
How Colorado’s high court nullified consent of the governed
The Colorado Supreme Court has negated state constitutional limits on taxes, debt, and corporate privilege.

The Colorado Supreme Court has negated state constitutional limits on taxes, debt, and corporate privilege.

HB 1062 makes gun theft a class 6 felony, punishable by jail time, regardless of the value of the firearm stolen.

In the last decade, FASTER has trained thousands of teachers and other school staff in emergency medicine and emergency armed defense.

The bill’s only utility is in service of gun confiscation

“This bill was brought forward by lobbies with malice against gun owners and with no regard for the ability of people to comply with these impossible demands.” — David Kopel

The bill will prohibit anyone in Colorado from “manufacturing, importing, purchasing, selling, offering to sell, or transferring ownership of a so-called “assault weapon.” It would also prohibit the possession of rapid-fire trigger activators.

“I don’t think you can find two more opposite individuals on this issue than councilwoman CdeBaca and the Independence Institute, David Kopel in particular.” — Denver City Councilman Kevin Flynn on the irony of CdeBaca and Kopel agreeing on a gun rights issue.

Media coverage and resident opposition forced the city to ask firearms, and Second Amendment experts to join a roundtable discussion on May 3 at the council’s third work session on the topic.

“Concealed carry Permit holders are vastly more law-abiding than the general population.”–David Kopel

“When we start chipping away at that in any part of the country, it opens the door here locally. I’ve been vocal on the idea that we don’t police the citizens. We police with the citizens and part of that is letting them having the ability to protect themselves with weapons of their choice.” — Weld County Sheriff Steve Reams.

In modern campaigns against Americans who own repeating arms, some advocates spew hateful racial stereotypes. They are part of a long tradition that gun control is a form of race control.

“Banning the very arms that were typically owned by Coloradoans when they ratified the Constitution contradicts the text: the right “shall not be called in question.”” David Kopel
By Jon Caldara
If you’re a fan of limited government, personal liberty, or educational choice, Tuesday night’s election results were a downer, just another one in a long line of depressing elections that has made Colorado more California than California.
However, if you prefer a controlling elite deciding your fate, debt, class envy and teacher unions, it was just another victory in a decade’s long win streak.
I’m curious how multi-billionaire nannyist Michael Bloomberg felt about his out-of-state investment. He put $5 million toward convincing Denver voters adults must stop buying Swisher Sweets cigars (which contains flavored tobacco, the new fentanyl).
As adults drive by marijuana shops selling flavored edibles, liquor stores selling peach-infused vodka, and legal psychedelic mushroom operations, it’s adults buying smoking cessation products like Zyn in Denver that Michael Bloomberg knows is the scourge of our nation.
It didn’t matter it is already illegal for anyone under 21 years old to buy any tobacco or nicotine products, flavored or not. Bloomberg’s millions convinced voters this was a ban on children buying the stuff. He won handedly as he spent nearly $52 per “yes” vote to make it happen.
Fifty-two bucks a person was enough to convince Denverites who scream “my body, my choice!” when it comes to abortion that government needs to stay out of your uterus but shove itself down your adult lungs. He can’t run New York anymore, so he regulates Denver.
His $5 million was the most spent on any ballot issue or candidate in Colorado this year. For perspective, the class-baiting tax increase on rich people to buy free lunches for just slightly less rich people’s kids raised only $800,000. And that was a statewide question not a tiny one like Denver’s cigar ban.
Passing Propositions LL and MM, the double-down on free lunches in Colorado, was certainly no shock. But it gives us some things to speculate.
It did not surprise me MM passed. What did surprise me was it passed by a larger majority than the original tax proposal, Prop FF, just a couple years ago.
By contrast voters seem to have learned their lesson on the wolf reintroduction fiasco. If put on the ballot today, “wolves” would certainly lose. I think witnessing the debacle of flinging apex predators throughout Colorado is what drove Denver voters to recently reject the slaughterhouse ban and a ban on selling furs. They realized that maybe in some areas, government doesn’t know what it’s doing.
In the same way, the farce that is the free lunch program should’ve caused more of us to reconsider the blatant socialism of stealing from those who have more than you.
It took no time for the current free lunch program to run into the red. I mean, go figure, you offer people free stuff, and they line up to take it. The program also failed to source food locally as promised in the original Prop FF. In other words, the state really FFed the whole socialistic experiment.
Yet even after witnessing this failure, a larger percentage of people voted for MM than the original FF. More of us want to penalize successful people to empower government elite to decide what their own kids should eat.
Could this be a leading indicator the socialist value structure of “take from thy neighbor” has taken root here? Props FF and this year’s LL and MM might be the gateway drug for the cocaine of “democratic socialism.” The first one is always free. “Yo, here’s a sandwich for your kid, you know, on the house.” Before you know it, we’re replacing our successful flat income tax rate with a punitive, progressive income tax.
New York’s socialist mayor-elect spelled it out in his victory speech. “We will prove that there is no problem too large for government to solve, and no concern too small for it to care about.”
Translation: Here in Colorado we will destroy our economy to save the Earth from climate change (while China builds a dirty coal plant every day), punish the productive, risk-taking class and chase them out of the state (see New York in California) as we micromanage every aspect of your life (like outlawing Swisher Sweet cigars, and feeding your children the meals of our choosing).
Is this the Colorado we’ll buy when some out-of-state billionaire sells it to us?

Energy Co-Ops may list a variety of places that they get their power from, but how does that work and what arrives to the customers? PowerGab Hosts Jake Fogleman and Amy Cooke discuss this and more.
Show Notes:
https://coloradosun.com/2025/11/20/colorado-coal-power-comanche-extension/
https://bigpivots.com/bryan-hannegan-the-bigger-leagues/
https://coloradosun.com/2025/11/17/united-power-electricity-suppliers-wind-solar-battery-energy/

After all the years warning us of the upcoming energy disaster that is Colorado’s energy policy, Amy Oliver Cooke tells us there might be a little bit of hope. Just a little bit of hope.