@AnatolyKapinsky@elonmusk If they changed the definition of a vaccine in 2020, they will change the definition of Fascist to fit their delusional narratives!
With 63,000 cross references and over 300 prophesies about Jesus that were fulfilled over 700 years after they were written, how could anyone doubt that the Bible is true?
The **12 gun control bills** referred to in the context of Virginia's 2026 General Assembly session (advanced or passed largely along party lines by Democrats, with many now awaiting or headed to Gov. Abigail Spanberger's desk) come from reports detailing a package of measures that cleared both chambers. These were part of a broader push (with 18 total gun-restriction bills introduced), and 12 had passed both the House and Senate by mid-March 2026.
A detailed list from conservative-leaning coverage (e.g., Yahoo/AOL articles summarizing the session) highlights these as key ones that advanced without Republican cosponsors:
1. **Imposition of Civil Liability on the Firearms Industry** (Senate Bill 27 / related HB21) — Allows lawsuits against gun manufacturers/dealers for not implementing "reasonable controls" to prevent sales to high-risk individuals.
2. **Red Flag Laws Expanded** — Broadens existing extreme risk protection orders or related mechanisms to remove firearms from at-risk people more easily.
3. **Prohibition on Plastic Firearms / Ghost Guns** (HB40) — Bans the sale, possession, or manufacture of untraceable "ghost guns" and certain undetectable firearms.
Other major bills frequently cited in session coverage as part of the Democratic-led package (many overlapping with or contributing to the "12" count) include:
- **Assault Firearms / Weapons Ban** (HB217 / SB749) — Prohibits the future sale, purchase, import, manufacture, or transfer of "assault firearms" (defined as certain semi-automatic rifles, pistols, or shotguns with features like pistol grips, threaded barrels, etc.) and large-capacity magazines (often >15 or >10 rounds depending on version), with Class 1 misdemeanor penalties and exceptions for antiques or pre-existing ownership.
- **Secure / Safe Storage in Homes** (HB871) — Requires firearms to be locked or stored securely in homes where minors or prohibited persons could access them.
- **Firearm in Unattended Motor Vehicle; Civil Penalty** (HB110) — Prohibits leaving a visible handgun in an unattended vehicle (with a civil fine up to $500 and potential towing); this is the bill from the original X post, which included the exemption for General Assembly members.
- **Limits on Carry in State Buildings and College Campuses** (HB626) — Narrows exemptions, restricting where concealed carry is allowed in public buildings and on higher education grounds.
- **Bar on Firearms for Those Convicted of Intimate Partner Violence** (HB19) — Prohibits firearm possession or purchase by those convicted of certain domestic violence offenses.
- **Crackdown on Firearms Manufacturers/Dealers Not Following Responsible Conduct** (related to SB27/HB21) — Imposes standards and potential penalties for irresponsible sales practices.
Additional ones commonly grouped in the package (from session tracking and news like Virginia Mercury, WTOP, and Virginia Independent News) include measures on:
- Banning firearms in certain mental health or developmental hospitals (e.g., HB229).
- Tightening rules on transfers under protective orders (e.g., HB93).
- Age restrictions or other carry/storage tweaks (e.g., under-21 limits on certain purchases).
- Related safe storage reminders in schools or other minor provisions.
The exact 12 can vary slightly by source (some reports count companion bills or subsets), but the core focus was on assault weapon bans, storage rules (home and vehicle), ghost gun prohibitions, industry liability, and carry/location restrictions. These passed on mostly party-line votes, with GOP opposition citing Second Amendment concerns and potential court challenges (e.g., post-Bruen scrutiny). Many were bills previously vetoed under former Gov. Youngkin but revived under Democratic control.
@DrRepatriator@AsianDigest@CyberGreen09 It’s fine! This is their right to dance and our Second Lady is Indian as well so just smile and don’t read into anything. I see happy people having a wonderful time in our capital.
"Five years ago, the WEF told us that by 2030, we would own nothing."
"Everything... has started moving to a subscription-based model, if you've noticed."
"And with the digital ID... they can shut you out of any of this kind of access."
The Iranian regime has even attempted to assassinate the U.S. president — President Donald Trump.
Now they are masquerading as a victim. Now we have taken lawful action.
Damn!!!!!!🔥🔥🔥🔥
If you watch one video from beginning to end this is the one.
@realkarenjean I could not hit follow fast enough.🫡 X share this around the world!!
I finally found this video after months of searching.
They've tried to keep this off of social media because it exposes all of the young people who died suddenly because of the vaccines.
I hear what you’re saying, and I want to be clear I’m not dismissing your concerns. I live in Los Angeles and see ICE activity firsthand, not just online. I also have friends who are undocumented, from different backgrounds, not only brown or black, and they’re very aware of the legal challenges they face.
From that perspective, I think framing enforcement as simply “chasing brown and black folks” misses a lot of nuance. It turns a complicated policy issue into something much narrower than it really is.
Immigration enforcement exists in many countries, including Denmark, and it’s not applied solely based on skin color. That’s why I feel ICE, as flawed as they may be, doesn’t really belong in a discussion about Greenland. I just don’t think every global issue needs to be filtered through race (ethnicity) in order to be taken seriously.
At the end of the day, I think we want many of the same things; respect for people, self-determination for Greenland, and decisions grounded in facts rather than narratives. That’s where I’m coming from. I appreciate your response Tillie and thanks for giving me an opportunity to engage in conversation on this with you.