Senator Feinstein DEAD
By Gregory Kielma
BREAKING: Longtime Gun Control Crusader California Senator Diane Feinstein Dead at 90

BREAKING: Longtime Gun Control Crusader California Senator Diane Feinstein Dead at 90
By
Dan Zimmerman
September 29, 2023
California’s longest-serving Senator, Diane Feinstein, who was a non-stop crusader for limiting gun rights is dead at age 90. She rose in power due to a high profile shooting in San Francisco’s city hall and went on to build much of her career on the fight to restrict Americans’ Second Amendment rights and outlaw classes of firearms and accessories.
From Tactical K Training and Firearms Instructor Gregg Kielma
God Bless the Senator from California.
In my opinion you did everything wrong to curtail gun ownership to legal law-abiding Americans. Your blatant disregard for understanding firearms was outrageous. The information you spewed was a travesty. The people that will follow you know nothing about firearms, law-abiding citizens and our Second Amendment right to carry and own. They are people like me, my next-door neighbors, my friends, good people who legally own firearms and are responsible American's.
You fine Senator from California did a disservice to all legal firearm owners, Americans, that have set us back in very unpopular ways. Your insight into firearms, rifles and handguns, magazine's, was flawed and wrong on many levels. You, Senato, were only a mouthpiece for the gun grabbers who voted for your flawed ideology. Shame on you Senator Feinstein.
God's Speed and God Bless The Senator from California.
From CNBC . . .
After two failed bids for mayor, she was elected president of San Francisco’s board of supervisors in 1978, becoming the first woman to hold the title.
Feinstein was made acting mayor of the city later that year, after then-Mayor George Moscone and Harvey Milk, her colleague on the board of supervisors, were assassinated by Dan White, a former member of the same board.
In later interviews, Feinstein recalled finding Milk’s body and searching for a pulse by putting her finger in a bullet hole.
The tragedy had the side effect of jumpstarting Feinstein’s political career, but the trauma of the day stuck with her even decades later.
A tireless civilian disarmament crusader, Feinstein — who used to carry a gun herself — wrote the 1994 “assault weapons” ban that both the New York Times and a federal government study acknowledged was an abject failure. Nonetheless, she never stopped trying to enact another one.
This is all we’ll say about that.