Controversial Kentucky Congressman Posts Christmas Photo Of Family Holding Guns—Asks Santa For Ammo

The new date is Dec 4, 2021.

A Christmas photo of the Massie family was posted on the congressman's account with the caption: " Merry Christmas!" The mass shooting at a Michigan high school prompted renewed calls for gun control measures.

On January 31, 2020 in Kentucky, Rep. Thomas Massie will hold a gun at a rally in support of the Second Amendment. Bryan Woolston is the photographer.

The images are from the same company.

In the photo, Massie is holding an M60 machine gun next to his youngest daughter, while his wife, three other children and another man hold assault-style rifles.

There is hope for this country after Massie posted a video of the not-guilty verdict in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial.

Massie, an MIT grad, is an ardent gun rights advocate and Trump loyalist, who told CNN in 2017: "I believe in the deep state." He drew controversy in 2019: "I sought to legalized raw milk even though the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned against it."

After the Capitol attack, he said he and other members of Congress were glad to be armed.
One user replied, "Two things." It was appalling after the latest school shooting. Someone else would have been shot if anyone sitting down discharged their weapon. One user was in support of the photo. Massie's Christmas photo comes against the backdrop of a heated debate over gun control. According to a poll conducted last month, Republicans are more in favor of stricter gun laws than Democrats. The parents of the boy accused of killing four and wounding seven in a shooting spree at his high school in Michigan pleaded not guilty to four charges of manslaughter. There were more gun violence incidents in the US between March 2020 and March 2021, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive. Almost half of them were dead.

There is a structure called the Tangent.

Massie asked Santa for a refill on his supply of bullets, which are in short supply nationwide.

The parents of the Michigan school shooting suspect are not guilty of manslaughter charges.

Gun sales are near record levels.

The lowest rate in 16 years has been the drop in support for stricter gun laws.

Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty.