The Soft Tyranny of Safety: Colorado’s New Gun Laws
There’s always a whiff of sanctimony when government functionaries insist that rights must now be pre-cleared by the Crown. Colorado’s latest legislative offerings — Senate Bill 25-003, Senate Bill 25-205, and House Bill 25-1133 — reek of the perennial delusion that bureaucrats can engineer virtue through paperwork and power.
Let’s take SB 003. Beginning August 1st, Coloradans won’t be able to purchase many semi-automatic firearms without first applying for a permit from their local sheriff — then passing a state-approved gun safety course. This isn’t “common sense reform.” It’s a constitutional right turned into a government permission slip, enforceable by the very people who answer to political winds, not individual liberty.
Then there’s SB 205, requiring law enforcement to run serial number checks on firearms before a business can complete a sale. Retailers will be legally compelled to act as auxiliary arms of the state, reporting anything that smells of suspicion within 48 hours or risk their federal firearms license. A policy worthy of some windswept European bureaucracy — not a Western state with a frontier soul.
Finally, HB 1133 bumps the legal age to purchase ammunition to 21 and demands all ammo be locked up behind the counter. As if the problem is 20-year-olds wandering aisle four and suddenly becoming violent — not the far deeper rot of broken enforcement and selective prosecution.
Now, I believe in training. I believe in responsibility. But I do not believe that liberty should arrive with a barcode and an expiration date.
Educated gun owners are good. Licensed freedom is not. The distinction, though subtle in speech, is immense in consequence.
And the government that licenses your liberty today can suspend it tomorrow.









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