Colorado has joined California in taxing Americans’ Second Amendment rights with its new voter-approved gun initiative. While proposals for similar taxes have ignorantly claimed they mean to reduce gun violence, this new Centennial State measure is unique in that it confesses upfront to being a revenue-generating scheme, using victim services as an “ends justify the means” argument.
A 6.5% tax on guns, gun parts and ammunition will apply to dealers and manufacturers that make at least $20,000 annually, excluding sales to law enforcement and active-duty military. The tax is expected to generate $39 million in revenue, which the state says it will spend on programs to support domestic violence victims and mental health services, with a small portion to fund school security measures.
According to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Colorado has approximately 2,200 firearms and ammunition dealers, pawnbrokers and manufacturers operating within the state. Frank Sadvar of Northwest Outfitters says that while the “way it was worded on the ballots, it looked really good,” he suspects the initiative will fall short of its estimated revenue promises, much like most scams from the left.
“We’ve already got people saying, ‘Well, we can run over to Utah or Wyoming instead,’” says Sadvar.
Economists call this “Pigouvian,” a tax on a purchase that creates an additional cost for individuals not directly involved in the original transaction. In other words, when Americans purchase guns, we inherently create societal costs associated with the damage caused by owning firearms. Rosanna Smart, a senior economist at RAND, co-director of the RAND Drug Policy Research Center, and affiliate faculty of the Pardee RAND Graduate School, likens this to gasoline taxes used to support infrastructure such as road repairs and initiatives to reduce pollution.
“It’s not because you’re a bad driver that we’re taxing gasoline. It’s because we need this money to be able to improve our infrastructure in ways that allow people to continue to use that product,” says Smart.
Unshockingly, Rosanna is not as “smart” as her name might suggest. The analogy fails for several reasons. First, every vehicle that uses gasoline to travel public roadways contributes to the wear and tear associated with keeping up the infrastructure. Can you imagine if this was the case with the estimated 400 million privately owned firearms in the United States? Trust me when I say we would know in a very severe way if it was. Only an infinitesimal percentage are used to commit violent crimes, and this has nothing to do with the gun itself and everything to do with its criminal use. Of course, we’ve become accustomed to the left shifting blame to inanimate objects in support of their disarming agenda, while being seemingly impervious to the crime flooding through our borders and going unchecked in cities across America.
The second gaping hole in this nitwit argument is that it conveniently sets aside the fact that the right to “keep and bear arms” is codified in the Bill of Rights, not some bill of privileges. It is a Constitutionally protected liberty that “shall not be infringed.” Let me spell this out for the subversive and treasonous left. Shall not be taxed. Shall not be regulated. Shall not be restricted. Shall not be banned.
You know what, though, I’ll play along. If Democrats don’t see these measures as a violation of the Second Amendment, they certainly won’t see them as a violation of the First, right? I find it disturbing and destructive to speak of mutilating children in support of the trans agenda. Whoever discusses these matters, medical personnel, the media, or the average citizen, should do so with the utmost care and accountability. Red (American) states, listen up. Let’s have them apply for a tax stamp. Pay around $200 per conversation, wait for approval, and then you may speak on the matter on the specified occasion. If you are caught having one of these conversations without a tax stamp, then you will face fines and imprisonment. Revenue from the tax could be used for mental health services for those with gender dysphoria.
Let’s ban talk of socialism and other conversations contradictory to the founding principles of the United States, or at least find a way to regulate or restrict them. Perhaps any conversation or publication containing more than ten sentences or any assembly involving more than ten people should be forbidden to regulate the capacity of such speech. Wasn’t it the left who argued that words could be violence in the first place? And let’s address publication. When the Constitution was drafted, the founders could not have foreseen film, television, still photography, radio, telephones, or the internet. It’s time to dust off those Gutenberg-style presses if you want to disseminate certain types of communication.
I could do this all day, but you get the point. Until we can restore the rights promised to all Americans by the Constitution, I say conservative states should stop bringing toothpicks to a gunfight. Fight them back using their own rules. Surely, the left can not cry infringement of the First Amendment upon the same measures they enthusiastically and unashamedly apply to the Second Amendment. Expose them for the parasitic conspirators and treasonous subversives they are.
The irritating part is the subject has already been decided by SCOTUS – see Murdock v PA. These 2A sin taxes should be immediately slapped down in any court in the country.
Minneapolis Star Tribune Co. v. Commissioner
Same political party behind the firearm tax scheme were behind poll taxes…par for the course.
The right of citizens of the United States to vote in any primary or other election for President or Vice President, for electors for President or Vice President, or for Senator or Representative in Congress, shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any State by reason of failure to pay any poll tax or other tax.
Should easily translate to the exercise of any Constitutionally protected right.
Tax abortions. The lefties will go bats* crazy.
Another 2A Win Against This Federal Firearm Ban (firearms and pot).
h ttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fIz_F1K9amc
How about permits to publish newspapers?
The Most Important 2A Video You Will Watch All Week…
h ttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9jTecdjrUY
Again,, another great read. However, although it may be true–calling people Nitwits doesn’t make your article more persuasive. Makes you sound closer to the people you are trying to describe.
You really DID NOT mean it when you said “another great read”, did you? You ONLY posted just so you could nitpick the use of the word nitwit.
We will never win when our own side takes us down a notch for using a wrong word. We can’t win. We’re not unified.
Or we are, and YOU are an anti.
Stupid fucking libtards.
How do you join the lawsuit against this unconstitutional tax?
MDRW – while I understand your point about civility, name-calling joined the chat many years ago and ain’t leaving any time soon. As the recent demorat comments have clearly shown, the Left is using speech that if it came from our side would be instantly labeled ‘hate speech.’
I’m not advocating we resort to using for-letter words to describe the opposition, but polite conversation with a hunger tiger is kind of pointless. And the term ‘nitwit’ is actually very accurate. And what’s the difference between ‘bigoted’ and ‘opinionated’? The side that said it.
I’m all for civil discourse – you learn a LOT by rational discussion. And someone much smarter than me (shut up, ex-wife…) said ‘if you can’t understand the other side, you can’t understand your own.”
Sometimes you have to fight fire with fire. But it’s hard to change someone’s mind when they’re passed out on the ground from your right hook!
Choose wisely.
I think he’s an anti.
It’s simple; he only comes on to pick apart the LEAST important part of an article, and leaves it to the reader to conclude that the entire article is now suspect.
I know people like this. They find the smallest, most molecularly-sized thing to nitpick, and they rely on THAT to draw attention away from the meaning and intent of the overall conversation being had.
Colorado’s “law” sounds a lot like Commiefornia’s 11% tax on almost everything firearms related. They both need to be on the docket.
Let’s discuss federal FAET of 10-11% while we’re at it.
Especially since that’s pretty well guaranteed to be the legal justification the states will use.
We need a “Human Impact Reparation Tas”; an annual tax on every living human in the nation. We all contribute to wear and tear on everything, thus a tax on life affords recompense for the general wear and tear of everything. Persons who exit life before their mortality table years of expected life cheat the overall wellness of everything by however many years early they exit.
Yes, there should be an excise tax on arriving, staying, and exiting.
“Tas” should be “Tax”.
This tax was Initiative KK, it passed by 4.4%.
It was carried by Denver, Boulder (county) and Pitkin County (Aspen/Snowmass).
This is, effectively, purely a creation of the Californication of Colorado because of mUh PanDemIk measures in California.
How about a tax on the UNarmed to pay for better protection to society?
There are an estimated 1 million (more or less) Defensive Gun Use events per year. That means a huge BENEFIT to society provided by gun carriers. Anyone NOT carrying a weapon therefore should be TAXED to make up for the deficit they create.
Um… be careful what you wish for.
I fully understand the argument against taxing the exercise of a constitutional right, but at the same time I can’t help pointing out that the Pittman-Robertson tax on firearms and ammunition has been, on the whole, a net plus for the nation and for gun owners. The Pittman-Robertson tax has brought in a LOT of revenue over the 87 years since it was imposed, and by the same law, every penny of that has gone to conservation causes – most of it for game animals and the habitats they live in. If excise taxes on guns & ammo get thrown out, where is that money going to come from?
The general argument for taxes is that taxes benefit the public. With Pittman, we end up arguing that a tax on a fundamental natural, civil, and human right is unconstitutional…except for the tax on a fundamental natural, civil, and human right that we personally find acceptable, because it benefits something we like.
How often do I point out the lack of principled positions to be found on both sides of the aisle, but which are particularly irksome to the Right of center?
Oh, all the time. Well, here’s Exhibit #2375862873641238766 for you.
39million in today’s economy isn’t going to do a whole hell of a lot.
None of our arguments matter, none of the cases cited in these comments showing taxes on Constitutional rights are impermissible matter. Even if SCOTUS makes rulings favorable to individual rights – especially 2 A rights – there’s no mechanism to force compliance when the inferior courts, and politicians decide to thumb their noses at those rulings.
We’re living in a post Constitutional country now. Our Constitution is functionally meaningless because politicians only feel limited in what they can do by their own ideas of morality, and because they treat the Constitution as just a piece of parchment written by a bunch of old, dead white men.
The whole premise on which this Country was founded – limited government with its power defined and limited by the Constitution – has been completely upended. The government doesn’t represent the people anymore, it’s above the people and it only represents itself.
Democrat controlled states are going to continue their jihad to take away your guns and ammo and they will continue to pass “restorative justice” laws…which will continue to drive up the crime rate…which will continue to allow politicians to rationalize ever more draconian gun and ammo confiscation laws.