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Alex Pretti was lawfully carrying under Minnesota law and the U.S. Constitution. From a 2A conservative framework, that fact alone should have foreclosed any justification for lethal force.
I’m a liberal, and I have rarely—if ever—agreed with @SavannahLMaddox on policy. That’s precisely why this moment matters. Representing HD-61 (~75% Republican, ~70% Trump support), she stated a basic truth: the mere act of being armed is not permission for the state to kill someone.
This matters even more given the context: Rep. Maddox has just advanced legislation expanding concealed carry to 18–20-year-olds—explicitly affirming that lawful carry does not equal threat. That makes her speaking out consistent, not symbolic.
Which raises the harder question: why has Kentucky GOP leadership said nothing?
@RobertStivers
@MaxWiseKY
@SenMikeWilsonKY
@RobbyMillsKY
@DavidWOsborne
@DavidMeadeKY
@StevenRudyKY
@SuzanneMilesKY
@JasonNemesKY
If lawful carry is a constitutional right in Kentucky policy, it cannot become a death sentence when exercised in front of federal agents. Rights that vanish at gunpoint aren’t rights—they’re permissions.
Linda Blackford@lbblackford
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