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A Marine Lance Corporal figured out how to replace a $5,644 military antenna part for ten dollars using a 3D printer. The Marine Corps saved $600,000. Within months, the lobbying organizations representing Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman killed Military Right to Repair in Congress — in a closed door meeting, no cameras, no public vote.
That's not a coincidence.
This video connects the dots between the death of Military Right to Repair, the wave of 3D printer control legislation moving through California, Washington, and New York right now, and the real reason micro-manufacturing in the hands of normal people is being legislated out of existence.
It was never about firearms. It was always about who controls manufacturing — and what happens when you don't need them anymore.