Mad River AR

Mad River AR MRAR at Springfield is a premier indoor shooting sports club located in Springfield, Ohio.

Daniel Defense SBR / Suppressor Raffle - $4,006 Prize PackageONLY OHIO RESIDENTS 21 OR OLDER MAY ENTERNOTE: YOU DO NOT H...
01/09/2026

Daniel Defense SBR / Suppressor Raffle - $4,006 Prize Package
ONLY OHIO RESIDENTS 21 OR OLDER MAY ENTER
NOTE: YOU DO NOT HAVE TO "LOG IN" TO BUY TICKETS. There are NO physical tickets for this raffle. You will NOT get a number at the time of your purchase. We will randomly assign ticket numbers AFTER ALL 1,000 TICKETS HAVE BEEN SOLD or after raffle ticket sales are closed and will provide these numbers to participants before the drawing.

On New Year's Day, the federal tax stamp for SBRs and suppressors went from $200 to $0. This means you pay NO TAX STAMP on short-barreled rifles and shotguns or suppressors.
BFA, along with several other leading gun rights groups, played a direct roll in bringing about this significant change to federal law. And this clears the way for legal action challenging the very existence of the National Fi****ms Act of 1934.
To celebrate and commemorate this victory, we're doubling down with a raffle that includes both a short-barreled rifle AND a suppressor!
Coming in at less than 6 lbs. and with a barrel measuring just 11.5", the Daniel Defense DD4 RIII S AR15 ($2,239.99) features a fully ambidextrous lower, two-piece SOCOM handguard with M-LOK attachment, and ergonomic Daniel Defense Buttstock and Pistol Grip.
We've attached a CAT White Bread ultra-lightweight Titanium Suppressor ($1,099.99), featuring a durable DLC finish, compact 5.45" overall length, and full-auto rating. We've also mounted an EOTech EXPS2-0 Holographic Sight ($665.99), with 68 MOA ring and 1 MOA dot, side buttons for switching between 20 daytime brightness settings, side-loading battery compartment, and quick-release mount.
The entire prize package adds up to $4,006. Click the photos below for a close-up look.

Proceeds support Buckeye Fi****ms Association.
A maximum of 1,000 3-digit tickets (numbered 000-999) will be sold for $25 each. The winning number will be determined by random drawing. You may purchase as many tickets as you want.
The raffle will end when all tickets are sold or ticket sales are closed. The drawing date will be announced after the raffle has been officially closed. See complete rules and terms at the bottom of this page.
ONLY OHIO RESIDENTS 21 OR OLDER MAY ENTER
NOTE: You do NOT have to "log in" to buy tickets. Also, there are NO physical tickets for this raffle. And you will NOT get a number at the time of your purchase. We will randomly assign ticket numbers AFTER ALL TICKETS HAVE BEEN SOLD and provide these numbers to participants privately by email before the drawing.
The more tickets you buy, the greater your odds of winning!
1 Ticket = 1 in 1,000 Chance
2 Tickets = 1 in 500 Chance
5 Tickets = 1 in 200 Chance
10 Tickets = 1 in 100 Chance
Here's a list of everything in this prize package:
Click on the links for more photos and detailed information on each item.
Daniel Defense DD4 RIIIS 11.5" SBR - $2,239.99
CAT White Bread Suppressor TI64 - $1,099.99
EOTech EXPS2-0 Holographic Sight - $665.99
To see these items in person, visit Black Wing Shooting Center at 3722 Marysville Road, Delaware, Ohio 43015.
ONLY OHIO RESIDENTS 21 OR OLDER MAY ENTER
Eligibility, Validity, and Other Requirements: Void where prohibited by law. Only individuals with residence in Ohio and who are 21 years or older may enter. Employees, officers, directors, and trustees of Buckeye Fi****ms Association, Buckeye Fi****ms Foundation, and Black Wing Shooting Center, their immediate families, and members of their household are not eligible to participate. Guns awarded as prizes will be distributed through a licensed dealer and only in compliance with federal and state laws and applicable local ordinances. If a winner is not a resident of Ohio or is ineligible to receive a prize under relevant state, federal or local laws and regulations, the prize will be forfeited and another winner will be chosen. Any taxes on prizes are the sole responsibility of the winner. Prizes are non-transferable. There will be no prize substitution. The winner will be notified by phone and/or email. Entry constitutes consent for the use of the name and image of the winner. Raffle ticket purchases are not tax deductible. There will be no refunds for tickets purchased.
Drawing and Winner: All guns, gear, and other prizes will be given away at the conclusion of the raffle after an eligible winner is selected. There are no physical tickets. Ticket numbers will be randomly assigned after all 1,000 tickets are sold or after raffle ticket sales are closed, and these numbers will be made available to all participants before the drawing. The winning number will be determined by random drawing on the specified date of the drawing. If for any reason the winning number in a drawing does not match a number assigned to a ticket holder, the drawing will be repeated until a matched number is drawn. If for any reason a winner is ineligible, a new drawing date will be announced to pick an eligible winner. A raffle ticket holder with the winning number must respond directly to a winner notification within five (5) days of the drawing, otherwise the winner will forfeit the prize and another drawing will be held to select a winner. Responding directly to a winner notification means replying to the email you receive about having the winning number or calling Buckeye Fi****ms Association at 614-715-4867.
Notifications: Drawing dates, number assignments, and raffle notifications are provided via the email address ticket buyers enter at the time of purchase. It is the responsibility of the ticket buyer to provide a working email address and to check for raffle-related messages in a timely manner. Buckeye Fi****ms Association is NOT responsible for email addresses that are misspelled, nonfunctional, or that bounce or are blocked in any way.

Daniel Defense SBR / Suppressor Raffle - $4,006 Prize Package 6:00am Friday, January 09, 2026 ONLY OHIO RESIDENTS 21 OR OLDER MAY ENTER NOTE: YOU DO NOT HAVE TO "LOG IN" TO BUY TICKETS. There are NO physical tickets for this raffle. You will NOT get a number at the time of your purchase. We will ran...

OUR TOP OPTICS FOR AR’S PICKSThese optics will give your AR the Edge afield and at the Range. The post OUR TOP OPTICS FO...
01/08/2026

OUR TOP OPTICS FOR AR’S PICKSThese optics will give your AR the Edge afield and at the Range.
The post OUR TOP OPTICS FOR AR’S PICKS appeared first on .

These optics will give your AR the Edge afield and at the Range.

Ohio 2026 muzzleloader deer season resultsHunters harvested 13,055 white-tailed deer during Ohio’s four-day muzzleloader...
01/08/2026

Ohio 2026 muzzleloader deer season resultsHunters harvested 13,055 white-tailed deer during Ohio’s four-day muzzleloader hunting season that ended Tuesday, Jan. 6, according to a Jan. 7 news release from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of Wildlife.
This total accounts for all deer taken with a muzzleloader or archery equipment during those four days. Hunters may pursue deer with a bow until Sunday, Feb. 1.
The Division of Wildlife reports the number of deer checked at notable points during the hunting season. Last year, hunters checked 13,495 deer during the muzzleloader season, according to the release. Over the past three years, hunters bagged an average of 13,269 deer in the same timeframe.
Related article: Ohio’s 2025 deer gun weekend results

Hunters checked 3,473 antlered deer (27% of deer tagged) and 9,582 antlerless deer (73%). The antlerless category includes does (7,924), button bucks (1,418), bucks with shed antlers (143), and bucks with antlers shorter than 3 inches (97).
The 10 counties with the highest totals during the muzzleloader season are as follows:
Coshocton (557)
Tuscarawas (491)
Carroll (451)
Muskingum (437)
Knox (393)
Harrison (391)
Licking (388)
Columbiana (375)
Guernsey (356)
Jefferson (299)
Hunters in Ohio have tagged 222,648 deer during the 2025-26 season as of Tuesday, Jan. 6, according to the release. The season total has surpassed 200,000 for the fourth consecutive year. Deer checked by season include the following:
archery, 99,551. Ohio’s archery hunting season is open until Sunday, Feb. 1.
youth gun, 9,759
gun season, 84,448
additional gun weekend, 15,835
all deer checked with a gun, which includes deer taken during controlled hunts: 124,104
Deer harvest totals for this hunting season are lower than average in Athens, Meigs, Morgan, and Washington counties as a result of an unprecedented outbreak of epizootic hemorrhagic disease (EHD) in that region over the summer. Coinciding with the start of the seven-day gun season, the bag limit in those counties was reduced in response to the disease outbreak.

Hunters harvested 13,055 white-tailed deer during Ohio’s four-day muzzleloader hunting season that ended Tuesday, Jan. 6, according to a Jan. 7 news release from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of Wildlife. Here are the county leaders.

Ohio AG Dave Yost coleads 25-state coalition challenging California ammunition restrictionsOhio Attorney General Dave Yo...
01/07/2026

Ohio AG Dave Yost coleads 25-state coalition challenging California ammunition restrictionsOhio Attorney General Dave Yost and Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador are leading a coalition of 25 states in opposing California’s latest attempts to undermine the Second Amendment by tightening restrictions on ammunition.
“California has spun a web of burdensome laws designed to stop residents from buying ammunition,” Yost said in a Jan. 6 news release posted on the AG's website. “The right to bear arms includes the right to buy ammunition — and we’re asking the court to once again declare these laws unconstitutional.”
In an amicus brief filed Jan. 5, Yost and his counterparts urge the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to uphold an injunction blocking California from enforcing its ammunition background-check requirements, according to the release.
Such state laws could require California residents to pay up to $19 for a background check — a process often lasting nearly a week — every time they purchase ammunition, according to the release. Similar restrictions apply to ammunition imported from out of state.
The brief argues that these laws place an unconstitutional burden on the Second Amendment rights of California residents, according to the release.
“California’s ammunition background-check and anti-importation provisions make fi****ms unusable to California residents unless they buy the state’s renewed permission to reload them every time they run low on ammunition,” the brief states.
The brief cites legal precedent affirming that arms-bearing rights include the right to ammunition. It also asserts that California has failed a legal test requiring the state to prove the laws are consistent with the nation’s historical tradition. On the contrary, the brief states, the California laws in question are unprecedented.
Two courts, including a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit, have already ruled that the laws infringe on constitutional rights, according to the release. The Ninth Circuit has granted California’s request for the full court to rehear the case.
Joining Yost and Labrador in signing the amicus brief are the attorneys general from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming.
A separate amicus brief was filed by the U.S. Department of Justice. Per a Jan. 6 article by NRA-ILA:
Yesterday, the U.S. DOJ and the 25-state coalition each filed amicus briefs arguing that the ammunition restrictions violate the Second Amendment.
The DOJ’s brief asserts that the laws establishing the background check requirement “do not pass even the ‘laugh test,’” because they “evoke[] a convoluted board game, not a serious attempt to further a legitimate purpose.” The regulation is “designed to burden the exercise of the right to bear arms,” the DOJ argues, and “a fi****ms regulation that seeks to frustrate the exercise of the right to keep and bear arms is a per se violation of the Second Amendment.”

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost and Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador are leading a coalition of 25 states in opposing California’s latest attempts to undermine the Second Amendment by tightening restrictions on ammunition.

The New Savage 110 Ultralight Elite Rifle: Review
01/06/2026

The New Savage 110 Ultralight Elite Rifle: Review

Float like a butterfly…

New Jersey senators push nationwide licensing system for gun ownershipby Jose NinoSens. Cory Booker and Andy Kim (D-New ...
01/06/2026

New Jersey senators push nationwide licensing system for gun ownershipby Jose NinoSens. Cory Booker and Andy Kim (D-New Jersey) have introduced sweeping legislation that would fundamentally transform how Americans purchase fi****ms, requiring federal government approval before any citizen could legally acquire a gun.
The Federal Firearm Licensing Act, introduced Dec. 17, 2025, would mandate that every American obtain a federal firearm license before purchasing or receiving any firearm. The proposal represents one of the most comprehensive federal gun control measures in recent years, establishing a nationwide licensing system that would place significant new requirements in between law-abiding citizens and their Second Amendment rights.
Under the proposed legislation, Americans would need to complete mandatory fi****ms safety training that includes both written testing and hands-on instruction before qualifying for a license. The attorney general would conduct background checks on every applicant, and the FBI would perform regular compliance checks to monitor license holders. Each license would expire after five years, requiring gun owners to renew their permission to purchase fi****ms.
New year, new rules: What 2026 means for suppressors, short-barreled shotguns and rifles

The bill would also fundamentally alter how Americans can buy and sell fi****ms privately. Unlicensed individuals could no longer transfer guns directly to other unlicensed individuals. Instead, all transactions would need to flow through licensed dealers who would conduct background checks. Selling or transferring a firearm to someone without a valid federal or state license issued within the previous 30 days would become illegal, with sellers required to report such transactions to law enforcement.
Booker defended the measure by invoking a recent tragedy at Brown University. “Every day, Americans face the relentless scourge of gun violence, most recently the shooting at Brown University, which claimed the lives of two students and left nine others critically wounded,” the New Jersey senator stated. “With each new tragedy, we are painfully reminded of Congress’s continued failure to pass commonsense legislation that could end this nightmare and finally make our communities safe.”
The senator drew comparisons to vehicle licensing requirements.
“If a license is required to drive a car, it should be required to own a gun,” Booker argued. “The Federal Firearm Licensing Act brings this common sense idea to every community in the nation, mandating background checks and proper training before a license is issued.”
Sen. Kim echoed these sentiments, stating that “families are demanding Congress step up and deliver commonsense steps that prevent guns from getting into the wrong hands and protect innocent lives from the scourge of gun violence in our country.”
Looking back, looking forward: Top 10 stories of 2025
and 5 things to watch in 2026

The legislation has drawn support from gun control advocacy organizations. Giffords and the Community Justice Action Fund have endorsed the bill, while cosponsors include Sens. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts), Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut), Adam Schiff (D-California), Alex Padilla (D-California), and Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii).
Second Amendment advocates have substantial reasons for concern. The bill would create unprecedented federal control over a constitutional right, requiring Americans to seek government permission before exercising their ability to purchase fi****ms. The mandatory training, testing, and licensing requirements establish barriers that could prevent law-abiding citizens from acquiring guns for self-defense, hunting, or sport shooting.
The five-year renewal requirement means gun owners would need to repeatedly prove their worthiness to the federal government to maintain their ability to purchase fi****ms. The attorney general would gain authority to revoke licenses if officials deem someone “a danger to themselves or others,” a standard that could be subjectively enforced and susceptible to political manipulation.
The prohibition on private transfers represents a direct assault on how many Americans have traditionally bought and sold fi****ms within their communities. Gun shows, family transfers, and sales between acquaintances would all require government intermediaries and documentation. The mandatory reporting requirements to law enforcement create a de facto registry of gun transactions that privacy advocates and gun rights supporters have long opposed.
The legislation also establishes ongoing FBI monitoring of license holders through the Rap Back service, meaning gun owners would be subject to continuous government surveillance. This perpetual oversight raises civil liberties concerns that extend beyond the Second Amendment into broader questions about government tracking of citizens exercising constitutional rights.
While the bill includes a provision allowing states with similar licensing systems to potentially gain exemptions from the federal mandate, the legislation would still establish a nationwide framework that could serve as a foundation for future restrictions. Moreover, this could create a slippery slope where today’s licensing requirements become tomorrow’s justification for expanded gun control measures.
The comparison to driver’s licenses, while rhetorically appealing to supporters, fundamentally misconstrues constitutional protections. Driving is a privilege regulated by states, while the Second Amendment explicitly protects the right to keep and bear arms. The Constitution contains no provision requiring Americans to obtain government permission before exercising enumerated rights.
The Federal Firearm Licensing Act faces significant hurdles in a Republican trifecta in Washington and would likely encounter immediate constitutional challenges even if passed. Second Amendment advocacy groups would almost certainly file lawsuits arguing the licensing scheme violates the fundamental right to keep and bear arms by imposing undue burdens on gun ownership.
For Americans who value their Second Amendment rights, this legislation represents a fundamental shift in how the federal government would regulate fi****ms. Rather than targeting criminals, the bill creates a comprehensive system requiring every American to prove their worthiness to federal authorities before purchasing a gun.
As this legislation moves forward, the debate will ultimately center on whether Americans need government permission to exercise rights the Founders deemed inalienable.
Republished with permission from AmmoLand.

Sens. Cory Booker and Andy Kim (D-New Jersey) have introduced sweeping legislation that would fundamentally transform how Americans purchase fi****ms, requiring federal government approval before any citizen could legally acquire a gun.

What 2026 means for suppressors, short-barreled shotguns and riflesby Joe D. "Buck" RuthOn Jan. 1, 2026, moderately loos...
01/05/2026

What 2026 means for suppressors, short-barreled shotguns and riflesby Joe D. "Buck" RuthOn Jan. 1, 2026, moderately looser rules for suppressors and short‑barreled rifles and shotguns took effect, stemming from President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill, signed into law on July 4, 2025.
As part of the reconciliation package, H.R.1, the $200 tax stamp on those items has been eliminated; however, the registration requirement remains, pending the outcome of a handful of lawsuits challenging the very existence of the National Fi****ms Act of 1934 (NFA).
What does that mean for you?
If you want to purchase a suppressor or a short-barreled rifle or shotgun, you must still file ATF Form 4 (Form 5320.4), the "Application for tax paid transfer and registration of firearm used to request approval to transfer a National Fi****ms Act (NFA) firearm subject to transfer tax liability."
That, of course, is absurd considering the tax stamp on those items is now $0.00. In fact, Buckeye Fi****ms Association in May joined numerous organizations nationwide in signing an open letter to two U.S. House of Representatives committees, urging Congress to eliminate unjust restrictions imposed by the NFA.
Meanwhile, the Department of Justice, in Brown v. ATF, is defending the NFA's existence, asserting that "fi****ms registration is justified under the Commerce Clause and the Necessary and Proper Clause" and that short-barreled rifles can be registered consistent with the Second Amendment because they are “particularly dangerous weapons” and “uniquely susceptible to criminal misuse.”
The U.S. Supreme Court, however, held in Sonzinsky v. United States (1937) that the NFA is constitutional but primarily because it functions as a tax.
Buy now or wait?
The bottom line is that whether you should run out and grab a suppressor or short-barreled rifle or wait it out depends your risk tolerance. Purchasing now means your tax stamp cost will be null, but you'll still have to register the item. Waiting — for how long is anyone's guess — could pay off if the lawsuits seeking to dismantle the NFA ultimately succeed.
Joe D. "Buck" Ruth is a longtime small-game hunter and gun owner who spent nearly three decades in the news industry. He is the website and social-media manager for Buckeye Fi****ms Association.

On Jan. 1, 2026, moderately looser rules for suppressors and short‑barreled rifles and shotguns took effect, stemming from President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill, signed into law on July 4, 2025. Here's what that means.

Gun rights and education: 5 things Ohioans should watch for in 2026by Joe D. "Buck" Ruth2026 could be a pivotal year for...
01/02/2026

Gun rights and education: 5 things Ohioans should watch for in 2026by Joe D. "Buck" Ruth2026 could be a pivotal year for gun rights, from elections at the state and federal level to municipal actions at the local level. Here are five things to watch for this next year, including an event announcement from us:
1. Elections
We've had the good fortune the past few years of having a pro-gun state legislature and a governor willing to sign pro-gun legislation into law.
Republicans still hold a supermajority of 65-34 in the 99-member Ohio House of Representatives, but the lead has decreased by two from 67-32 just two years ago. A veto-proof supermajority is 60 votes (three-fifths), but a two-thirds majority (66 votes) is needed in some cases. The entire Ohio House is up for grabs every two years, and the 2026 primaries are this spring. Statistically, Republicans have proven to be more pro-gun than Democrats.
Likewise, the Ohio Senate continues to hold a supermajority, but it also has shrunk from 26-7 two years ago to 24-9 currently. Of the 33 seats, 17 will be up for election in 2026.
The Republican gubernatorial race is poised to pit Vivek Ramaswamy, who secured the Ohio Republican Party endorsement early in 2025, against Democrat Amy Acton, who served as the Ohio Department of Health director under DeWine.
Ramaswamy has said, "The First Amendment is a promise. The Second Amendment is how we deliver that promise." Conversely, Acton, who was a volunteer for anti-gun zealot Barack Obama's 2008 presidential candidacy, describes what she calls "the scourge of gun violence" on her campaign website.
Other prospective gubernatorial candidates include Republican Philip Funderburg, Democrat Jacob Chiara, and independent Tim Grady. Democrat Tim Ryan withdrew in late November. Another one is Heather Brazell-Hill, who initially said she would run as a Republican but since has said she would run as a Libertarian, an Independent, or the America Party (founded by Elon Musk but not yet recognized in Ohio). She still calls herself a Republican on her campaign website.
At the federal level in Ohio, all U.S. House seats are up for election. And a special election will be held in November to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated by now Vice President JD Vance. Republican Jon Husted, previously lieutenant governor, was appointed by Gov. Mike DeWine in January 2025 to fill Vance's seat but must run in November to retain it until the November 2028 elections. Bernie Moreno, Ohio's other Senator, is not up for reelection in 2026. Democrats who have declared are former Sen. Sherrod Brown and newcomers Ron Kincaid, Lynnea Lau, and Chris Volpe.
Buckeye Fi****ms Association in due time will publish grades and endorsements for the May primaries so that voters will know where candidates stand on gun rights.
2. Legislation
As noted in our 2025 year in review, several pro-gun bills are in the works in the 136th Ohio General Assembly, highlighting the importance of electing the best candidates for defending and advancing Second Amendment legislation.
In addition, 15 total bills that we oppose — 10 in the House and five in the Senate — have been introduced but are likely to go nowhere beyond a committee assignment.
Check our Legislation page to see where BFA stands on each bill.
3. Protecting Houses of Worship training
BFA has sponsored a handful of Protecting Houses of Worship seminars geared to training security teams in how to respond to an active-killer situation.
This training class is designed as an intro to help identify security needs, as well as organizational and team training standards. Training will include the history of active killing events, including current tragedies, plus medical training, tactics, and active-killer-response scenarios.
This class includes training with SIRT pistols. SIRT stands for shot indicating resetting trigger. These are realistic replicas of commonly used carry guns, providing the same feel, weight, and trigger characteristics of the real things. They include lasers to show where shots in real life would land.
While there is no live fire during this class, the SIRT pistols (provided) will allow participants to safely practice effective response tactics in a realistic congregational setting.
A late-summer class earned participants' praise. Another class is slated Jan. 24 in Medina. And we should soon be announcing a class in Westerville.
We will keep you posted as new training sessions become available. In the meantime, if you would like to host an event at your congregation, email BFA executive director Dean Riek at drieck@buckeyefi****ms.org or call administrative assistant Angela Armstrong at 614-715-4867.
4. Watch your local leaders
As we reported earlier this week, new bodies of city councils, township trustees, and school boards begin in January, and you can bet many of them are not staunch supporters of your gun rights.
All supporters of the Second Amendment should keep an eye on meeting agendas for their councils, school boards, and trustees. You have a right to know what they're going to discuss, per Ohio's Open Meetings Act (sunshine laws).
Buckeye Fi****ms Association is counting on you to pay attention to your local government and help us hold them accountable. Not all municipalities' websites are the same, but generally speaking, start with your town's or school district's website and search for "council," "board," and/or "agenda" and go from there.
5. New BFA event coming in August
We'll soon announce details on a brand-new fundraiser offering dinner, raffles, games, and an opportunity to meet with candidates running for Ohio offices at the local and state level. It's called the BFA Patriot Fest and is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 22. So mark your calendar.
We're still lining up speakers and finalizing details, so we can't say more about this exciting new event right now. But we'll be sure to let you know when it's time to start selling tickets.
Joe D. "Buck" Ruth is a longtime small-game hunter and gun owner who spent nearly three decades in the news industry. He is the website and social-media manager for Buckeye Fi****ms Association.

2026 could be a pivotal year for gun rights, from elections at the state and federal level to municipal actions at the local level. Here are five things to watch for this next year, including an event announcement from us.

Happy New Year 2026 from Buckeye Fi****ms AssociationOur resolution for 2026 is the same as it has always been: to conti...
01/01/2026

Happy New Year 2026 from Buckeye Fi****ms AssociationOur resolution for 2026 is the same as it has always been: to continue the fight for Second Amendment rights.
The sad truth is that there are hundreds of civil rights organizations in the U.S. that ceaselessly fight for every conceivable human right, except the one they don't like. Even though the right to keep and bear arms is enumerated in the Constitution, well-funded groups such as the ACLU, NAACP, and others completely ignore, or even work against, the Second Amendment.
That's why organizations like BFA exist. And it's why we so often feel embattled from every direction. Not only do big-city politicians and enemies of personal freedom fight us, but prominent civil rights organizations, which should be standing shoulder to shoulder with us, also fight us.
Fortunately, we have the Constitution on our side. And through relentless efforts locally and nationally, through elections, legislation, litigation, and education, we have made huge strides toward the recognition of the Second Amendment as a protection just as legitimate — and just as important — as freedom of speech or freedom of the press.
The Second Amendment is NOT a second-class right.
So in 2026, we'll keep doing what we've been doing for more than two decades. We will never give in. Never give up. Never stop fighting for what is right.
If you'd like to stand with us, please become a dues-paying member in this new year or make a donation to help fund our ongoing efforts.
All of us at Buckeye Fi****ms Association wish you and your family a happy New Year!

Our resolution for 2026 is the same as it has always been: to continue the fight for Second Amendment rights. If you'd like to stand with us, please become a dues-paying member in this new year or make a donation to help fund our ongoing efforts.

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309 E Leffel Lane
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