Gun Businesses Scramble After Credit Card Service Stops Processing Payments on all Gun Purchases Without Warning

Mixing politics and business is bad business. Just ask the NFL.

But that isn’t stopping the credit service, Intuit, from taking a stance against the Constitution.

Intuit, without warning, ceased processing credit card payments at firearm-related businesses across the country, resulting in small businesses scrambling to track down customers to get them to pay their bills.

Intuit maintains its actions are justified because the company has a “face-to-face” policy prohibiting firearms from being directly sold to customers, the New York Post reports. However, many of the guns businesses sold were sent to federally-licensed firearms dealers near the customers, where a background check can be completed prior to possession.

And the payments that are failing to process don’t only involve firearms, but gun safety classes, T-shirts, coffee mugs, safety training classes and gun-related gear.

Intuit, a financial software and tax preparation company that produces TurboTax and QuickBooks, credited the money back to the customers’ accounts, even after the purchase was shipped, the New York Post reports.

Intuit has not returned the Gateway Pundit’s request for comment.

In May, QuickBooks abruptly cut ties with Gunsite Academy, a firearms training center, according to the American Rifleman, arguing the guns and knives for sale on Gunsite’s website violated the face-to-face requirement.

Gunsite also lost thousands of dollars when QuickBooks suddenly credited back sales to customers in lieu of processing the transactions.

Meanwhile, internet giants Google, YouTube and Facebook are also strategizing to silence the gun market, tightening restrictions on which gun-related words, phrases, or videos, are allowed on their platforms.

Google is reportedly adding words like “gun-grips” and “scopes and sights” to its list of prohibited AdWords later this month.

The search engine announced these new changes in an email obtained by Breitbart, in which the subject line reads, “Google AdWords Policy Update – Change to Dangerous products or services Policy.” The email provides a “non-exhaustive list of examples of products for which ads will no longer be allowed,” including “stocks, onversion kits, scopes and sights, tripods and bipods, gun-grips, gun-making instructions and software or equipment for 3D printing of guns or gun-parts.”

In May, days before students around the nation convened for the march for gun control, YouTube announced it was banning all gun demonstration videos in conjunction with Facebook’s incremental prohibitions on gun ads and sales.

 

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Alicia is an investigative journalist and multimedia reporter. Alicia's work is featured on numerous outlets including the Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Red Voice Media, World Net Daily, Townhall and Media Research Center, where she uncovers fraud and abuse in government, media, Big Tech, Big Pharma and public corruption. Alicia has a Bachelor of Science in Political Science from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. She served in the Correspondence Department of the George W. Bush administration and as a War Room analyst for the Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee.

You can email Alicia Powe here, and read more of Alicia Powe's articles here.

 

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