“A man from Bangladesh introduced bill SB749 and got passed, a very extensive gun ban bill in Virginia
It’s headed to the governor’s desk to be signed, she’s expected to sign it.
Some guy from Bangladesh just banned American citizens from owning firearms in Virginia. Saddam Azlan Salim, a state senator in Virginia, has crafted SB749 banning all types of the possession, sale, etc, of firearms. It has passed the legislation. It’s going to the governor’s desk, a hardcore leftist, and will most likely sign it.
Saddam wasn’t born in our country. He came here like five minutes ago in the year 2000, and he does not celebrate our history and our constitution. We have to stop the foreign invasion of our country with people who do not celebrate American ideals.
The bill prohibits the import, manufacture, sale, purchase, or transfer of defined “assault firearms” (e.g., semi-automatic rifles, pistols, or shotguns with features like folding stocks, pistol grips, threaded barrels for suppressors, or fixed magazines over 10 rounds) and “large capacityammunition feeding devices” (magazines holding more than 15 rounds).”
Virginia is poised to become the 11th state with a ban on “assault weapons,” an arbitrarily defined category of politically disfavored firearms. Senate Bill 749 makes it illegal to import, sell, or buy many of the country’s most popular rifles, including the AR-15, although it does not apply to firearms possessed prior to July 1. The bill also prohibits the importation, sale, or purchase of magazines that hold more than 15 rounds, which are likewise highly popular and come standard with many models of rifles and handguns.
The bill is awaiting the signature of Gov. Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat who has said she favors such legislation. Although the ban’s supporters portray it as a common-sense way to reduce mass shooting deaths, that proposition is doubtful given the features it targets, which as usual have little or nothing to do with a gun’s suitability for such crimes. And because the prohibited firearms are indisputably “in common use” for “lawful purposes,” the ban seems vulnerable to a constitutional challenge under the Supreme Court’s Second Amendment precedents.
S.B. 749 defines “assault firearms” to include any semi-automatic, center-fire rifle that accepts detachable magazines and has any of five features: a threaded barrel, a flash suppressor, a thumbhole stock or pistol grip, a second handgrip or a protruding grip that can be held by the non-trigger hand, or a folding, telescoping, or collapsible stock. As state Sen. Saddam Salim (D–Fairfax), the bill’s lead sponsor, sees it, any of those features transforms a rifle from a legitimate product into an intolerable “weapon of war.”

