From: billimmelman on
On Jul 11, 2:21 am, JT <zzzxtyryyetytr...(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
> Photo above is of Chuck Schumer [see below list] - apparently it's
> okay for Jews to possess guns, just not Goyim cattle. Oh yes, the
> greatest gun grabbers in US History are and have always been quite
> Jewish. "Gun control" in the United States is as Jewish as our liberal
> and self destructive immigration policies.
>
> U.S. Gun Control Legislation, 1968-Present
>
> Emanuel Celler
>
> 1968: The Gun Control Act of 1968 comes from Rep. Emanuel Celler's
> House bill H.R. 17735. It expands legislation already attempted by the
> non-Jewish Sen. Thomas Dodd. America's biggest and most far-reaching
> gun law came from a Zionist[1].
>
> Howie Metzenbaum
>
> 1988: Senate bill S. 1523 is sponsored by Senator Howard Metzenbaum.
> It proposes legislation turning every violation of the Gun Control Act
> of 1968 into a RICO predicate offense, allowing a gun owner to be
> charged with federal racketeering offenses.
> 1988: Senator Metzenbaum co-sponsors a bill -- S. 2180 -- to ban, or
> limit/restrict, so-called "plastic guns."
>
> Herb Kohl
>
> 1990: Senator Herbert Kohl introduces bill S.2070, the Gun-Free School
> Zones Act of 1990, which bans gun possession in a school zone. The law
> will later be struck down in court as unconstitutional.1993: Senate
> bill S.653 is sponsored by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum. It bans specific
> semiautomatic rifles, but also gives the Secretary of the Treasury the
> power to add any semiautomatic firearm to the list at a later date.
>
> Chuck Schumer
>
> February, 1994: The Brady Law, which requires waiting periods to buy
> handguns, becomes effective. Senator Metzenbaum wrote the Brady Bill.
> Metzenbaum sponsored the bill in the Senate. The sponsor of the bill
> in the House was Rep. Charles Schumer [2].1994: Senator Metzenbaum
> introduces S.1878, the Gun Violence Prevention Act of 1994, aka "Brady
> II." Rep. Schumer sponsored "Brady II" sister legislation [H.R. 1321]
> in the U.S. House of Representatives.
>
> Dianne Feinstein
>
> September, 1994: The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of
> 1994 goes into effect, including a provision that bans the manufacture
> and possession of semiautomatic rifles described as "assault
> weapons." [Note: true assault weapons are fully automatic, not
> semiautomatic]. That gun-ban provision was authored in the Senate by
> Senator Dianne Feinstein and authored in the House by Congressman
> Schumer.
>
> Arlene Specter
>
> 1995: Senators Kohl, Specter, Feinstein, Lautenberg and others
> introduce the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1995, an amended version of
> the 1990 school-zone law which was struck down in court as being
> unconstitutional.
>
> Frank Launtenberg
>
> September, 1996: The Lautenberg Domestic Confiscation provision
> becomes law. It is part of a larger omnibus appropriations bill. It
> was sponsored by Senator Frank Lautenberg. It bans people convicted of
> misdemeanor domestic violence from ever owning a gun.1997: Senate bill
> S. 54, the Federal Gang Violence Act of 1997, proposes much harsher
> sentences for people violating minor gun laws, including mandatory
> prison sentences and forfeiture of property. It was introduced by
> Dianne Feinstein and Senator [Hatch], among others. It returns the
> idea of turning every violation of the Gun Control Act of 1968 into a
> RICO predicate offense
>
> Barbara Boxer
>
> January, 1999: Senator Barbara Boxer introduces bill S.193, the
> American Handgun Standards Act of 1999.January, 1999: Senator Kohl
> introduces bill S.149, the Child Safety Lock Act of 1999. It would to
> require a child safety lock in connection with transfer of a
> handgun.February, 1999: Senator Frank Lautenberg introduces bill S.
> 407, the Stop Gun Trafficking Act of 1999.February, 1999: Senator
> Lautenberg introduces S.443, the Gun Show Accountability Act of 1999.
>
> Senator Abe Levin
>
> March, 1999: Senator Lautenberg introduces bill S.560, the Gun
> Industry Accountability Act of 1999.March, 1999: Senator Feinstein
> introduces bill S.594, the Large Capacity Ammunition Magazine Import
> Ban Act of 1999.May, 2000: Senate bill S. 2515, Firearm Licensing and
> Record of Sale Act of 2000, is submitted by Senators Feinstein,
> Senator Barbara Boxer, Sen. Lautenberg and Sen. Schumer. It is a plan
> for a national firearms licensing system.
>
> January, 2001: Senate bill S.25, Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale
> Act of 2001, is sponsored by Feinstein, Schumer, and Boxer. It is a
> nation-wide gun registration plan [apparently there were two versions
> of that Firearm Licensing and Record of Sale Act bill].
>
> May, 2003: Senators Feinstein, Schumer, Boxer and others introduce
> legislation that would reauthorize the 1994 federal assault weapons
> ban, and, close a loophole in the law that allows large-capacity
> ammunition magazines to be imported into the U.S. The ban is scheduled
> to expire in September, 2004.
>
> October, 2003: Senators Feinstein, Lautenberg, Levin [also Jewish] and
> Schumer co-sponsor bill S.1774, designed to stop the sunset [ending]
> of the Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988.
>
> March, 2005: Senator Lautenberg introduces bill S.645, "to reinstate
> the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act," in
> other words, to reinstate the 1994 assault-rifle ban [also known as
> the "Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994"] which
> expired in late 2004.
>
> March, 2005: Senator Feinstein introduces bill S.620, "to reinstate
> the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act," in
> other words, to reinstate the 1994 assault-rifle ban [also known as
> the "Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994"] which
> expired in late 2004.
>
> http://www.iamthewitness.com/doc/The.Jewish.Gun.Grabbers.htm
>
> http://www.iamthewitness.com