Since 1776, women have fought for and defended our freedom. This too-often-unheralded part of American history, as well as all that women do today, is told here by the NRA's first female president.
A group of senators recently sent out a scathing letter to the attorney general and head of the ATF over what they call enforcement of "secret guidance."
Anti-gun groups and gun-ban politicians will try to convince you that very few people successfully defend themselves and others with firearms. That couldn't be further from the truth.
In December, The National Rifle Association’s Institute for Legislative Action (NRA-ILA) partnered with the New York State Rifle and Pistol Association and asked the Supreme Court to hear a challenge to New York’s restrictive process for issuing concealed-carry licenses.
Millions of Americans have recently become first-time gun owners. How can you help them learn about firearms safety and responsibility? How can you inform them about defending their right to defend themselves and their families?
When looking at the struggle of Black people in the United States for their natural rights—those of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness—the right to bear arms, and particularly those arms employing multi-shot technology, has been vital.
I am writing this column with deeply mixed emotions. As we go to press, the mainstream media has called the 2020 presidential election for Joe Biden. Unless something dramatic develops, by the time you read this, President Trump may have exhausted all avenues available to him to contest the results of an election that even some Biden supporters admit had some very odd irregularities.