
Draft bill puts numerous places off limits to concealed carry; Democrats test limits of ‘sensitive spaces’
The bill shows just how far majority Democrats will go to restrict Coloradans’ gun rights

The bill shows just how far majority Democrats will go to restrict Coloradans’ gun rights

“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

Henkel threatened that if the ordinance wasn’t passed now she would be asking to strengthen the education piece during the next go round to include range time.

They know no other way of campaigning except dishonesty and negativity. And the voters of House District 51 rejected it. — Hugh McKean after his primary victory on Tuesday.

“If you believe in election integrity it doesn’t matter if you won or lost, you should pursue the truth,” McKean said.

“This political maneuver deprived the volunteers of this initiative of the COVID19 protections afforded by EO 065. The intent was to politically discriminate against this initiative since Polis does not support it thereby placing the petition circulators in danger of contracting COVID-19 and putting their lives at risk. This is a wanton disregard by Polis for the physical safety and well-being of the Colorado citizens.” Donna Windholz

The RMGO complaint says, “At no time was the complete text of HB 1177 read at length in the Colorado House of Representatives.”

The original civil forfeiture laws were enacted decades ago supposedly to help law enforcement go after big criminal syndicates. But in fact they are used to go after small-timers, especially poor defendants who can’t afford lawyers
At this point, if you hear beeping downtown, it’s not a construction crew. It’s a company backing out.
And look, I get it. Businesses relocate for all sorts of reasons: taxes, regulations, labor costs, office space, crime, commute times, the haunting feeling your chief executive is one city council meeting away from being declared a single-use plastic.
But Colorado’s political class has been turning “headquarters” into an endangered species.
Take TIAA, the financial services giant whose name has for decades been glowing atop a downtown Denver skyscraper like a Bat-Signal for retirement funds. They’re relocating to Frisco, Texas.
Texas? Of course, Texas. If Colorado is the place where we hold hearings on the carbon footprint of breathing, Texas is the place where they say, “Stop talking and go build something.”
We’re constantly assured Texas is a lawless, dystopian wasteland of deregulation and brisket. Apparently, dystopia pencils out better than Colorado.
Then there’s Palantir, our most high-profile (and secretive) tech company, which just moved its headquarters from Denver to Miami.
Miami! The city best known for hurricanes, cocaine kingpins yelling “Say hello to my little friend,” and the kind of consumer lifestyle that makes Boulder’s city councilors vomit into their reusable tote bags.
Why are they leaving? It must be the two medieval-poetry grad students who keep protesting outside Palantir’s Denver office.
Yes, congratulations. I’m sure it was your cardboard signs that chased them out — not the state becoming the first in the nation to roll out sweeping, pre-emptive AI regulations that require companies to document, audit, report, explain, disclose and apologize for their algorithms before they’ve even finished coding them.
Nor could it be Colorado’s energy policy that traded the reliability of “baseload power” for the whimsy of intermittent renewables. Businesses need predictable, stable electricity to make long-term investment decisions. That’s not ideological. That’s arithmetic.
Add to that the constant drumbeat of new mandates, fees and compliance requirements, and Colorado starts to look less like a tech hub and more like a regulatory obstacle course.
So, what’s the pattern here? It’s not just “companies move sometimes.” We’re building a list. A tracker. A scoreboard. The Colorado Chamber literally maintains a “Lost Opportunities” compilation of companies leaving, downsizing, or choosing to expand somewhere else. Nearly 12,000 jobs have moved away.
When you need a tracker for corporate departures, you’re no longer “a state with some challenges.” You’re a gate agent announcing final boarding for Flight 970 to Anywhere Else.
It’s not just big, finance-and-tech firms. It’s small slices of Colorado history too.
Yes, even cowboys are looking at Colorado Springs and saying, “This place is getting a little… weird.”
The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association has been based in Colorado Springs since 1979, and now it’s moving its headquarters — and with it the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame — to Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Wyoming — a state with more cattle than people. A place where regulations come in two categories: “Don’t set yourself on fire” and “Try not to get kicked.”
When cowboys rustle themselves out of Colorado, are we still Colorado?
At some point, we stopped being a place where entrepreneurs risk their time, treasure and talent to build things and became a place where entrepreneurs must apologize for themselves.
And it’s not just the cost — although yes, costs matter. It’s the vibe. The political posture. The governing style that says, “We want your jobs and tax revenue… but we’d also like you to feel lightly ashamed for existing.”
Since we keep treating businesses like the thief in a crime novel, maybe we should stop acting shocked when they quietly leave in the middle of the night.
Because that’s what’s happening. Not “moving.” Evacuating.
Like:
“Grab the servers!”
“Did you get the customer list?”
“Forget the Keurig, we don’t have time!”
“Is the legislature still in session?”
“Then GO, GO, GO!”
And the saddest part is Colorado still has everything going for it — talent, beauty, lifestyle, innovation. We should be an easy sell. Instead, creators leave because the policy climate feels like a never-ending HR seminar conducted by people who have never met a payroll.
Look, companies move for lots of reasons. But when the pattern keeps pointing toward states with lower taxes, lighter regulatory burdens, and more predictable policy environments, maybe — just maybe — it’s not coincidence.
Maybe it’s policy.
No, no. It was definitely the protesters with tambourines.
Jon Caldara is president of Independence Institute, a free market think tank in Denver.

Colorado’s utility bills have risen, but why did that happen and is there an end in sight? PowerGab Hosts Jake Fogleman and Amy Cooke dive into the reason for the increases and discuss if there’s a way to fix them.
Show Notes:
Also, we have Sarah’s post about the CO Sun opinion column:
https://i2i.org/colorado-suns-nonpartisan-case-against-natural-gas-is-misleading/
https://coloradosun.com/2026/02/24/opinion-colorado-natural-gas-prices-ssoaring-leave-fossil-fuels/
https://bigpivots.com/groups-say-puc-needs-to-rein-in-xcel/
https://energybadboys.substack.com/p/necessarily-skyrocket
https://energybadboys.substack.com/p/green-plating-the-grid-how-utilities
https://i2i.org/money-power-colorado/
https://liberalandlovingit.substack.com/p/a-sensible-energy-policy-for-colorado
Because the grid could use a backup plan.
Yes, we’re giving away a Predator Generator.
No, this is not a drill.
Yes, it’s because reliability apparently isn’t fashionable anymore.
Starting with the first show of 2026, drop a funny, clever, or pithy comment in the show’s comment section.
That’s it. No forms. No fine print to initial. No ESG questionnaire.
At the end of the session, we’ll select our top 3–5 favorite comments.
Then you vote on the winner.
Democracy still works here. Mostly.
Winner announced on the last show in May 2026.
One comment.
One generator.
Because when the grid wobbles, satire won’t keep your lights on — but a Predator Generator will.

When you go to the doctor, do you feel like you’re treated like a number? Do you remember doctors spending more time looking at their patients than looking at computer screens? Travis Bockenstedt advocates for a new medical model that keeps costs down and keeps doctors doctoring.