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Wyoming’s Second Amendment Preservation Act Passes Despite Law Enforcement Opposition

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Wyoming just dropped a bombshell on federal overreach with the passage of the Second Amendment Preservation Act (SAPA), a bold legislative flex that slams the door on warrantless federal gun seizures and other ATF encroachments. Despite fierce pushback from law enforcement groups—who argued it could hamstring their operations—the bill sailed through, signed into law by Governor Mark Gordon. This isn’t just another state-level nullification play; it’s a direct rebuke to the Biden-era ATF’s regulatory blitzkrieg, from pistol brace bans to forced serialization of privately made firearms. Wyoming lawmakers framed it as a shield for the state’s 600,000+ gun owners, ensuring that federal agents can’t swoop in without a Wyoming-issued warrant, effectively putting local sovereignty over D.C. diktats.

Digging deeper, this victory echoes the spirit of the 10th Amendment and builds on a wave of SAPA-style laws in states like Missouri and Tennessee, where courts have already started chipping away at federal supremacy in firearms cases. Critics, including sheriffs’ associations, cried foul over sanctuary state chaos, but proponents cleverly highlighted how it mirrors existing state protections against federal overreach in areas like marijuana enforcement—why enforce gun rules Uncle Sam cooks up in isolation? The real genius here is the enforcement mechanism: Wyoming officials are barred from helping feds enforce unconstitutional regs, starving the ATF of manpower and intel. For the 2A community, it’s a blueprint—imagine if red states coordinated this into a national firewall, turning blue-city bailouts into federal irrelevance.

The implications? Massive morale boost for pro-2A warriors nationwide, signaling that state resistance is alive and gaining traction amid SCOTUS wins like Bruen. It pressures wobbly governors in places like Arizona and Montana to follow suit, while forcing the feds into costly legal battles they’ll likely lose in conservative circuits. Gun owners in Wyoming can now breathe easier, but the bigger win is momentum: this act isn’t just preservation; it’s a declaration that the Second Amendment isn’t negotiable. If you’re in the fight, celebrate this W and push your state reps—nullification works when we make it stick.

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