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general freedom privacy Second Amendment rights

Second Amendment Privacy Act

Paul Jacob on a big win for gun rights.

If you live in Georgia and have recently bought a gun or are about to, good news!

Governor Kemp has signed the Second Amendment Privacy Act to protect the financial privacy of persons buying guns and ammo. Georgia is the fourteenth state to enact such legislation.

According to Lawrence Keane, a lawyer with the National Shooting Sports Foundation, this means no more collusion between financial companies and the government to spy on the private finances of gun owners.

At least not in Georgia.

States must institute these protections because enemies of our right to bear arms have started using financial transactions as way to penalize gun owners. It would be nice if the federal government enacted equivalent protection. But given our present federal regime, the chances of that happening anytime soon are slim.

The main thing the Act does is prohibit financial institutions from requiring that a firearm code be associated with purchases of guns and ammo that you make using a credit card. When banks flag your purchase in this way, it’s easy to target you for sanctions like cancelling your account or maybe adding you, without any good reason, to a government watch list.

The Second Amendment Privacy Act also prohibits using existing firearms codes to discriminate against gun owners. So it protects people whose purchases have already been code-flagged, not just people who buy a gun now.

It’s progress. Thirty-six states to go.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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Illustration created with Midjourney and Firefly

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2 replies on “Second Amendment Privacy Act”

If we had a proper separation of bank and state, such legislation would be not merely unnecessary but unacceptable. Discrimination for or against weapons owners would be a prerogative of purely private financial intermediaries.

In the other states, at least for now, save up and pay cash.
Problem solved; sort of.
And do this for other things too. They are actually tracking book purchases, especially bibles.

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