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Apr 30, 2026

various gun silhouettes filled with a green nature scene
Voxby Benji Jones·Apr 30, 2026

The strange reason why wildlife agencies want Americans to buy more guns

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left 0.21
Source quality78/100
Factual ratio76/100
Framing13/100

Here’s a weird fact: Every time someone buys an assault weapon in the US, such as an AR-15, they’re funding wildlife conservation. The same is true if they purchase a handgun, a shotgun, or any other kind of gun or ammunition.That’s thanks to a law most people have never heard of: the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, commonly known as the Pittman-Robertson Act. Passed by Congress in 1937, the law channels revenue from a tax on firearms, ammo, and archery equipment to state wildlife agencies — government organizations that restore wildlife habitat, monitor threatened species, and oversee hunting and fishing. Levied on firearm manufacturers and importers, the tax is 11 percent for long guns and ammunition and 10 percent for handguns, and it sits on top of other common taxes.Over the last decade, the law has channeled close to $1 billion a year into state wildlife agencies across the country, amounting to a substantial share of their budgets. One recent analysis found that Pittman-Robertson made up about 18 percent of state agency budgets, on average, in 2019. (License fees for fishing and hunting, along with a hodgepodge of other revenue streams, including a similar tax on fishing gear, make

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Lean: -0.214 · Source quality 78/100 · Factual vs opinion 76/100.

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Political lean

Political leanleft 0.21Source quality78/100Factual ratio76/100Framing13/100

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v2-canonical

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