Hunters want to hunt. Anti-hunters want to stop the hunt. When the two meet, the confrontation can take on a life of its own and quickly get out of hand.
Elections have consequences, and America has now experienced a hard turn to the left. The looming question: How will this affect hunting and gun ownership?
Celebrity hunter Michael Waddell calls out singer Eric Church, who made remarks against the NRA in a Rolling Stone interview about the 2017 Las Vegas shooting.
We detailed why AARP doesn’t want you to own guns and asked what you think. Here’s what you had to say.
A day-old Arkansas law that expands concealed carry is already being re-evaluated — and the state’s Senate has approved the changes.
A last-minute action by the USFWS on the final day of the Obama Administration may directly affect which ammunition you can and can’t use.
New Jersey will soon have a law that bans domestic abusers from owning firearms.
Look behind the mask to see what this mega-business is really all about and you’ll find it is not friendly to those who support the Second Amendment.
The beginning of 2017 means new laws are becoming official. Two laws — one in California, one in Illinois — are particularly impactful.
A small Colorado school district approved allowing teachers and employees to double as security guys, which includes carrying concealed firearms.
If this bill is signed into law, Ohio's public universities would have the option to permit concealed-carry on campus.
One Oklahoma senator hopes to put armed officers in private schools, allow top government officials to carry firearms and reduce the costs of obtaining and renewing handgun permits.
A Missouri representative-elect has introduced a bill that exercises Second Amendment rights and drives to ultimately eliminate gun-free zones.
Several gun-rights groups are taking advantage of a new Republican president and plan on having Proposition 63 overturned in court. Here’s why.
In addition to electing the next POTUS, voters in California, Maine, Nevada and Washington voted on measures to tighten gun-control laws.
State have approved 15 out of 18 ballot initiatives to expand gun right. However, this year, four states are looking at potentially tightening restrictions.
The judge agreed with Remington that the lawsuit should be dismissed under the federal Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act.