As lawmakers enact new gun reforms in the wake of recent mass shootings, one factor shaping the political debate is how reliant states are on gun culture.
sign of getting better. here to react and talk about the multiple reasons why planes are delayed making money host, charles payne from fox business. charles, this is devastating. you are so helpless, unless you are fortunate enough to be able to afford private travel, you sit there and your life and your vacations just melt away. why? every single trip. i don t know about you but the last few times i have flown unmitigated nightmare. brian: no one has any explanation. you know what? and it s tough. everyone is frustrated and it rolls down hill. maybe the worst run industry in america. okay? here is why people should be offended. first of all, obviously, we are paying for a service. but they got $54 billion from covid. 54 billion. you know what we are going do do? we need the money, congress. obviously we shut down the economy. that was kind of reasonable. keep people trained up and ready reopened it will be seamless. are you kidding me?
Despite the carnage caused by firearms, the business of manufacturing, marketing, and selling guns to Americans is thriving. What is worse, it appears that efforts to control and regulate the
Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York State, now the third highest-ranking Republican in the U.S. House of Representatives, has an A+ rating with the National Rifle Association (NRA). Stefanik has not been shy about echoing NRA talking points, and the GOP congresswoman is not the only gun industry ally in her family.
A closer look at firearms sales reveals some interesting trends that should be part of America’s ongoing conversation about the root causes of gun violence.