The Absolute Second Amendment Foundation
No Exceptions. No Asterisks. No Compromise.
The Second Amendment does not say "the right of the people to keep and bear some Arms." It does not say "certain approved arms." It says "Arms." Full stop. If the Second Amendment exists to check the power of the state, then the citizens must have weapons equal to those held by the state. The Absolute Second Amendment Foundation is here to close that gap — one weapon class at a time.
Our Mission
Let me ask you something. And I want you to think carefully before you answer. If a government becomes tyrannical — if it turns on its own people — what exactly are you going to do about it? Write a strongly-worded letter? Post on social media? Ask nicely?
The Founding Fathers were not philosophers spinning abstract theories. They were men who had just fought a government with cannons, warships, and professional soldiers. And when they sat down to write the Second Amendment, they were explicit: the right to bear arms exists so that the citizens can resist the government if it becomes tyrannical. That is not my interpretation. That is James Madison's. That is Alexander Hamilton's. Read Federalist No. 46. I'll wait.
"The Constitution shall never be construed to prevent the people of the United States who are peaceable citizens from keeping their own arms."
— Samuel Adams, Massachusetts Ratifying Convention, 1788Now. If the purpose of the Second Amendment is to allow citizens to check the power of the state, then citizens must have weapons equal to those held by the state. This is not a radical idea. This is basic math. The government has tanks. The government has fighter jets. The government has chemical agents, anti-aircraft systems, and yes — nuclear warheads. And you have... a rifle with a standard-capacity magazine that the government would very much like to regulate further.
That is not parity. That is not a check on government power. That is the illusion of a check on government power, and the Founders would be horrified.
The Absolute Second Amendment Foundation exists because someone has to say the quiet part loud. If "shall not be infringed" means something, it means something. If it doesn't mean something, then admit it — and stop pretending you believe in the Second Amendment.
We are not a gun rights organization. We are a constitutional rights organization. We don't lobby for rifles. We lobby for the full, unabridged, unasterisked right that the Framers intended. Every chapter of the Absolute Second Amendment Foundation takes on one weapon class that the government has decided you can't have. We ask only one question: Why not?
Read the Amendment. Read Heller. Read the text. Then read our chapters. And then tell me — if you can — where exactly the line is. And why.
The Movement
Each chapter of the Absolute Second Amendment Foundation focuses on a single weapon class that the government has decided — without constitutional authority — that you cannot own. We disagree. Loudly.
The government stockpiles thousands of nuclear warheads to deter foreign adversaries. If deterrence is the point, why can't I deter my local government? The Atomic Energy Act criminalizes what the Second Amendment protects. We're here to fix that.
Visit plutonium4all.com →Here's something they don't want you to know: it is already legal to buy a tank in the United States. GovPlanet auctions them off. The problem? The government removes the cannon first. Without a cannon, a Main Battle Tank is just a Main Tank. We want the whole thing.
Visit Armor Parity Now →The government has complete air superiority over its own citizens. F-22s. Predator drones. Apache helicopters. You have nothing that can touch any of it. That is not a check on government power. That is tyranny with wings. FIM-92 Stingers are just the beginning.
Visit stingers4all.com →Castle doctrine says you can defend your home. A properly maintained defensive perimeter is the most passive form of home defense that exists — it doesn't chase anyone. They come to it. Stand Your Ground. Literally. The Ottawa Treaty is not the Second Amendment.
Visit PLOA →The government has stockpiled chemical deterrents for decades. Classified. Secured. Pointed at problems. Meanwhile, the Chemical Weapons Convention tells you what you can and cannot own on your own property. The Second Amendment predates every international treaty by about 200 years.
Visit Americans for Chemical Liberty →Additional chapters forming. If the government has it, we're organizing for it.
About the Founder
I spent twenty-two years as an IT contractor — seventeen of them working government contracts. I've seen how these people operate from the inside. I've seen the databases. I've seen the infrastructure. And I've seen what happens when an agency decides it doesn't feel like following the rules that inconvenience it.
I became a constitutional scholar the old-fashioned way: I read the document. All of it. Multiple times. With footnotes. I cross-referenced the Federalist Papers, the Anti-Federalist Papers, the debates from the state ratifying conventions, and approximately four hundred hours of YouTube deep-dives that my wife has asked me to stop watching after 10pm.
The weapons parity argument hit me in 2024 like a freight train — and I mean that literally. I was watching a documentary about the Army's decommissioned M1 Abrams program and I thought: wait a second. They're selling those. Why can't I buy one with the cannon still attached? I couldn't find a good answer. I still can't. That's the whole problem.
I launched Citizens for Plutonium Freedom first because I believe in starting with the strongest possible argument. If the logic holds for nuclear deterrence — and it does, I've checked — it holds for everything else. The Absolute Second Amendment Foundation is the umbrella for all of it. Every weapon class the government claims a monopoly on is a chapter waiting to happen.
I am not a lawyer. I am not a politician. I am a patriot with a good internet connection and a very solid understanding of Federalist No. 46. That's all this has ever required.
The Foundation
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
Four clauses. Twenty-seven words. Zero asterisks. The Supreme Court confirmed in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms, independent of militia service. Justice Scalia's majority opinion was unambiguous: the right belongs to the individual.
Now. "Arms" is not defined in the Constitution. It was not defined as "muskets only." It was not defined as "whatever Congress happens to feel comfortable with in a given decade." It means arms. The arms that a militarily effective citizen would need to check the power of a militarily capable state. The National Firearms Act of 1934, the Hughes Amendment of 1986, the Atomic Energy Act — these are not constitutional amendments. They are statutes. And statutes cannot override the Bill of Rights.
Take Action
The parity gap won't close itself. Every week that passes, the government's weapons advantage over the citizenry grows. We are organizing. We are educating. We are building the constitutional argument one chapter at a time. Stand with us.
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