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WATCH: SIXTEEN Out-of-State ATF Agents Visit and Intimidate Popular Gun Store in Smyrna, GA on Same Day as Nashville School Shooting, Get Scared Off by GOP Congressmembers! By Jordan Conradson

Georgia Republican Reps. Barry Loudermilk, Mike Collins, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Rich McCormick

Sixteen ATF out-of-state agents reportedly visited Adventure Outdoors in Smyrna, GA, to conduct a “routine” inspection of the popular longtime gun dealer on Monday morning.

Coincidentally (or not), this happened on the same morning of a school shooting by a transgender who kept a manifesto and mapped out his plan in Nashville, TN. The Biden White House on Monday afternoon called for Republican lawmakers to back a ban on so-called ‘assault weapons’ following the Nashville school shooting.

Both of these incidents happened months after Nashville Predators Foundation teamed with Nashville Police in offering People $50 Kroger cards to turn in their firearms.

Brian Glenn of Right Side Broadcasting Network shared the news Monday morning, calling it a “raid” and said they would continue to monitor the story.

Marjorie Taylor Greene can be seen telling off an ATF Public Information Officer below, saying, “it’s very odd for them to be treated this way.”

 

Rep Marjorie Taylor Greene tweeted,

Members of our Georgia delegation were present for an unprecedented ATF inspection at longtime and well respected Adventure Outdoors in Smyrna, Ga.

After we questioned their motives and informed them of Oversight and Republican controlled Appropriations, they all left.

 

11Alive reports,

Lt. Gov. Burt Jones vowed an investigation Monday after an apparent visit by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) to a Smyrna gun store.

11Alive contacted ATF to confirm the nature of the bureau’s presence at Adventure Outdoors, which was posted about by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, but the bureau did not respond to request for comment.

The presence of ATF was observed by fellow Georgia Republican Reps. Barry Loudermilk, Mike Collins and Rich McCormick as well, according to Greene’s post.

Lt. Gov. Jones reposted a video of the Congress members speaking to a person wearing an ATF public information officer jacket. He wrote: “Adventure Outdoors is one of the largest and most respected businesses in our state — and this appears to be an egregious overreach by Joe Biden’s ATF. We will be working to investigate this situation to protect this business and Georgians’ 2A rights.”

 

From RSBN:

Watch as roughly fifteen ATF out-of-state agents enter Adventure Outdoors in Smyrna, GA for a “routine” inspection just days before Governor Ron DeSantis plans to visit on Thursday. Local congressional representatives heard of the supposed routine inspection and arrived on the scene and answered questions from the local media They also questioned the ATF public information officer about this unprecedented inspection.

Georgia lawmakers can be seen below denouncing the highly equipped inspection by the “politicized and weaponized” agency and explaining that the ATF agents would not answer their questions. “They’ve been the benchmark really nationwide for other gun stores of how it really should be done,” said Rep. Barry Loudermilk. “It was unprecedented to have that many inspectors come for especially a dealership that has just renewed their Federal Firearms License (FFL).”

Rep Mike Collins told reporters, “we were told we didn’t have to be given a reason” from the ATF for their inspection. The ATF also asked about the upcoming political event on Thursday.

This was not an annual or regularly planned inspection, said Congressman Rich McCormick. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said, “They left after they met us.” She continued, asking, “Why leave if you’re not doing anything wrong? Why would they leave after meeting members of Congress, especially the Congressman where this gun store is in his district and he’s a customer here?”

The Congressmembers from Georgia said these 15 officers came from multiple states. One Representative said they came from 14 different states to intimidate this “flagship” gun store. “There’s 20 inspectors here in the Atlanta area,” said Loudermilk.

The Georgia delegation also be seen confronting the ATF’s Public Information Officer as a group.

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California: San Francisco Supervisors Considering Firearm Tax – The NRA-ILA

Today, the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco will consider whether to adopt File #230305, a resolution in support of Assembly Bill 28, which states the Legislature’s intent to impose a tax on firearms and ammunition. NRA members and Second Amendment supporters are invited to oppose File #230305 by submitting comments via email or by participating in the meeting, which is available in person and by calling in. Click here for the agenda and to view details for participating.

It is unjust to saddle law-abiding gun owners with punitive taxes. Such policies will not hinder the criminal misuse of firearms, but instead make it more expensive for law-abiding citizens to exercise their constitutionally protected rights or engage in lawful firearm related activities.

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The .38-40 Winchester Center Fire: History & Performance by DAVE CAMPBELL

Campbell 38 40WCF 1

To say that the Model 1873 Winchester set the world on fire is a bit of an understatement. Winchester knew it had a winner with the Model 1866, but the folded-rim cartridges were simply not up to the task of containing the pressures necessary to launch anything of substantive power. The centerfire primer gave the company that much needed edge.

Gun people—especially those who carry along a firearm as part of their daily business—complained then, as they do now, that what they needed was something lightweight and less burdensome to carry but powerful enough to fit their self-defense and hunting needs. Not much has changed in some 150 years. Trouble is, when you lighten up the firearm but keep the original power, recoil is intensified, and the manufacturers will get beefed for that.

One solution is to make a cartridge with lighter bullets that have less inertia to overcome, thus lessening the obstinate and accuracy-robbing recoil. So Winchester decided to reduce the diameter of the bullet a bit and neck down the .44-40 Winchester Center Fire (WCF) cartridge. Bullet diameter shrunk from .427″ to .401″ and the weight of the bullet from 212 grains to 180 grains. Technically, using the Winchester nomenclature of the day, the new cartridge would be called the “.40-40 WCF,” but apparently that moniker lacked pizazz, so somebody lost in the annals of Winchester history decided on .38-40 WCF, and it stuck. Then, as today, cartridge nomenclature never let accurate specificity get in the way of marketing.

If one looks up the .38-40 WCF now, most claim it was introduced in 1874. However, George Madis, author of The Winchester Book and generally considered the last word on all things Winchester, says that the .38-40 WCF was actually introduced in the Model 1873 rifle in 1879. Danny Michael, curator of the Cody Firearms Museum, confirmed this saying that according to its records, the first Model 1873 in .38-40 WCF was shipped in 1880. Colt’s first Single Action Army chambered in the lighter load was in the mid-1880s.

The .38-40 WCF made a pretty fair stab at maintaining adequate power, while making it easier to make hits with its somewhat flatter trajectory and reduced recoil. From a 24″ rifle barrel, it launched 180-grain bullets in the 1,100 to 1,150 f.p.s. range. Later on as revolvers were chambered for it, the cartridge was still at a respectable 800 f.p.s., plus or minus, or about that of the more modern .40 S&W with cast bullets. Recall, too, that the .38-40 WCF was developed during the blackpowder era. When smokeless powders and jacketed bullets became the norm, the 19th-century cartridge still competes ballistically with the modern iteration at 1,000 f.p.s.

All of this meant that while the .44-40 WCF was king of the hill in the Winchester ’73, the .38-40 WCF ran a somewhat close runner up. When the Model 1892 Winchester was introduced it also was available in .38-40 WCF.

Similarly, in the Colt SAA, the .44- and .45-calibers reigned at the top of the popularity heap, but the .38-40 WCF came in a strong third right to the end of the first-generation guns in 1941. Colt also chambered it in its Model 1878 double-action revolver and later in the New Service double actions. Smith & Wesson chambered a few Model 3 single-action revolvers for the .38-40 WCF, and later a handful of its N-frame revolvers, but the total number of Smiths in this caliber is pretty negligible.

When L.L. Hepburn patented a solid-top, side-ejecting version of the mid-sized Marlin 1888 rifle—and renaming it the New Safety Repeating Rifle Model 1889—one of the first chamberings was in .38-40 WCF. Marlin marked “38W” on top of the barrel. Lengths ran from 15″ to 29″, round or octagon. Stocks were plain American black walnut up to some highly figured walnut in the better grades. By the way, the retail price of an 1889 at that time was a whopping $18. A friend has a pair of Marlin 1889s that he uses in cowboy-action shooting and was gracious enough to loan them to me for the photos here. Marlin carried the chambering over into its Model 1894 rifle as well.

Colt also chambered its slide-action Lightning rifle in .38-40 WCF, as has several of the replica manufacturers. Remington chambered its Model 14 1/2 in .38-40 WCF beginning in 1913. By 1937, most of the interest in the cartridge had waned. Shooters wanted more power and a flatter trajectory. The blackpowder holdover had seemingly run its course. However, as cowboy action shooting gained in popularity, a Renaissance aura rekindled interest in the .38-40 WCF. Colt reintroduced the .38-40 WCF in its third-generation SAA in 1993, and it had a following for a while.

Handloaders either swear by or at the .38-40 WCF. Like its parent cartridge, paper-thin case mouths can be problematic. Handloads often chambered easily into a rifle or carbine, but revolver chambers were—are—cut more precisely, making it necessary to adjust the sizing die down enough to chamber in a revolver.

The issue with thin chamber mouths can be remedied by trimming all the cases to a minimum length and deburring—emphatically not chamfering the mouth. Bell the mouth just enough to accept the heel of the bullet, and gently seat the bullet instead of ramming it. Starline brass has addressed the thin case mouth issue, and the friends I have shooting the .38-40 WCF now much prefer it to other brands. With component shortages being what they are today, finding jacketed .401″ bullets now is an issue. The answer here is, of course, to cast your own, but relatively few modern shooters want to do that.

Many moons ago, a high-velocity factory load, giving the 180-grain jacketed soft point a muzzle velocity of 1,775 f.p.s. from a 24″ rifle barrel, was available. Unfortunately, it had to be withdrawn because too many guys were stuffing it in black-powder-framed revolvers and blowing them up. The .38-40 WCF was—and is—a fine cartridge for self-defense and smaller game. It’s not much of a deer gun, unless the range is very short. I would not turn away from a revolver chambered for it. The .38-40 WCF earned its chops.

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