Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, broadcasting Life from Denver, Colorado. It's the leaking with
Michael Brown. Really glad to have you joining the program today,
so you know we have Roe's We got rules of engagement,
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(01:02):
Brown Ussay at Michael Brown USSA. So this week in Colorado,
we decided that screw the Second Amendment. A well regulated
militia being necessary to the security of a free state,
the right of the people to keep in bare arms
shall not be infringed. And I wasn't quite sure for
the for the national audience how to describe how bad
(01:27):
this bill is. This you may have heard about it
even on the national news cable. The cable news channels
are covering it too. You may here referred to a
Senate Bill twenty five Nash zero zero three, Senate Bill three.
This is a horrific attack on the Second Amendment. Absolutely horrific.
So before the program started, I thought, well, let me
(01:48):
just kind of prouse real quick the interwebs and see
what they say about the bill. And so I type
into the Google machine, I'm going to use Google today
because I wanted I wanted to get If I really
wanted to get an unfiltered list of stories, I would
use Duck Duck Go, or perhaps start page search results,
(02:11):
or maybe gone over and used a tour browser or
something which also uses the Duck Duck Go. But now
I wanted to go to the Google machine, because you look,
Google's going to return me certain results. They're going to
be scared. They're always scared. And here's the first one.
This comes from the ABC affiliate in Denver, Denver seven
(02:31):
ABC News. The headline is polus, who's our governor in Colorado?
Speaker 2 (02:36):
Who?
Speaker 1 (02:36):
By the way, if you've heard, because I've heard cable
channels over the past year or so, National Review and
others have referred to I think it was National Review.
If I'm wrong, I deeply apologized n ro O. But
I've heard people refer to our governor as a quasi libertarian.
Well I would say he's more quasi than he is libertarian,
(02:59):
and he's served not libertarian, so he's quasi. But whatever
quasi you want to apply, that's up to you. But
he is not a libertarian. He's a full on you know.
He's exactly like Bernie Sanders, except he's wealthier than Bernie Sanders.
He's a billionaire. His family made the money in greeting
cards and flowers and they're billionaires. And he's married to
(03:24):
an animal rights activist and his husband, the animal rights
activists is responsible for the reintroduction of gray wolves in
the state of Colorado. Which is costing US money, which
is killing cattle, killing animals, and now they're beginning to
move into the urban areas. So and now the legislature,
the polyp beera in Colorado is struggling with how to
(03:45):
fill a minimum of a one point five billion dollar deficit,
and they have threatened to not fund Colorado Parks and
Wildlife because the cost of paying the ranchers for all
the cattle and the cheap and the dogs everybody else
that these damn wolves are killing is becoming so costly
that they're not implementing the right programs to you know,
(04:08):
kind of stop the depredation of these of livestock. So
they're struggling with that. That gives you an idea of
this little family unit. Jared Polus and Marlon Reese, these
two gay guys that live in Boulder, and they think
that they are They think they know better how to
tell you to live your life, how to run your business,
(04:29):
how to treat you know, wildlife, how to treat the outdoors,
how to do everything. They know better than anybody else.
And I despise them for it. And I know that
I know this governor personally. I've sat down across the
dinner table from this guy. I haven't been invited back.
I don't think I'm going to get invited back. I
(04:50):
don't care, although I find it interesting because I'm sure
it would be a fascinating conversation. But anyway, back to
the old Google machine. So I thought, well, let's see
what the local news media is saying about it, because
I don't really watch a lot of the local news media. Polus,
who's the governor? Police signs watered down semi automatic gun
(05:10):
restriction bill into law. The governor also signed a bill
to bolst of the state's response to mass shootings. What
bull crap? What utter bull crap. So I thought, let's
do this. Let's go on to grock if if you're
familiar at all with X, they have an artificial intelligence application,
(05:36):
I guess is the right word. What does Let me
just do this on the fly. What does Senate Bill
twenty five zero zero three in Colorado do? Question Mark,
Let's see what you came up. Let's see what it
comes up with. This is all based on artificial intelligence.
Send a bill twenty five zero zero three in Colorado
signed it into law on April ten. Just this past week, Thursday,
(06:01):
implements a permit to purchase system for semi automatic firearms
and bans the sale and purchase of rapid fire conversion
devices something like a bump stock. They say you are
the key points. Now I want you to think about
that phrase, because the GROC is absolutely right about this.
(06:22):
It implements a permit to purchase. So not only not
only do you have to go past the federal all
encompassing background check, but before you can even do your
background check, you have to walk. You will now have
to walk into a gun store with a permit to purchase. Now,
(06:48):
imagine that I want to go give a speech outside
this building that I'm sitting in in the Denver Tech
Center where our studios are located. I broadcast this program
from I can do all my programs from from Denver.
And we have a circle drive out front, and that
circle drive is private property. But if I step just
off the circle drive, there's a public sidewalk that goes
(07:11):
up and down the length of this block that's out
in front of us. This is a really nice area
of town. And if I walk out on that public sidewalk,
the First Amendment, the First Amendment guarantees me the right
to free speech. Now, I can't walk out in the
middle of street and block the traffic, as you know
some of these stupid protesters are prone to do all
across the country. But if I stand on a sidewalk
(07:33):
and I don't know, maybe I decide I want to
preach the gospel. Maybe I want to condemn Nazis. Maybe
I want to say really nasty, racist, homophobic, seno phobic,
you know, misogynistic, every kind of pejority, kind of language
you could find. It would offend everybody within earshot. I've
(07:55):
got a right to do that because the First Amendment
guarantees me that right. Just the Second Amendment guarantees me
the right to keep in bare arms that shall not
be infringed. But imagine if I wanted to walk out
on that sidewalk and give a speech. Before I did,
I had to go to the local sheriff and say, hey, Sheriff,
i'd like to I'm going to give a speech at
(08:18):
it's ten fourteen mountain time at ten fourteen mountain time
on Saturday, April twelve. Could I get a permit to
do that? And the sheriff would say, well, you can,
but first you have to go to a free speech class.
And in this free speech class you're going to get
it's a twelve hour class. Well wait a minute, I
(08:39):
don't have twelve hours today. Well sucks to be you,
doesn't it. Let me tell you more about how this
analogy applies to this gun bill. It's the begin with
Michael Brown. Be shouldn't subscribe to the podcast on your
podcast app search for this program. It's called the Situation
with Michael Brown. The Situation with Michael Brown. You hit
that subscribe button, leave a five star review, and then
(09:01):
that will download all five days of the weekday program
plus the weekend program, so you get all the Michael
Brown you need. More about how this analogy works coming
up next. Hey, so Weekend with Michael Brown. Glad to
have you with me. I appreciate you tuning in. We're
talking about the latest attempt by the Marxists to control
(09:23):
the entire state of Colorado. Colorado is essentially a Democrat
not essentially it is. It's a Democrat controlled state. We
have no statewide elected Republican officeholder. Every major office is
held by a Democrat. And they know that, and they
(09:47):
make zero attempt to modify, or to compromise or do anything.
And I understand because I'm to the point where, if
I live in a Republican controlled state, I might, out
of courtesy, say, well, tell me what you think about
(10:07):
this legislation I'm introducing, and would I would honestly listen
to them, because they really might have some good ideas.
Now likelihood that they won't. But nonetheless, I think that
my responsibility as an elected representative is to say, here's
the legislation I'm introducing, and if you are a I'm
a Republican. And if you're a Democrat, I'm a conservative,
(10:27):
you're a liberal, and you've got some idea about how
I can make this legislation better, or tell me what
you don't like about it, or tell me why you
oppose it. Then that gives me the ammo no pun intended.
That gives me the ammo that I need to either
make the legislation stronger, better, or to tweak it a
little bit so that I might just might keep the
(10:49):
full force and effect of what I'm trying to accomplish
and still get an opponent's vote to pass the bill.
Or they might just say, you know, I don't like
anything about it. I'm not well, okay, well, fine, screw you.
I've got the majority. I'm going to go past it anyway.
I gave you the opportunity, and you didn't take the opportunity,
so screw you. So this is what's going on in
Colorado right now, and I think this is kind of
(11:11):
large what's going on throughout the entire country. We're that
polarized and many of us, you're truly included quite frankly,
on many issues. I'm just not interested in compromise. I'm
not interested in compromise because for the past five decades
or more, we've been going down this progressive path of
moving the country further and further to the left, further
(11:34):
and further into Marxist territory where you know, I had
a history actually I didn't have this teacher, but she
was famous for a quote that went something like this
that it always takes radicals to move the ship of state.
And if the country is going in a direction and
has gone down a path that you know, another party
(11:57):
or another group of voters or people don't like, it
will take radicals to right that ship of state and
going back in the right direction. And I don't mean
right in terms of I mean the direction that you
wanted to go in. It takes radicalism to do that.
And I think that's the point we're at, is that
we've become so leftists, we've become so Marxist, that it
(12:20):
is going to take radicalism to move us back to
the other direction, which I think is exactly why Trump
was elected. I do think there's been a general awakening
in the country, and I give Joe Biden and Kamala
Harris credit for that. They so in their lack of
governing skills and in their ability to just completely capitulate
(12:44):
to the Marxist wing of the Democrat Party, they've taken
us to that tipping point. And so now I think
that's one of many reasons why Trump got elected. And
some of the chaos and the upheaval and some of
the stuff that maybe is frightening to people is precisely
what we need in order to get to get the
country back on the right track. Remember the polling some
(13:07):
three forces of America, three three forces of all Americans,
not just voters, believe the country is on that wrong track,
right track, wrong track polling we've been doing for decades. Well,
now you know, more than the majority, almost reaching super majority,
status believe the country is on the wrong track. Trump's
moving it back onto the right track, and the pollings
(13:27):
begin beginning to indicate that too. But I digress too much.
So this analogy about what this bill does in Colorado
Senate Bill twenty five zero zero three, it is a
permit to purchase system for virtually all some semi automatic weapons,
long guns, and handguns, so a glock nine millimeter, an
(13:51):
AR fifteen, everything except maybe revolvers. I think revolvers would
not be included because they're they're revolvers, not they're not
really considered semile but that may be. You know, who
knows what how a court would interpret. So my analogy
about giving a speech out front of this building, I
would have to go to the sheriff and say, Sheriff,
(14:12):
I want to give a speech. I need a permit
to do so, and the sheriff would say, okay, well,
I'm more than happy to issue a permit. Once you
complete a training course on the first Amendment. And by
the way, you have to pay for the course that
the instructors have to pay to become instructors. They have
to pay taxes and fees to be the instructor. Then
(14:33):
they have to pay a portion of the tuition if,
for lack of a better word, tuition that I would
pay the instructor to teach me how to give a speech,
and then once I get all of that done over
a twelve hour period, And there's nothing in the bill
that says it's, you know, like from six am to
six pm, or they can be from you know, six
(14:56):
to seven pm over twelve days. I mean, I suppose
instructors are going to be able. They're going to have to,
you know, do it different ways, because not everybody can
take off twelve hours in one day and go do it,
or four hours a day, or even three hours a day.
I mean, it's absurd. But twelve hours of a safety
training course how to shoot a gun, and then once
(15:19):
you pass the course, you have to go back to
the sheriff. The sheriff is not required at that point
to still give you a permit. It is still to
the discretion of the sheriff, the county sheriff, whether or
not to issue a permit to you so that you
can then go to a gun store, fill out your
background form, show them that you've completed the training requirements,
(15:43):
and then oh wait a minute, you still can't buy
those guns. Oh, you could buy another gun. I could
buy a ten gage shotgun, or I could buy a
Colt forty five. But no, the semi weapons are just
pretty much outlawed in Colorado. So if my speech is
(16:06):
the equivalent of a semi automatic weapon, I just can't
do it. I can't do it. Or if it's one
of the permitted then I go through the training in
order to exercise my First Amendment. Right now, apply that
to the second Amendment. It is indeed a permit to
(16:28):
purchase system for semi automatic firearms, and it bans the
sale and purchase of anything that can be attached like
a bump stock. So, starting in August of next year,
August one, anyone purchasing a semi automatic rifle, shotgun, or
a guess operated semi automatic handgun that has a detachable
magazine must obtain this permit. And you've got to still
(16:52):
pass the background check. You've got to complete the firearm
safety training course covering the safe handling, storage, federal and
state laws DS. You've got to learn how to de
escalate a situation. I mean, you might as well just
you might as well become a cop at this point,
you've got to be trained on crisis intervention and you
(17:13):
actually have to spend range time. The permit is invalid
for five years and you're required to do a refresher
course to renew that permit. Wow, and when you hear
the governor, it's all about saving lives. Really, how many
(17:37):
criminals raise your hand? In fact, if you're driving, step
on the accelerator and raise both hands off the steering
wheel if you think that the criminals are going to
comply with this law, because you deserve to go into
the median So the Weekend Off Michael Brown texts any
message to three three one zero three keyword Mike or Michael.
(17:58):
I'll be right back tonight. Michael Brown joins me here,
the former FEMA director of.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Talk show host Michael Brown.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
Brownie, no, Brownie, You're doing a heck of a job
The Weekend with Michael Brown. Hey, welcome back to the
Weekend with Michael Brown. Glad to have you with me.
Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast. On your podcast app,
search for the Situation with Michael Brown. The Situation with
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(18:29):
of course leave a five star review and that will
get you all five days of the weekday program plus
the weekend program. And while you're at that, go follow
me on X It's at Michael Brown USA. At Michael
Brown USA. So back to Senate Bill twenty five zero
zero three here in Colorado. This is part of an
overarching larger effort by Democrats across the entire country and
(18:54):
it is absolutely mind boggling, unconstanttional. But beyond that, it
is at the same time fascinating to me, as it
is frustrating to me that Democrats, truly Marxists that are
(19:16):
now in control of many legislatures, many gubernatorial seats, have
lost the Congress, fortunately in the White House. But continue
this attack on the Second Amendment, and I would add,
by an extension, an attack on the right of natural law,
(19:40):
the right of self defense. As human beings, there is
a natural law of self defense, and with the invention
of gunpowder and firearms, that has become the most efficient
and effective method of self defense. Now, unfortunately, like we've
now seen across all over the world, you ban a gun,
(20:05):
criminals still commit crimes, whether it's you know, using state
knives in the United Kingdom or any other you know,
baseball bat somewhere, But somehow the criminals still are able
to commit crime, and criminals are still able to get guns.
I you know, if I were truly, if I were
(20:29):
truly a left of center Marxist, which means I don't
have half a brain. But if I were, and I
still had the same brain that I have today, the
same IQ, the same logic, reasoning, rationality, everything else. At
some point, don't you act? Don't you simply ask the question,
(20:50):
Wait a minute, we keep passing. Colorado has now passed.
Don't hold me to the specific number, but I think
Colorado is now in the past four or five years past,
like twenty twenty. Different pieces of legislation, all meant to
reduce crime, all meant to restrict, you know, criminals getting
(21:11):
access to guns. Yet crime continues to increase. And then
there are studies that show that where you loosen these
laws and you allow law abiding citizens to more easily acquire, possess, carry,
whatever it is with firearms, crime tends to go down.
That's unequivocally true. So I, for the life of me,
(21:35):
I struggle with but I've got the answer, But I
struggle with, what are they thinking now? The prime sponsor
of the bill in Colorado is a guy by the
name of Tom Sullivan. Tom Sullivan had a son who
was murdered in the Aurora theater shooting. If you're not
(21:56):
familiar with that, that is a shooting that occurred, and
I think it was one of the Batman movies. I've
forgotten the details about it, but it was one of
the Batman movies. And a theater in Aurora, Colorado, suburb
of Denver was you know holding. You know, they were
going to do the you know, the midnight showing. He
was going to be released. You know, let's say he's
going to be released at midnight tonight, or it was
(22:18):
going to be at released at midnight, you know, Friday night.
So at twelve oh one they were going to start
the showing you the new Batman film and this dirt
bag who was a psycho to begin with, where there's
a shocker, uh gaines entrance to a back door of
the theater and walks in and starts shooting and kills people,
(22:39):
including the son of this bill's sponsor, Tom Sullivan. Now
I feel my heart goes out to him. I truly
feel sorry for him. I feel sorry for anyone who
loses a child in a crime. I actually feel sorry
for a criminal, particularly a teenager who loses his life
(23:03):
to a cop while he's committing a crime, because they've
made some bad choices and I feel bad. Now. Am
I trying to be soft heart to hear and say
the cop should not have shot him? No, I'm just
saying that that's a tragedy, that's a sad situation, and
we would not be human if we didn't feel badly
for that kid's family that got killed by a cop.
(23:23):
But sometimes you make bad choices that have really dire consequences, like,
you know, pointing a gun at a cop when you're
sixteen years old, Well, you know, stupid is a stupid
does you're gonna end up? You know? As I call it,
DRT dead right there. But this is me. I don't
feel sorry for the family or feel sorry for the
kid for whatever reason, may you know, cause him to
lead up to that stupid choice. Well, Tom Sullivan's son
(23:45):
did not make a choice other than go to the theater.
But there is nothing in this bill that will either
bring a son back nor anything that will prevent the
same kind of event from happening again. In fact, every
mass shooter in Colorado past a background check. Now, if
(24:07):
you want to get twisted, think about this. If a
mass shooter in Colorado wants to become more even more
efficient at killing, then oh, go take this training course.
Go take the training course. You'll be a more deadly shooter.
(24:28):
So when you go to commit your crime, you can
probably kill even more people. But somehow all of these
Democrats are convinced that all of this legislation is going
to reduce crime. They're out of their freaking minds. Now,
the other thing that this bill does is it will
(24:49):
absolutely affect the gross domestic product of the state of Colorado.
It will, if not drive some gun stores completely out
of business. It's certainly going to reduce their inventory, their
opportunity for sales, and people are going to go elsewhere.
(25:09):
Now I know if I go to some other state,
they're going to have to comply with Colorado law. If
I declare that I'm a Colorado resident when I try
to buy a gun in New Mexico, for example. There
may be some ways around that, but I haven't quite
figured that out yet. I'm still working on that because
I think that's unconstitutional. But where are we now the
(25:34):
Supreme Court. And I don't want to get into the
details of why the Supreme Court makes the decisions the
way they do, but suffice it to say that when
the Court takes a case, they decide that case, generally speaking,
on the most narrow grounds possible because they want to
(25:55):
make certain that whatever their opinion is, whether it's a
nine to zero, five to four, or sixty three, makes
no difference. They want to decide the case on the
most narrow grounds possible because they don't want to touch
on or address anything other than the issue in front
of it. So they won't wander off into, you know,
(26:17):
into different They won't chase squirrels like I do and say, well,
while we're here, this case also kind of points out
we got this problem and this problem and this problem.
And I say that because I want you to understand
the history where we are today and why I think
this case is so blatantly unconstitutional. So let's go back
to two thousand and eight. The Supreme Court decided the
(26:41):
case called District of Columbia DC versus Heller. There was
a landmark US Supreme Court decision regarding the Second Amendment.
Why because it held that the Second Amendment protects an
individual's right. It protects my right, Michael Brown, just as
a text, your right to possess firearms for lawful purposes
(27:05):
such as self defense. Now, in this case, it happened
to be within the home, and it was not connected
to any sort of military service. And they found that
the law that made it so difficult to possess, to
buy and possess a handgun in DC, that it was
virtually a ban on handguns in DC. And the Court
(27:26):
clarified that the Second Amendments not unlimited, but restrictions on
certain groups, like you know, not preventing a fellon or
a mentally ill person from buying certain types of dangerous weapons,
particularly like unusual weapons, was unconstitutional. Now, they applied the
case only to a federal enclave like d C, did
(27:48):
not apply it to the states. But then that brought
about another case two years later in twenty ten, McDonald
versus City of Chicago. Now the McDonald cases under life
mark case. And this shows the slow progression of the
Supreme Court with originalists and constitutionalists on the court beginning
(28:09):
to address the Second Amendment. And they found that the
Second Amendment protections apply to state and local governments, which
built on the Heller case two years earlier, Chicago had
a near total ban on handgun possession, just like DC
the law that struck the law they struck down on
the Heller case. Well, Chicago argued that the Second Amendment
(28:32):
only applied to federal laws, not to state of local ones,
and the Court said otherwise. The McDonald part of McDonald
of the McDonald case McDonald versus Chicago, was a guy
named Otis McDonald. He was a resident of Chicago. He
challenged the ban, asserting that he needed a handgun for
self defense in his high crime neighborhood. And the Supreme
(28:57):
Court held in a five to four ruling that the
Second Amendment applies to the states. So we've we've had
these two landmark cases that say there's an individual right,
and it applies to the case, it applies to the states.
So here what Colorado has done is they have taken
a right that I have as an individual and made
(29:19):
it so onerous, so difficult to simply go purchase a
gun that it's going to limit my ability to do so,
it's going to unreasonably limit my ability to do so,
it's going to make it costly. It's going to force me.
And now can I afford the fee for the training course?
(29:43):
Probably so. Now, depending on how the courses get structured,
can I afford twelve hours? I don't know. It depends
on how the courses are set up. But let's take someone.
Let's take a mother of two kids, none Marria, mother
of two. She's working at Walmart or some convenience store.
(30:07):
She lives in a high crime neighborhood. She wants to
get a handgun to protect herself and her kids. Does
she have the money, does she of the time? Hmm,
interesting question, isn't it. It's the Weekend with Michael Brown
on the text line the number three three one zero
three keyword Micha or Michael. Hang tight. I'll be right back.
(30:31):
Thanks for tuning into the Weekend with Michael Brown. Glad
to have you with me. We're talking about the restriction
of gun rights in Colorado and the point that I
was making. And I love this audience. Thank you, because
I can always depend upon somebody somewhere in the audience
to make precisely the point that I'm driving at. Be
sure and follow me on X. It's at Michael Brown, USA,
(30:52):
Go do that right now. And by the way, it
was the Joker movie. Somebody in the text line reminded
me of that, and he was dressed as the Joker.
The shooter was when he came in and began. Thus
began the cosplay of mass shooters. And you now see
that playing out because they all imitate each other. But
(31:15):
the larger point that I wanted to make to the
national audience is this, this is part of a concerted
nationwide effort to disarm this society. Because the second thing
that this does, this permit to purchase bill, also creates
a de facto registry of all guns purchased in the
(31:37):
state of Colorado. Michael writes Chandler from Washington State. I'm
a regular weekend listener, look forward to hearing you on
Saturday mornings. Well, you ought to be listening on the
week two, Chandler. Come on. I feel for folks in Colorado,
but one to point out that Colorado is wimpy when
(31:58):
it comes to firearms laws. Washington State banned semi automatic
rifles two to three years ago and requires proof of
training to buy any firearm. There are days away from
passing a new law that will require a permit and
more training state to prove life fire in order to
purchase any firearm with background checks by both the state
(32:19):
and the FEDS. The state does one for the five
year purchase permit and the FEDS do one for every
single purchase. We are also just as bad when it
comes to other issues. I believe the top three liberal
hellholes are now Washington, Minnesota, and Colorado, in no particular order.
New York and California have dropped into fourth and fifth.
(32:43):
I slightly disagree with that. I mean, we could debate
the list all day long, but I too would argue
Washington and Colorado, but rather than Minnesota, I would put
in Illinois or Illinois. I'd put in Illinois, and then
I would say that Minnesota to New York and California
have dropped into fourth, fifth, and sixth. You can't forget Illinois.
(33:06):
And I know people are going to get upset because
we left out, say New Jersey, where we left out
you know, some other craphole state. But this is something
that's going on all over the country. But to drive
home one other point about this bill, let's go to
Fox News Laura Ingram last night.
Speaker 2 (33:28):
And ultimately that least saving lives all right, Paulis.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
Let me back up. That's that's the governor after this
bill signing. Ultimately the bill will save lives bill. You
know what, mark the tape will come back in a
year or actually we'll have to wait two years and
see if this bill is saved one single life, because
I guarantee you it will not.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
Highlights and ultimately that least saving lives. All right, Paulis
is among the worst of course governors out there there.
It's totally disingenuous. The new law is radically antisecond amendment
is beginning of twenty twenty six, it will be illegal
to buy or sell, or manufacture semi automatic guns with
the tastable magazines unless you pass, as you said, a
(34:15):
set and two background check at a permit, local sheriff's office,
a long safety course joining me, now, Coli and Noir
second Amendment advocate Colian. This covers virtually all semi autos,
does it not including the very very popular glock nine millimeter?
Speaker 1 (34:34):
Yeah, pretty much.
Speaker 3 (34:36):
At this point, this bill basically proves that the government
of Colorado thinks that people are stupid, this idea and
this concept that they're doing this because they want to
stop mass shootings. Yet all the major mass shootings in Colorado,
all those shooters pass background checks. So how sincere can
you truly be if your response to that is, oh,
we're going to have them pass what another background check?
Speaker 1 (34:59):
So it just goes to so you're better?
Speaker 2 (35:01):
Yeah, and a twelve hour course exactly?
Speaker 1 (35:06):
So who does that hander the most? Right? Some?
Speaker 4 (35:09):
I mean, as far as I'm concerned, I know a
lot of people that work a lot and don't have
time to go and get a twelve hour course just
to be able to purchase a certain type of firearm
to use to defend themselves. So the only people are
going to be able to do this are the elite.
Speaker 2 (35:25):
And of course it costs real money.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
I mean, this is not Yes, it's gonna cost real money.
So that single mom of two who's working at Walmart,
working for minimum wage somewhere, she can't afford this. So
I got an idea. Let's play their game. Let's make
this mandatory in school. In public schools, you have to
(35:50):
take a firearm training course. Whether you're ever going to
buy a gun or not, I don't care, but you
have to take you have to take a mandatory firearm
training course in the schools, or for that matter, any
private school. Let's just you know, as long as we're
going to play this ef and mandate game, then let's
mandate that in the curriculum. So I would suggest to
the Secretary of Education, Linda McMahon before she takes another
(36:13):
step to dismantle the Department of Education, put out a
directive that mandates that these training courses be provided free
of charge. So to speak, somebody's still going to pay
for it, but provide to every student. Make it mandatory.
Every student in every public school, private school, or being
homeschooled must include this twelve hour training course in their curriculum.
(36:40):
We can play their game too. This is their desperate
attempt at the state level to continue to take away
your rights. It's the weekend with Michael Brown. Be sure
and follow me on X It's at Michael Brown USA.
We'll be right back