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Could Spencer Pratt’s Solution to Hollywood Outsourcing Save L.A.?

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Imagine a Hollywood where the glitz and glamour collide with the thunder of gunfire, all thanks to Spencer Pratt—the reality TV villain turned unlikely policy whisperer. On a recent episode of The Alex Marlow Show, Breitbart’s Editor-in-Chief lit up over Pratt’s bold pitch: transform Los Angeles into America’s premier hub for firearms manufacturing. Marlow called it brilliant and exactly right, zeroing in on how suffocating regulations, sky-high fees, and endless expenses have driven film production overseas. Pratt’s fix? Lure gun makers from restrictive states like California itself (irony alert) by slashing red tape and offering tax incentives, turning Tinseltown’s soundstages into factories churning out AR-15s and 1911s. It’s not just a pipe dream; with Georgia and Texas already booming as pro-2A production powerhouses, L.A. could claw back jobs by embracing the very industry its elites love to demonize on screen.

For the 2A community, this is catnip—a Trojan horse for economic revival that flips the script on Hollywood’s anti-gun hypocrisy. Picture the implications: billions in manufacturing revenue flooding a bankrupt California, creating high-wage jobs for union workers who might otherwise be extras in woke reboots. Suddenly, the same libs decrying gun violence in award speeches could be cashing checks from Smith & Wesson or Ruger plants next door. It’s a masterclass in irony, forcing cultural elites to confront the Second Amendment’s economic muscle—over $70 billion annually to the U.S. economy, per NSSF data, with manufacturing hubs like New Hampshire and South Carolina thriving sans the regulatory chokehold. Pratt’s idea exposes the outsourcing scam: when you tax and regulate industries to death, they flee to freer soils. L.A. adopting this could spark a domino effect, pressuring blue states to compete or watch red America monopolize both movies and munitions.

The real genius lies in the cultural ripple: Hollywood props get made locally with real guns (gasp!), fostering a grudging familiarity that might soften anti-2A narratives. Breitbart’s spotlight on Pratt elevates this from tabloid fodder to serious policy fodder, reminding us that 2A isn’t just about rights—it’s a jobs engine Hollywood desperately needs. If L.A. bites, it saves itself; if not, it’s just more proof that freedom shoots straight while socialism shoots blanks. Stay tuned— this could be the blockbuster pitch that arms California’s comeback.

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