We Like Shooting

We Like Shooting 669 – Pecuniary Mandamus
June 30, 2026
00:0000:00

We Like Shooting 669 – Pecuniary Mandamus

This show is brought to you by Primary Arms!

We Like Shooting – Ep 669

This episode of We Like Shooting is brought to you by:

Guests: Adam Ruonala – Century Arms – Canik – Vice President of Sales and Marketing – https://www.canik.com/

Text Dear WLS or Reviews +1 743 500 2171

Public

 

Show Titles

 

GOA GOALS Aug 1-2 in Iowa. https://goals.goa.org/

GEAR CHAT

  • Note

    250th marketing on Pew Report. https://pew.report/subscriber/
  • GRIFFIN ARMAMENT(Nick)

    Griffin Armament EZ-LOK Barrel Adapters

    EZ-LOK® barrel adapters

    The EZ-LOK barrel adapter is the smaller component of Griffin Armament’s patent-pending two-part Rapid Index piston system designed for simplified suppressor mounting on Browning-style tilt-barrel pistols. It threads onto the barrel and mates with a separate EZ-LOK piston via an internal taper lock, allowing installation with a 3/4″ socket wrench and requiring zero specialized training. Available in 9 mm (shorter) and .45 (extended cylinder) versions across three thread patterns.
  • MEDICAL GEAR OUTFITTERS

    Hockey First Aid Kit

    Stay prepared at every game and practice with our Hockey First Aid Kit. Includes trauma supplies, tourniquet, SAM splint, Save-A-Tooth kit, cold packs, wraps, and more for hockey injuries.

  • Note

    Gideon optics guardian LR
  • Note

    Best can for my ps-90?

BULLET POINTS

  • THEARMORYLIFE

    M41A Pulse Rifle from Aliens (Prop Replica)

    The M41A Pulse Rifle is the standard-issue weapon of the US Colonial Marines in the 1986 film Aliens. It is a fictional firearm manufactured by Armat Battlefield Systems that fires 10x24mm explosive-tipped caseless rounds from a 99-round magazine (typically downloaded to 95) with an under-barrel 4-shot 30mm pump-action grenade launcher. Real-world versions are movie props constructed from modified M1A1 Thompson, Remington 870, and Franchi SPAS-12 components or modern 3D-printed replica kits; operational screen-used props are rare and valuable.
  • PEW REPORT

    Civilian Medical CM1 Online Emergency Medical Training Course

    CM1 Online is an expanded e-learning version of Shawn Herrin’s in-person medical class developed by Civilian Medical for users unable to attend live sessions. Built on the custom Rally Learn platform after over a year of research, it uses interactive slides, quizzes, progress tracking, student accounts, and a scenario game engine to provide structured repetition and decision-making practice of S.A.F.E. (scene safety, activate help, focus on injured, evacuate) and B.A.R.E. (bleeding, airway, respiration, exposure) frameworks. Targeted at preparedness-minded individuals and groups who own medical gear but lack stress-based practice, it supports organizational tools for assigning seats, tracking completion, and instructor integration for pre/post live training.
  • FOREST SERVICE DEBUTS NEW RECREATION MOBILE APP

    USDA Forest Service National Forests and Grasslands Mobile App

    The Forest Service launched the National Forests and Grasslands mobile app for iOS and Android during Great Outdoors Month. The app provides the most complete collection of Forest Service recreation sites, safety alerts, closures, and offline maps for the 164 million annual visitors to national forests and grasslands.

    The USDA Forest Service launched the National Forests and Grasslands mobile app on June 4, 2026 to provide a single comprehensive visitor information platform. It consolidates data from nearly 30 legacy apps, offering complete recreation site details, safety alerts, closures, amenity information, activity search, offline maps, and optional map layers for fire and weather data. The free app is available on iOS and Android for the 164 million annual visitors to national forests and grasslands.
  • ATHLON OUTDOORS EXCLUSIVE FIREARM UPDATES, REVIEWS & NEWS

    NRA 2026 New Guns & Gear That Stole the Show

    Uncover the exciting NRA 2026 new products unveiled at the Annual Meetings & Exhibits, perfect for shooters and collectors.

    The article by P.E. Fitch highlights standout new firearms and accessories debuted or featured at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in Houston, positioning the event as the industry’s encore to SHOT Show. Coverage includes innovative designs from multiple manufacturers, with particular attention to eye-catching or controversial products that drew significant attendee interest. Specific product details, dimensions, weights, and pricing are not extractable from available page metadata and previews.
  • INSIDE SAFARILAND

    Do Handgun Silencers Have a Place in the Self Defense World

    Do silencers have a place in the self defense world? They may not have completely made it there yet, but I think they will be.

    Safariland blog article examines whether handgun silencers (suppressors) belong in self-defense applications. The author gives a cautious but optimistic ‘yes,’ particularly highlighting advantages for home defense scenarios while acknowledging practical limitations. The piece discusses benefits like hearing protection for the shooter and reduced disturbance to bystanders or family members, alongside typical drawbacks such as added size, weight, and legal/regulatory requirements.
  • SOLDIERSYSTEMS

    Roni Nano Roni Pistol-to-Carbine Conversion Kit

    Houston, TX – Roni Corporaton, the leading designer and manufacturer of the renown Micro-Roni, PDW-style pistol-to-carbine conversion kits and other fi …

    The Nano Roni is Roni’s most compact pistol-to-carbine conversion kit that installs a handgun into a chassis in seconds without tools, transforming it into a pistol-braced PDW. It includes a complete system with chassis plus accessories such as magazine holders, light mounts, Picatinny rails, charging handles, optics mounts, slings, and a belt holster. Initial compatibility covers multiple Glock models with additional Glock, SIG Sauer, Taurus, and Canik models planned; available in black, OD Green, and Flat Dark Earth.
  • THE TRUTH ABOUT GUNS

    Can You Shoot 5.56 Through a .22 Suppressor? – The Truth About Guns

    Can you shoot 5.56 through a .22 suppressor? Usually no. Here’s why pressure, heat, and gas volume matter so much.

    The article addresses whether .556/.223 ammunition can be safely fired through a standard .22LR (rimfire) suppressor. In the general case, it is not safe or recommended. Most dedicated rimfire suppressors are engineered only for the much lower pressures, smaller gas volumes, and reduced heat produced by .22LR, .22WMR, or similar rimfire cartridges.
  • NSSF

    NSSF Releases Most Recent Firearm Production Figures (ATF AFMER 2023)

    Over 32 million Modern Sporting Rifles in Circulation WASHINGTON, D.C. — NSSF®, The Firearm Industry Trade Association, released the Firearm Production in the United States including the Firearm Import and Export Data 2025 Edition (reporting 2023 data) to its members. The report compiles the most up-to-date information based on data sourced from the Bureau of Alcohol, […]

    According to the NSSF article dated January 15, 2026, ATF AFMER data shows 2023 U.S. domestic firearm production at 8,466,729 units, a 15.4% decrease from 2022. Total firearms made available for the U.S. market in 2023 were 13,574,653 (handguns 8,176,535; rifles 3,899,907; shotguns 1,498,211). Cumulative civilian firearms in possession 1990–2023 reached 506.1 million, with modern sporting rifles (MSRs) in circulation estimated at over 32 million.

GUN FIGHTS

Play the best Price Is Right-style GunBroker game on the internet.

BANGRANK

A live cast ranking segment for anything and everything in the gun world, powered by questionable certainty, strong opinions, and audience voting.

THE AGENCY BRIEF

  • Agency Update

    1. AGENCY BRIEF: STREET SWEEPER / USAS-12 DESTRUCTIVE DEVICE RECLASSIFICATIONWhat this really was: In 1994, ATF took lawfully owned shotguns and shoved them into the NFA “destructive device” category.

    No vote in Congress. No new statute. Just an agency ruling that turned specific 12-gauge shotguns into the same legal category as grenades.

    The targets were the Striker-12, the Street Sweeper, and the USAS-12. The Striker and Street Sweeper used revolving cylinders. The USAS-12 was a semi-auto, magazine-fed shotgun. They all fired ordinary 12-gauge shells, the same kind of ammunition people put through hunting pumps all over the country.

    The legal hook was buried in the National Firearms Act, specifically 26 U.S.C. § 5845(f). That section says a weapon with a bore over one-half inch can be treated as a destructive device unless the government decides it is “generally recognized as particularly suitable for sporting purposes.”

    A 12-gauge shotgun has a bore of about .73 inches.

    So every 12-gauge in America avoids the NFA only because ATF treats it as sporting enough. That is the trapdoor.

    In 1994, during the Clinton administration, ATF issued Rulings 94-1 and 94-2. The agency said these shotguns had no recognized sporting purpose, pointing to their weight, capacity, and military-style features. Once ATF withdrew that exemption, the guns became destructive devices.

    The pattern was simple:

    Start with a broad statute and an elastic test like “sporting purposes.”
    Use subjective factors, including appearance, to pull back prior approval.
    Reclassify the guns by agency ruling.
    Open a short amnesty period for tax-free registration.
    Turn missed paperwork into felony exposure.

    Confirmed fact: ATF used the sporting purposes clause to reclassify these firearms and require NFA registration without Congress passing a new law.

    What is less clear is how many legacy owners actually got notice before the amnesty window closed. But the legal threat was real, and the policy result stuck. These shotguns became radioactive to own, transfer, or inherit.

    2. WHY IT MATTERS

    This was a working model for regulatory creep.

    The 1994 reclassification showed that an agency could use definitions to change the legal status of firearms after people already owned them. The “sporting purposes” test has nothing to do with the Second Amendment. It is not a rights test. It is a permission test.

    It asks whether unelected officials think your firearm looks respectable enough for duck hunting or trap shooting.

    That mechanism is still sitting in federal law. The statute effectively says a 12-gauge is a destructive device unless ATF says otherwise. Your legal status depends on an agency opinion that can change later.

    That should sound familiar.

    The Street Sweeper ruling is the same kind of move ATF has used in fights over pistol braces, bump stocks, forced-reset triggers, and frame-or-receiver definitions. Pick an unpopular target. Reinterpret the category. Give owners a narrow compliance path. Then use the new classification to turn ordinary possession into felony risk.

    Once the line between a legal shotgun and an NFA item depends on politics instead of a clear rule, nobody can plan around it. Builders, FFLs, collectors, and regular owners start backing away from anything unusual because the agency might change its mind after the fact.

    That is the damage. Not just what happened to three shotguns. The bigger problem is that the federal government proved it could move the line later.

    3. THE 2A ANGLE

    Under Bruen, the government has to justify firearm restrictions by pointing to this country’s text, history, and tradition.

    There is no founding-era tradition of the executive branch reclassifying privately owned firearms into an explosives-style category because they lacked recreational value.

    Text: The Second Amendment protects the right to keep and bear arms. It does not say “arms suitable for sporting purposes.”

    History: In the founding era, arms commonly possessed by the people were lawful to own. There was no federal licensing scheme where a Washington office could retroactively criminalize arms already in private hands.

    Tradition: The sporting purposes test comes from pre-Heller thinking. Heller recognized self-defense, not hunting, as the core lawful purpose protected by the Second Amendment.

    ATF penalized these shotguns for martial features and capacity. Those are not side issues. Those are exactly the traits that make arms relevant to the Second Amendment in the first place.

    You do not have to like the Street Sweeper. You do not have to want a USAS-12.

    The point is what the ruling normalized: category-jumping by agency decision. If a sporting purposes test can turn a 12-gauge shotgun into a destructive device, the same logic can be aimed at defensive rifles, accessories, or whatever the next politically convenient target happens to be.

    Your rights should not depend on an agency waking up in a different mood.

GOING BALLISTIC

  • THETRUTHABOUTGUNS

    House Bill 4106: West Virginia Lowers Constitutional Carry Age to 18

    House Bill 4106 expands West Virginia’s existing constitutional (permitless) carry law to eligible adults ages 18–20 who lack a disqualifying criminal record. Previously, those under 21 were required to obtain a Concealed Handgun License and complete a firearms safety course. The bill was signed by Governor Patrick Morrisey on April 1, 2026, and took effect June 13, 2026.
  • SHOOTINGNEWSWEEKLY

    NRA v. 1791 Foundation Dispute Over $31.7 Million Firearm Collection

    The National Rifle Association is in an ongoing lawsuit with the 1791 Foundation (rebranded from the NRA Foundation in 2026), which owns the vast majority of a $31.7 million collection of thousands of historically significant firearms displayed in NRA museums in Fairfax, Virginia, and Springfield, Missouri. The collection was donated over decades with the expectation it would remain in the museums. Former NRA EVP Wayne LaPierre, ordered to pay $4.1 million in restitution and banned from leadership for 10 years (appeal denied), has supporters on the Foundation’s now self-perpetuating board.
  • SHOOTINGWIRE

    FPC Statement: Sen. Cornyn’s SHOT Act (S. 4775) Badly Misses the Mark

    On June 15, 2026, the Firearms Policy Coalition issued a statement criticizing Senator John Cornyn’s SHOT Act for failing to adequately strengthen the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA). FPC, after months of engagement with congressional offices and legal experts including Supreme Court counsel, asserts the bill does not provide robust protections for Second Amendment rights against frivolous litigation that could restrict firearms access. The organization instead promotes its own proposed PLCAA amendment focused on safeguarding peaceable gun owners and the firearms industry.
  • SHOOTINGWIRE

    NSSF Praises Introduction of S. 4775, the SHOT Act, to Strengthen PLCAA Against Frivolous Public Nuisance Lawsuits

    The National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) praised U.S. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) for introducing S. 4775, the Stopping Harmful and Outrageous Torts (SHOT) Act. The bill aims to close loopholes in the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA) that have allowed public nuisance lawsuits against firearms, ammunition, and component manufacturers and retailers for the criminal or unlawful misuse of their products. PLCAA was enacted with bipartisan support over 20 years ago to prevent regulation-through-litigation that seeks to bankrupt the industry.
  • GUNS

    Federal Court Strikes Down Biden ATF ‘Engaged in the Business’ Rule (U.S. Northern District of Texas, Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, June 2026)

    Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk granted summary judgment for plaintiffs, vacating and enjoining the ATF’s 2024 enhanced ‘Engaged in the Business’ rule that treated non-FFL sales of even a single modern firearm as dealing without a license, subjecting sellers to prosecution and advancing universal background checks via FFL/Brady requirements. The court held that ATF exceeded its authority by rewriting the Gun Control Act through regulation rather than enforcing it. The rule, which drew 318,040 public comments and positions from 46 states, is vacated nationwide; ATF had listed its repeal among 34 reforms in April.
  • BEARINGARMS

    Virginia’s Assault Firearms and Large Capacity Magazine Ban (Effective July 1, 2026)

    A Virginia law banning manufacture, sale, transfer, and public possession of statutorily defined ‘assault firearms’ and large-capacity magazines takes effect July 1, 2026. Sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Sadaam Salim (D-Fairfax) and in the House by Del. Dan Helmer (D-Fairfax), the measure faces immediate constitutional challenges, non-enforcement pledges from 15 commonwealth’s attorneys citing Bruen, Heller, and Miller, and a companion HB 21 authorizing the Attorney General to sue non-compliant gun stores.
  • BEARINGARMS

    Gun Records Restoration and Preservation Act (S. Bill by Sen. Andy Kim, D-NJ) to Repeal Tiahrt Amendment

    U.S. Sen. Andy Kim (D-NJ) introduced the Gun Records Restoration and Preservation Act on June 15, 2026, to repeal the Tiahrt Amendment. The bill would eliminate the 24-hour destruction requirement for NICS background check records, allow FOIA requests on firearm traces, permit ATF to mandate annual dealer inventory audits, and remove bans on consolidating federal firearms licensee acquisition records into a DOJ database. Sen. Kim states it would provide data to trace illegal gun trafficking and gun violence.
  • BREITBART

    GOA Stands by James Harden: Texas Allows Constitutional Carry

    Gun Owners of America (GOA) defended NBA player James Harden after his arrest in Houston for unlawful carrying of a weapon involving a handgun in plain view and not in a holster in his vehicle. GOA stated that Texas permits constitutional carry and that the government has no business micromanaging how law-abiding citizens secure their firearms. Texas is one of 29 constitutional carry states allowing permitless concealed carry for those 21 and older with a clean record and is also an open carry state.
  • GUNOWNERS

    Wilson v. Hanley: Virginia Court Reaffirms Statewide Permanent Injunction Blocking Universal Background Check Law

    On June 3, 2026, in Wilson v. Hanley, Lynchburg Circuit Court Judge Yeatts ruled that the statewide permanent injunction against Virginia’s universal background check statute remains fully in effect. The court rejected attempts by state officials to undermine or dissolve the injunction originally secured in 2025 by Gun Owners of America (GOA), Virginia Citizens Defense League (VCDL), and co-plaintiffs. An open letter was sent to law enforcement reminding them not to enforce the blocked law.
  • CCRKBA HAILS UNANIMOUS SCOTUS RULING ON SECOND AMENDMENT(Savage)

    Ccrkba Hails Unanimous Scotus Ruling On Second Amendment

    The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms praised the U.S. Supreme Court’s unanimous decision in United States v. Hemani, which struck down a federal prohibition on firearms ownership for marijuana users. CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb stated the ruling correctly rejected a categorical approach to law enforcement, noting the government cannot broadly designate groups as dangerous without individual assessment.

  • SHOOTING NEWS WEEKLY(Savage)

    ACLU Can’t Bring Themselves to Acknowledge Hemani Ruling Was Also a Win for Gun Rights

    Neither “gun rights” or “Second Amendment” appears in the ACLU’s email blast to donors cheering their big win at the Supreme Court.

    The Supreme Court unanimously ruled in Ali Hemani v. United States that the government cannot criminalize conduct of large numbers of people through categorical and unfounded assumptions about danger. The ACLU celebrated the decision as protecting marijuana users’ rights but omitted any reference to gun rights or the Second Amendment in its communications. The article argues this represents a selective defense of constitutional liberties, as the ruling also benefits marijuana-using gun owners under the Second Amendment.
  • PEW REPORT(Savage)

    Wolford v. Lopez: Supreme Court Strikes Down Hawaii’s Private Property Carry Ban

    Case Background The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that Hawaii’s law requiring explicit property-owner consent before a concealed-carry permit holder may bring a handgun onto private land open to the public violates the Second and Fourteenth Amendments. The decision reverses the Ninth Circuit and reinstates the district court’s injunction, holding that the statute imposes a […]

    The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Hawaii’s law requiring explicit property-owner consent before a concealed-carry permit holder may carry a handgun onto private land open to the public violates the Second and Fourteenth Amendments. The decision reverses the Ninth Circuit, reinstates the district court’s injunction, and holds that the statute imposes a new and substantial burden on the right to bear arms for self-defense. It reaffirms a uniform national Second Amendment standard that cannot be diluted by local customs such as “the spirit of aloha.”
  • BEARINGARMS.COM(Savage)

    Why Amy Coney Barretts Wolford Concurrence Is As Important As The Decision Itself N1233005

    Explore why Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s Wolford concurrence is crucial alongside the Supreme Court ruling.

  • BEARINGARMS.COM(Savage)

    SCOTUS Makes No Move on Gun, Magazine Bans or Age-Related Cases in Monday’s Order List – NRA v. Glass, McCoy v. ATF, Lara v. Paris, New Jersey Assault Weapons/Magazine Ban Cases

    SCOTUS delays decisions on gun bans, magazine limits, and age-related 2A cases in Monday’s order list.

    The U.S. Supreme Court took no action on ten pending Second Amendment cases from last week’s conference, including five challenging hardware bans on guns and magazines (notably awaiting the Third Circuit’s en banc ruling on New Jersey’s prohibitions) and five challenging age-based restrictions on firearm sales and carry for those under 21. The Court did deny certiorari in U.S. v. Sam and U.S. v. Daniels (Fifth Circuit) and granted-vacated-remanded (GVR) U.S. v. Erik Harris (Third Circuit) on 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3) unlawful-user charges related to marijuana, consistent with recent precedents like Hemani and Wolford. These ten cases remain live and could be addressed in miscellaneous orders this week or held over for the fall 2026 term.
  • GUNOWNERS(Savage)

    VA: VICTORY – GOA & VCDL Secure a Preliminary Injunction in “Assault Weapons” Ban Challenge (Crump v. Katz)

    Gun Owners Foundation, Gun Owners of America, and VCDL have secured a preliminary injunction in Crump v. Katz, our lawsuit against Virginia’s so-called Assault Weapons Ban! This injunction prevents the Virginia State Police from enforcing the challenged gun and magazine bans while our case continues through the court system. As it currently stands, the temporary injunction extends the enforcement date from July 1, 2026 to … Read more

    On June 25, 2026, Gun Owners Foundation, Gun Owners of America (GOA), and the Virginia Citizens Defense League (VCDL) obtained a preliminary injunction in Crump v. Katz blocking Virginia State Police from enforcing SB749 and SB727. These bills would have imposed criminal penalties on law-abiding citizens for acquiring, transferring, manufacturing, importing, or carrying certain firearms and magazines capable of holding more than 15 rounds. The injunction delays enforcement from the original July 1, 2026 effective date until December 31, 2026, with an expected appeal by the Commonwealth.

REVIEWS

  • Review: Austin from IA

    Austin from NY: I get the strangest, most patriotic boners when Jeremy goes on his rage rants. Then it turns into an inny when the commie thumb [tries to] speak. Shawn, congrats on marrying up. Nick, love your ingenuity (insert Jurassic Park’s “Clever girl…” meme).
  • Review: Anonymous Coward from Iowa

    I stopped listening for a while, came back recently and realized the Jew was gone. I’m assuming Jeremy killed him, congrats on your stateside.
  • Review: Anonymous Coward from New York

    Review by Brownguy78:
    This show features 3 knowledgeable gun guys and a retard. Starts with great music and energy, you will laugh, you will learn. But when the retard starts his segment, it all falls apart. Fumble fucking through articles skipping syllables, and cackling all the way. 5 stars even with the retard. #fucksavage #wlsislife

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