Trump's tax bill to impact gun owners across Arkansas
ARKANSAS, JUL 10 – The bill removes taxes on suppressors and short-barreled rifles while maintaining the $200 tax on machine guns, potentially prompting legal challenges to the National Firearms Act, experts said.
4 Articles
4 Articles
NFA: The Hill Gun Control Dies On, and Antis Know It
A federal challenge to the NFA could be the proverbial “battle royal” in the fight to protect the Second Amendment. (Dave Workman) Wails from the gun prohibition lobby at the passage of President Donald Trump’s “One Big, Beautiful Bill,” which eliminates the $200 tax on suppressors and short-barreled rifles and shotguns—a tax originally adopted to discourage people from owning such things—invariably forecast mayhem, but in the background is the …
Federal tax on firearms suppressors gone, but Illinois’ ban remains - Regional Media News
(The Center Square) – The recently passed One Big Beautiful Bill Act scraps the $200 tax on firearm suppressors and short-barreled rifles, a move gun-rights advocates praise. Critics say it’s weak reform that keeps unconstitutional federal controls in place. Firearm suppressors used to be regulated under the 1934 National Firearms Act (NFA) and the Gun Control Act (GCA) of 1968, enforced by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives…
What stripped-down 'Big Beautiful Bill' means to gun owners
by Joe D. "Buck" RuthFor a brief moment, it seemed as though Congress was poised to deliver a landmark victory for America's gun owners. First, the House included the Hearing Protection Act in H.R.1, the reconciliation bill also known as One Big Beautiful Bill, but left out the SHORT Act. That meant suppressors were eliminated from the definition of the National Firearms Act of 1934. Then a Senate committee restored the SHORT Act, eliminating sh…
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