Gun registration is often sold as a safety measure, but history shows it’s the first step toward government control over firearms.

When the government knows who owns guns and where they are, it becomes much easier to confiscate them when the time comes.

Throughout history, regimes have used gun registration to identify and disarm their citizens before enforcing authoritarian rule.

The idea that registration prevents crime is a myth—criminals don’t register their guns, leaving only law-abiding citizens under scrutiny.

Gun registries create a centralized database that can be exploited not just by governments, but by hackers and bad actors.

Registration schemes put legal gun owners at risk of being targeted for theft or harassment simply for exercising their rights.

The government’s insistence on tracking firearms raises the question: why do they want to know so much about law-abiding gun owners?

If the Second Amendment is about protecting liberty, then any attempt to track or regulate gun ownership threatens that protection.

Gun registration isn’t about safety—it’s about control, and it chips away at the rights of citizens little by little.

Once the government has a registry, bans and confiscations are just one executive order or law away from reality.

Protecting the right to bear arms means rejecting any system that could lead to disarmament, including registration.

Americans must remain vigilant, because freedom isn’t lost all at once—it’s eroded step by step, often in the name of “safety.”