The New New

How Guns Became the New Free Speech

Cody Wilson, champion of the 3D-printed handgun, is facing sexual assault charges. It will likely do nothing to slow the march of his brainchild.

Andrew Zaleski
GEN
Published in
10 min readNov 13, 2018

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Illustrations: Max Loeffler

CCody Wilson used one word to summarize the culminating event in his years-long lawsuit against the U.S. government: “Epochal.”

This was in July, when news became public about the Department of Justice reaching a legal settlement with Defense Distributed, the Texas nonprofit Wilson founded in 2012 to help distribute 3D-printed firearms. And the response was what I expected from Wilson, a 30-year-old provocateur prone to self-mythologizing. I met him in 2014, when he was 26, after he had successfully designed, manufactured, and test-fired the Liberator, the world’s first fully 3D-printed gun. That breakthrough, and his subsequent effort to disseminate the blueprint to anyone with an internet connection, unleashed all manner of hell.

Wilson has long been a showman, equal parts ideologue and 1960s ad man, prone to philosophical meandering and asseverations about state tyranny and possessing a penchant for deliberately poking the political class. His sincerity was often questioned, but even four years removed, I knew what a victory over the federal…

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