Sunday, October 3, 2021

Avoid Supporting These Companies if You Value Your Gun Rights

 

Submitted by: Edward Moore

Avoid Supporting These Companies if You Value Your Gun Rights

By: Teresa Mull

Corporate gun control is a very real danger. David French, writing recently in National Review, declared it “…a threat that can choke off financing for the gun industry, stifle speech about guns, and lock the gun-rights community into offline (and small online) ghettos that restrict their ability to communicate.”

GPM, with the help of other pro-gun groups, has compiled a growing list of anti-gun businesses those who value their Second Amendment rights should boycott. You can also click here to sign a petition to boycott these companies.

This list will be updated as more companies move to restrict their customers’ rights to keep and bear arms.

Amazon Web Services
Amazon restricted user access to codeisfreespeech.com,, where users could access blueprints for making guns with a 3D printer.

Avis and Budget Car Rentals
Avis and Budget ended its participation in the NRA rewards program in March 2018.

Bank of America
Bank of America said in April it would 
stop financing manufacturers that make military-inspired firearms for civilians, such as AR-15s.

Buffalo Wild Wings
“In 2009, [Buffalo Wild Wings] announced a blanket no-gun policy at all of its locations,” ConservativeReview.com reports.

Citi Bank
Citi Bank told its retail business partners to 
prohibit the sale of firearms to customers younger than 21 and to those who have not passed a background check.

Chipotle
In 2014, Chipotle asked that customers not bring guns into its restaurants because “the display of firearms in our restaurants has now created an environment that is potentially intimidating or uncomfortable for many of our customers.”

Craigslist
Craiglist’s user policy prohibits weapons; firearms/guns and components; BB/pellet, stun, and spear guns; etc., ammunition, clips, cartridges, reloading materials, gunpowder, fireworks, and explosives.

Delta Airlines
Delta tweeted in February 2018 that it was ending the NRA’s contract for discounted rates and “requesting that the NRA remove our information from their website.”

Dick’s Sporting Goods/Field & Stream
The chain store enacted a new policy in 2018 that halted the sale of so-called “assault-style weapons” in their Field & Stream stores. The company announced it would 
destroy all the weapons pulled from its shelves. Dick’s CEO has since announced sales are down, and they may have to close the Field & Stream line of stores.

Enterprise Holdings (Alamo, Enterprise, and National)
Enterprise ended its discount program with the NRA amid the #BoycottNRA movement of 2018.

Facebook
Facebook prohibits ads that 
“promote the sale or use of weapons, ammunition, or explosives. This includes ads for weapon modification accessories.”

FedEx
FedEx ended the discount it offered NRA members shipping firearms after Gays Against Guns staged protests.

Hertz
Hertz ended its discount program with the NRA amid pressure from gun control groups.

Instagram
Instagram’s user policy says it prohibits buying or selling firearms.

Kroger
Kroger owns Fred Meyer stores, which no longer sell firearms to people under the age of 21.

Levi Strauss
Levi Strauss’s CEO announced in 2018 the iconic American denim company will be 
donating $1 million to Michael Bloomberg and gun control groups.

L.L. Bean
L.L. Bean no longer sells guns or ammo to people under the age of 21.

Reddit
Reddit updated its policies to forbid “[soliciting] or [facilitating]” transactions involving firearms, including “gun sales, drug sales, prostitution, stolen goods, personal information, and counterfeit official documents.”

REI
“The Seattle-based outdoor retailer said March 1 [2018] that it was halting future orders of some popular brands — including CamelBak water carriers, Giro helmets and Camp Chef stoves — whose parent company, Vista Outdoor, also makes assault-style rifles,” The Los Angeles Times reported.

Shopify
Shopify changed its user policy to 
prohibit the sale of certain firearms and accessories. Retailers who use the platform say this move will likely cost them hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Starbucks
Starbucks published an open letter in 2013 from its CEO asking patrons not to bring firearms into Starbucks stores or seating areas.

Target
Target issued a statement in 2014 saying, “Bringing firearms to Target creates an environment that is at odds with the family-friendly shopping and work experience we strive to create. Starting today we will also respectfully request that guests not bring firearms to Target – even in communities where it is permitted by law.”

Toms Shoes
Toms announced it will use $5 million to advance universal background checks.

Twitter
Twitter’s user policy says it 
“prohibits the promotion of weapons and weapon accessories globally.”

United Airlines
United has ended its partnership with the NRA.

Walmart
Walmart raised the age for purchase of firearms and ammunition from 18 to 21 years old and removed “online items resembling assault-style rifles.”

Wyndham Hotel Group
Wyndham ended its affiliation with the NRA amidst pressure from the gun control lobby.

YouTube
YouTube curtailed content intending to sell firearms or provide instructions on firearm manufacturing.

Keep in mind…
Ryan Flugaur, Director of Federal Affairs at the National Association for Gun Rights, told Gunpowder Magazine to keep in mind:

Sometimes anti-gun businesses can be tricky to identify
o Sometimes corporate policy will ban guns, other times only local franchise owners choose to ban them, not the company as a whole.
o Sometimes state or local law will supersede corporate policy, placating a business or franchise owner as anti-gun even if they’re not.
o Sometimes these legal restrictions or company decisions only apply to open carry, not concealed carry, or only apply to restaurants (or portions thereof) that serve alcohol.
o Corporate policies can be very different for employees than they are for patrons.
o So can storage in a car parked on company property or possession in a company’s parking lot.

Potential consequences for violating these bans
o Depending on state and local law but violating one of these policies could result in either being asked to leave by the owner (trespassing at worse), or a serious criminal act resulting in arrest and prosecution on firearm charges.

Teresa Mull is editor of Gunpowder Magazine. Contact her at teresa@gunpowdermagazine.com.

The companies above (about 28 or so) do NOT respect the Second Amendment, and two of them SELL GUNS. While hypocritical; few can equal Facebook, Twitter, or Dick's for anti-Article II activities. Some are worse than others, with those selling firearms on opposite poles. Walmart is the least rancid, as it is not known to lobby politicians to destroy the Second Amendment. Tiring of always being held responsible for any, (and every) crime ever committed, and knowing deep pockets are a magnet for lawsuits, they won't sell firearms to those under 21. Dick's, however, hired two firms to lobby Congress to change firearm laws that would negate Article II. Those changes would conflict with the Bill of Rights, of course, but since they have contempt for their own customer base, they are not likely to care.

 

Democrats maintain that your rights are not defined by the Constitution or the Bill Of Rights, but by what un-elected bureaucrats and politicians claim them to be. That totalitarian attitude is exactly why the right to bear arms was installed into the Bill Of Rights in the first place. Article II says nothing about harvesting game, either. Look all you want, that word 'hunting' is just not in there.


Gun Owners Of America: 1-703-321-8585 Congress: 1-202-224-3121 Hillsdale College: 1-517-437-7341 NRA: 1-703-267-1000

Got Bushmaster, Ruger, Smith & Wesson, Taurus, etc?

"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." Article II of The Bill Of Rights. (aka: The Second Amendment)

No comments:

Post a Comment