Fast and Furious was Never a Botched Operation
Fast and Furious did exactly what it was designed to do, set up the Second Amendment as the fall guy.
Missoula, MT –-(Ammoland.com)- The BATFEEE [Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, Explosives, And Everything Else] gunrunning fiasco that delivered thousands of U.S. firearms to Mexican drug cartels, operation Fast and Furious, is commonly referred to in the media as a “botched” federal operation.
Let’s be clear about this.
Fast and Furious was NOT “botched.”
It did exactly what it was intended to do. It delivered thousands of untraced U.S. guns to criminals at the behest of the BATFEEE and with the knowledge and assumed approval of top Justice Department and other administration officials.
Why? To set the stage for more gun control, of course.
The would-be tyrants in the federal government would love to disarm us all, to make us defenseless slaves to the federal government, as did every government that committed genocide during the 1900s before slaughtering 165 million human beings. However, further restrictions on the right to bear arms won’t fly in the current political climate without agitprop headlines, headlines federal officials hoped to supply with Fast and Furious.
So, let’s call a spade a spade. Fast and Furious was purely an anti-freedom political operation – a poorly-executed Reichstag fire intended to erode the liberty that the people have reserved to themselves from government interference in the Constitution.
If you or I had done what BATFEEE officials did “under color of law,” we’d be on our way to federal prison. The only thing “botched” about Fast and Furious has been the scurrilous attempt by the perpetrating cockroaches to run for cover when the lights came on.
Hat Tip: Katie Pavlich / TownHall.com https://tiny.cc/hj64l
Sincerely,
Gary Marbut, presidentMontana Shooting Sports Association
www.mtssa.org
author, Gun Laws of Montana
www.mtpublish.com
About Montana Shooting Sports Association:
MSSA is the primary political advocate for Montana gun owners. Visit: www.mtssa.org