A new gun control group has produced ads that claim there are stricter bans on books than on guns. Is there any truth to that?

And will the new health care law lead to mandatory home inspections? Some bloggers say it will.

The PolitiFact team took a look at the those questions and whether Miami-Dade County isn't being treated fairly by the state this week.

Guns over books?

Parents who sent their kids back to school recently are haunted by the memory of the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., last year. It's a memory they hope lawmakers in Washington haven't forgotten, either.

A new group called Moms Demand Action is calling for "common sense gun laws" that require background checks at gun shows and bans on assault weapons.

The moms have released an ad that shows one child holding the book "Little Red Riding Hood" and another an assault rifle. The ad argues that the book has been banned, but the weapon is legal.

The ad caught the eye of the PolitiFact team, which looked into it and rated the claim MOSTLY FALSE.

Only two school districts in the country have banned the book, and that happened more than 20 years ago. And assault weapons have been banned in a handful of states, including two big ones: California and New York.

Obamacare home inspections?

Washington is at the center of a debate over Obamacare.

The federal Affordable Care Act takes effect next year, and critics are speaking their minds. A blogger proclaims that an Obamacare provision will allow forced home inspections.

That warning is popping up all over the Internet, so PolitiFact looked into it. Team members talked to some of the bloggers and rated the claim as PANTS ON FIRE.

"They pointed to a program called Nurse-Family Partnerships," said PolitiFact Deputy Editor Angie Holan. "This is where nurses visit the homes of people who just had children. It's aimed at very poor people, and it's entirely voluntary, so there are no forced home inspections.  It's aimed at improving the health of children and new mothers, so forced home inspections? Pants on fire!"

No state love for Miami-Dade?

Finally, it has been called the Gateway to Latin America, a hub for business and tourism that's pumping billions into Florida's economy.

But is Miami-Dade County getting a bum deal from Tallahassee? One of its lawmakers seems to think so.

A couple of weeks ago, Republican Sen. Rene Garcia told Gov. Scott that the Florida Cabinet that Miami-Dade gives more money to the state than it gets back. In his view, that makes it what's known as a "donor county."

The PolitiFact team looked into the claim and rated it MOSTLY FALSE.

Miami-Dade does, in fact, collect the highest amount of sales tax in Florida at $2.6 billion. But it has a high population, and the county gets a lot of money back from Tallahassee. For example, Miami-Dade receives more education funding than any other school district in Florida.

The bottom line: There are no had figures on whether Miami-Dade is top donor county.