Coalition For Responsible Gun Owners
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P.O. Box 14014, Lansing, MI 48901
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Minnesota
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Minnesota Rifle And Revolver Association Inc.
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13756 89th Place N.Maple Grove, MN. 55369
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Minnesota
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Minnesota Gun Rights
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7809 Southtown Center, #173, Bloomington, MN 55431
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Missouri
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Missouri Firearms Coalition
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1709 Missouri Blvd, Suite E, #302 Jefferson City, MO 65109
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Mississippi
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Mississippi State Firearm Owners Association
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430 Withers Lane, Woodville, MS 39669
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Montana
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Montana Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 48 Ramsay, MT 59748
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Montana
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Montana Shooting Sports Associations
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P.O. Box 4924 Missoula, MT 59806
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North Carolina
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Grassroots North Carolina
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PO Box 10665 Raleigh, NC 27605
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North Carolina
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North Carolina Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 4116, Pinehurst, NC 28374
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North Carolina
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North Carolina Firearms Coalition
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3434 Edwards Mill Road, Ste. 112-130, Raleigh, NC 27612
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North Dakota
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North Dakota Shooting Sports Association
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P.O. Box 228, Bismarck, ND, 58502-0228
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Nebraska
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Nebraska Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. BOX 27131 Omaha, Nebraska 68127
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New Hampshire
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Gun Owners of New Hampshire
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P.O. Box 847 Concord, NH 03302-0847
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New Jersey
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New Hampshire Firearms Coalition
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PO Box 7182 Milford, NH 03055-7182
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New Jersey
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Association Of New Jersey Rifle And Pistol Clubs Inc
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P.O. Box 651, Newfoundland, NJ 07345
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New Jersey
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New Jersey Second Amendment Society
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P.O. Box 96, Highston NJ 08520
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New Mexico
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New Mexico Shooting Sports Association Inc.
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P.O. Box 93433 Albuquerque, NM 87199
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New York
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New York State Rifle and Pistol Association
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713 Columbia Turnpike East Greenbush, NY 12061
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Ohio
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Ohioans For Concealed Carry
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2885 Sanford Ave SW #24874
Grandville, MI. 49418 |
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Ohio
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Ohio Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 1201, Morehead, KY 40351-5201
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Ohio
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Buckeye Firearms Association
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PO BOX 357 Greenville, OH 45331
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Oklahoma
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Oklahoma Rifle Association Inc.
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P.O. Box 280, Maud, OK 74854
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Oklahoma
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Oklahoma Second Amendment Association
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P.O. Box 626, Edmond, OK 73083
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Oregon
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Oregon State Shooting Association
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P.O. Box 231191, Portland, OR 97281-1191
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Oregon
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Oregon Firearms Federation
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P.O. Box 556, Canby, OR 97013
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Pennsylvania
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Pennsylvania Rifle And Pistol Association
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624 Jerseytown Road Millville, PA 17846-9783
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Pennsylvania
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Firearms Owners Against Crime
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P.O. Box 1111 McMurray, PA 15317
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Pennsylvania
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Pennsylvania Firearms Owners Association
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PO Box 37635 #26617, Philadelphia, PA 19101-0635
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Rhode Island
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Rhode Island 2nd Amendment Coalition
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928 Atwood Avenue, Johnston, RI 02919
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Rhode Island
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Rhode Island Firearms Owners League
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P.O. Box 226, Fiskeville, RI 02823
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South Carolina
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Gun Owners Of South Carolina
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Post Office Box 326, Prosperity, SC 29127
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SouthCarolina
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Palmetto Gun Rights
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4711 Forest Drive, Ste 3 #298 Columbia, SC 29206
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South Dakota
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South Dakota Shooting Sports Association
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P.O. Box 3, Dell Rapids, SD 57022
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South Dakota
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South Dakota Gun Owners
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P.O. Box 3845, Rapid City, SD 57709
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Tennessee
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Tennessee Shooting Sports Association Inc.
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105 Imperial Blvd. #1213, Hendersonville, TN 37077-1213
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Tennessee
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Tennessee Firearms Association
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P.O. Box 198722, Nashville, TN 37219
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Texas
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Texas State Rifle Association
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8411 North I-35 AUSTIN, TX 78753
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Texas
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Lone Star Gun Rights
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9870 St Vincent Place, Austin, TX
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Utah
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Utah State Rifle And Pistol Association
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2718 E. 9725 South Sandy, UT 84092-3405
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Utah
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Utah Shooting Sports Council
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P.O. Box 17561, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
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Virginia
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Virginia Citizens Defense League
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P.O. Box 513, Newington, VA 22122
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Virginia
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Virginia Shooting Sports Association
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PO Box 1258, Orange, VA 22960
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Vermont
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Vermont State Rifle And Pistol Association
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454 South Main Street, Northfield, VT 05663
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Vermont
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Gun Owners of Vermont
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P.O. Box 45, Saxtons River, VT 05154
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Washington
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Washington State Rifle And Pistol Association Inc.
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PO Box 64971, University Place, WA 98464
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Washington
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Gun Owners Action League of Washington
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P.O. Box 50012, Bellevue, WA 98015-0012
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Wisconsin
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Wisconsin Firearm Owners
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P.O. Box 130 Seymour, WI 54165
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Wisconsin
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Wisconsin Gun Owners
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PO Box 329, Waupaca, WI 54981
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West Virginia
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West Virginia State Rifle And Pistol Association
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P.O. Box 553 Charles Town, WV 2541
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West Virginia
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West Virginia Citizen’s Defense League
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P.O. Box 11371, Charleston, WV 25339-1371
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Wyoming
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Wyoming State Shooting Association
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P.O. Box 942, Worland, WY. 82401
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Wyoming
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Wyoming Gun Owners
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1740H Dell Range Blvd. #447, Cheyenne, WY 82009
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Quote of the Day – P.J. O’Rourke Edition
Kathy Jackson of the Cornered Cat blog pointed me to this one on Facebook. It ties into something I’ve been working on the last few weeks, but I thought I’d post it here as QotD:
Now the Bible might seem to be a strange place to do economic research—particularly for a person who is not very religious and here in a country that is not predominately Jewish or Christian.
However, I have been thinking—from a political economy point of view—about the Tenth Commandment.
The first nine commandments concern theological principles and social law: thou shalt not commit adultery, steal, kill, etc. All religions contain such rules. But then there’s the tenth commandment: “Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s house, thou shalt not covert thy neighbor’s wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is thy neighbor’s.”
Here are God’s basic rules about how the Tribes of Israel should live, a very brief list of sacred obligations and solemn moral precepts, and right at the end of it is, “Don’t envy your friend’s cow.”
What is that doing in there? Why would God, with just ten things to tell Moses, choose, as one of them, jealousy about the things the man next door has? And yet think about how important to the well-being of a community this commandment is. If you want a donkey, if you want a meal, if you want an employee, don’t complain about what other people have, go get your own. The tenth commandment sends a message to collectivists, to people who believe wealth is best obtained by redistribution. And the message is clear and concise: Go to hell.
This Blog is Old Enough to Drive
Sixteen years ago on this day I hit “Publish” on my very first blog post:
Is this thing on?
Apparently so. Too bad I managed to lose the opening essay it took me an HOUR to compose. Oh well. I’ll reconstruct it and put it back up later.
Welcome to The Smallest Minority, so named because most of the really good names Eject! Eject! Eject!, USS Clueless, Instapundit, Acidman, and so on were already taken. And while not a Randian, I accept a lot of Ayn Rand’s observations as accurate, and it was she who wrote: “The smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities.”
This blog is about the rights of individuals, that smallest of minorities, so it seemed apt.
More (hopefully MUCH more) to follow.
And MUCH MORE did follow, damn, did it ever. 6950 more posts, plus this one. Three of the four links above are now defunct, but this one soldiers on.
“That America will return one day, I know it will.”
Digging through the archives looking for something else, I stumbled across this old post. I liked it so much I thought I’d repost it here:
Old Aviators and Old Airplanes….
This is a good little story about a vivid memory of a P-51 and its pilot, by a fellow who was 12 years old in Canada in 1967. It was to take to the air. They said it had flown in during the night from some U.S. Airport, the pilot had been tired.
I marveled at the size of the plane dwarfing the Pipers and Canucks tied down by her. It was much larger than in the movies. She glistened in the sun like a bulwark of security from days gone by.
The pilot arrived by cab, paid the driver, and then stepped into the pilot’s lounge. He was an older man; his wavy hair was gray and tossed. It looked like it might have been combed, say, around the turn of the century. His flight jacket was checked, creased and worn – it smelled old and genuine. Old Glory was prominently sewn to its shoulders. He projected a quiet air of proficiency and pride devoid of arrogance. He filed a quick flight plan to Montreal (Expo-67, Air Show) then walked across the tarmac.
After taking several minutes to perform his walk-around check the pilot returned to the flight lounge to ask if anyone would be available to stand by with fire extinguishers while he “flashed the old bird up, just to be safe.”
Though only 12 at the time I was allowed to stand by with an extinguisher after brief instruction on its use — “If you see a fire, point, then pull this lever!” I later became a firefighter, but that’s another story. The air around the exhaust manifolds shimmered like a mirror from fuel fumes as the huge prop started to rotate. One manifold, then another, and yet another barked — I stepped back with the others. In moments the Packard-built Merlin engine came to life with a thunderous roar, blue flames knifed from her manifolds. I looked at the others’ faces, there was no concern. I lowered the bell of my extinguisher. One of the guys signaled to walk back to the lounge. We did.
Several minutes later we could hear the pilot doing his pre flight run-up. He’d taxied to the end of runway 19, out of sight. All went quiet for several seconds; we raced from the lounge to the second story deck to see if we could catch a glimpse of the P-51 as she started down the runway. We could not. There we stood, eyes fixed to a spot half way down 19. Then a roar ripped across the field, much louder than before, like a furious hell spawn set loose—something mighty this way was coming. “Listen to that thing!” said the controller.
In seconds the Mustang burst into our line of sight. Its tail was already off and it was moving faster than anything I’d ever seen by that point on 19. Two-thirds the way down 19 the Mustang was airborne with her gear going up. The prop tips were supersonic; we clasped our ears as the Mustang climbed hellish fast into the circuit to be eaten up by the dog-day haze.
We stood for a few moments in stunned silence trying to digest what we’d just seen. The radio controller rushed by me to the radio. “Kingston tower calling Mustang?” He looked back to us as he waited for an acknowledgment.
The radio crackled, “Go ahead Kingston.”
“Roger Mustang. Kingston tower would like to advise the circuit is clear for a low level pass.” I stood in shock because the controller had, more or less, just asked the pilot to return for an impromptu air show!
The controller looked at us. “What?” he asked. “I can’t let that guy go without asking. I couldn’t forgive myself!”
The radio crackled once again, Kingston, do I have permission for a low level pass, east to west, across the field?”
“Roger Mustang, the circuit is clear for an east to west pass.”
“Roger, Kingston, I’m coming out of 3000 feet, stand by.”
We rushed back onto the second-story deck, eyes fixed toward the eastern haze. The sound was subtle at first, a high-pitched whine, a muffled screech, a distant scream.
Moments later the P-51 burst through the haze. Her airframe straining against positive Gs and gravity, wing tips spilling contrails of condensed air, prop-tips again supersonic as the burnished bird blasted across the eastern margin of the field shredding and tearing the air.
At about 500 mph and 150 yards from where we stood she passed with the old American pilot saluting. Imagine. A salute! I felt like laughing, I felt like crying, she glistened, she screamed, the building shook, my heart pounded.
Then the old pilot pulled her up and rolled, and rolled, and rolled out of sight into the broken clouds and indelibly into my memory. I’ve never wanted to be an American more than on that day. It was a time when many nations in the world looked to America as their big brother, a steady and even-handed beacon of security who navigated difficult political water with grace and style; not unlike the pilot who’d just flown into my memory. He was proud, not arrogant, humble, not a braggart, old and honest, projecting an aura of America at its best. That America will return one day, I know it will. Until that time, I’ll just send off this story; call it a reciprocal salute, to the old American pilot who wove a memory for a young Canadian that’s lasted a lifetime.
I know we still retain the possibility to be again what we once were, but I’m afraid that entropy will win in the end. The culture of a nation reflects the philosophy of that nation, and ours is no longer that of John Locke and Adam Smith, but rather Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Immanuel Kant and Karl Marx, when it isn’t just “…a junk heap of unwarranted conclusions, false generalizations, undefined contradictions, undigested slogans, unidentified wishes, doubts and fears, thrown together by chance, but integrated by your subconscious into a kind of mongrel philosophy and fused into a single, solid weight: self doubt, like a ball and chain in the place where your mind’s wings should have grown” as Ayn Rand put it.
If you didn’t mist up a little when reading that story, you may be who I’m talking about.
“That America will return one day….
I sure hope so.
Quote of the Day: Larry Corriea Edition
From his Monster Nation post The 2nd Amendment is Obsolete, Says Congressman Who Wants To Nuke Omaha:
In something that I find profoundly troubling when I’ve had this discussion before, I’ve had a Caring Liberal tell me that the example of Iraq doesn’t apply because “we kept the gloves on”, whereas fighting America’s gun nuts would be a righteous total war with nothing held back… Holy shit, I’ve got to wonder about the mentality of people who demand rigorous ROEs to prevent civilian casualties in a foreign country, are blood thirsty enough to carpet bomb Texas.
You really hate us, and then act confused why we want to keep our guns? But I don’t think unrelenting total war against everyone who has ever disagreed with you on Facebook is going to be quite as clean as you expect.
RTWT.
May Victims of Communism Day

Today is the 12th annual Victims of Communism Day, a day to remember the people murdered by their own governments in their quest to achieve a “worker’s paradise” where everyone is equal, where “from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs” is the beautiful dream lie. R.J. Rummel, Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Hawaii, calculated that the total number of victims of Communism – that is, the domestic victims of their own governments – in the USSR, China, Vietnam, North Korea and Cambodia is 98.4 million people. For all Communist governments during the 20th Century, he puts the estimate at approximately 110 million. And this wasn’t in warfare against other nations, this was what these governments did to their own people – “breaking eggs” for their utopian omelette that never gets made.
Six million Jews were murdered during the Holocaust, and another six million people the Nazis decided were “undesirable” went with them. “Never again” is the motto of the modern Jew, and many others just as dedicated. But “again and again and again” seems to be the rebuke of history.
The Communists are hardly alone in these crimes. Rummel estimates that the total number of people murdered by their own governments during the 20th Century is on the close order of 262 million, but the single biggest chunk of that truly frightening number is directly due to one pernicious idea: That we can make people better.
Why do I own guns? For a number of reasons, but one of them is this:
And how we burned in the camps later, thinking: What would things have been like if every Security operative, when he went out at night to make an arrest, had been uncertain whether he would return alive and had to say good-bye to his family? Or if, during periods of mass arrests, as for example in Leningrad, when they arrested a quarter of the entire city, people had not simply sat there in their lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs door and at every step on the staircase, but had understood they had nothing left to lose and had boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand? — Alexandr Solzhenitzyn, The Gulag Archipelago
—
The Second Amendment is a doomsday provision, one designed for those exceptionally rare circumstances where all other rights have failed – where the government refuses to stand for reelection and silences those who protest; where courts have lost the courage to oppose, or can find no one to enforce their decrees. However improbable these contingencies may seem today, facing them unprepared is a mistake a free people get to make only once. — Judge Alex Kozinski, dissenting, Silveira v. Lockyer, denial to re-hear en banc, 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, 2003.
I intend to repeat this post each May 1 that I continue to run this blog.
Several years ago, Sipsey Street Irregulars had a post to go along with this one. STRONGLY RECOMMENDED.
In 2013 Not Clausewitz also made a worthy addition.
And for those who insist that “That wasn’t real Communism” –
QotD: Civilization Edition
Civilization is not inherited; it has to be learned and earned by each generation anew; if the transmission should be interrupted for one century, civilization would die, and we should be savages again. — Will and Ariel Durant
I don’t think it takes a century. Just a couple of generations.
OMFG
Just ran into this over at Quora. Had to share. Or run around screaming. The question asked was “Why is the US Federal Government incompetent?” Just read this answer:
US federal government programs are NOT incompetent. They are UNDERFUNDED.
What I mean is this. When the government first initiates a new program—any program—the program has to be written into legislation. That’s how it gets funded in the Congressional budget. Normally, when a new program begins, it’s given the funding (or most of it) that was estimated it would need to run the program. But every Congressional budget cycle thereafter has a tendency to trim the budget.
The problem is that the program’s charter is defined by law, which means the program’s management doesn’t have the ability to cut back services to match the cut they received in the budget. The program is still expected to perform all of the services they’re required to by law. It’s not like a private corporation that can make cuts in products or services until they become profitable. The government programs have to perform all of the services they are chartered to perform, UNLESS they are specifically given reprieve in the law. This does happen sometimes.
So as the budgets get trimmed year after year, these government programs will INEVITABLY become dysfunctional. They can no longer perform their services with the funding they receive. That’s why federal programs are so challenging.
The answer to this would be to require Congress to cut services as they cut the budget. This is happening more frequently these days, but it hasn’t always been the case.
(Bold my emphasis. ALLCAPS and italics, his.)
“Be thankful we’re not getting all the government we’re paying for.” – Will Rogers. Only in Washington, D.C. is a 5% increase in a budget a “cut” when that program or department expected a 10% increase.
But this is how too many in the voting public THINK. This guy? “Campaigned (his) ass off for Bernie, from New York to Las Vegas.”
My shocked face is worn out.
Your 38 Seconds of Zen
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcScXlCComg]