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April 3, 2013, 11:57 PM | #51 | |
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I base my opinion on Scalia's language from Heller to the effect that the 2A protects the right of the People to have for self defense those arms "in common use." And in the United States today, THE pistol in most common use is a double stack with a capacity in excess of 10 rounds, and THE rifle in most common use is the AR-15 type rifle with a 30-round magazine. I also think it will fail because it essentially imposes a tax on a right. To buy ANY long gun you will need a new permit from the state. I didn't see any exemption for people who have already taken classes, paid the fees, had the background checks, and have pistol permits. Then the law requires ANOTHER permit, with fees and background checks, before you can buy ammunition. Again, unless I skimmed it too fast I don't see any exemption for people who have either a pistol permit OR a new long gun permit. In essence, the new regulations really are NOT "reasonable," and taken together they would not have prevented sandy Hook so they don't further the intended purpose. And to pass SCOTUS review a law restricting a fundamental right has to be narrowly tailored to produce the desired intent with the minimum imposition on the populace. IMHO there's just no way this mess could meet that test. It seems the legislature is telling themselves it will pass scrutiny because it's reasonable. What makes it reasonable? In their twisted minds, what makes it reasonable is that they say it's reasonable. |
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April 4, 2013, 06:20 AM | #52 |
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I wonder if firearms manufacturers and other pro-2nd companies can be encouraged to boycott Conn. in the same manner as New York state?
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April 4, 2013, 06:56 AM | #53 | |||
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However, I agree with Aguila's reading of the law- a gun owner will now need at least one permit or certificate to own or use a firearm, unless he or she is using ammunition stockpiled before the permit system goes into effect <incorrect info deleted>. Here's the key: as I read the law, the permits and certificates are granted by the same agency (the DESPP) using largely the same process, and are also revoked using the same process if the person is somehow disqualified from owning a firearm. There are only two conceivable reasons to require three largely identical and parallel permit systems: (a) to ensure continued employment for bureaucrats, and (b) to make it a real nuisance the exercise a fundamental right. I'm actually fairly confident that the courts will go with (b). <edits in italics>
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April 4, 2013, 08:06 AM | #54 |
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From the reading that I have done, and the hours of the debate that I listened to, a CT Pistol/Revolver Carry Permit trumps the other permits.
My understanding: If you own a long gun and want to buy ammo, you can buy a $35 ammo permit, and purchase ammo until the permit needs to be renewed. If you want to buy a long gun you will need the long gun permit (unsure on the fees) and with it, you can buy long guns and ammo. If you have a pistol permit, nothing changes for you, you can buy hand guns, long guns and ammo. The was no talk of the fee changing or not that I heard. Last edited by Tom Servo; April 4, 2013 at 09:21 AM. Reason: Removed "bull****" |
April 4, 2013, 09:46 AM | #55 | |
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^^^ RCPFab, upon rereading the section, I believe you're right.
Aguila, I believe our reading was incorrect. I apparently got lost in the "ands" and "ors". From the law: Quote:
Similar wording is found in the portion of the law that creates the long gun eligibility certificate program, but the ammunition certificate does not trump the long gun certificate. In other words, there will be four types of permits or certificates available to average CT citizens who aren't LE officers or gun/ammo dealers. They are, in order of decreasing privileges:
FWIW the fee for both the long gun and ammunition certificates is $35, and the law specifies that the Commissioner "shall issue" the permit to anyone who passes the background check and satisfies the other qualifications; however, the long gun certificate requires fingerprints and a training course, while the ammunition certificate does not. (I'll make some revisions to my prior post in a minute.)
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April 4, 2013, 11:15 AM | #56 |
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Today's news says the Governor is signing the bill today.
Sad, our country is being patchworked into pro-2ndA and anti. This could impact CT tourist industry. Those with carry permits or traveling to shooting events or hunting will by pass the state entirely. Nothing good will come from this. |
April 4, 2013, 11:24 AM | #57 | |
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But Connecticut simply doesn't allow ANY carry without a permit. That's not regulating the mode of carry, that's regulating the act of carry. That didn't get fixed in this new bill. CT didn't make anything easier for anyone -- they just made things a lot tougher. In a bill this long, they should also have included state preemption (which Connecticut doesn't have), but that didn't further the gun control agenda so that was never even discussed. |
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April 4, 2013, 01:11 PM | #58 |
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Here's the key: as I read the law, the permits and certificates are granted by the same agency (the DESPP) using largely the same process
Well.... I see unintended consequences that are good for our side: A state where everyone who ever wants to buy ammunition does so by getting a permit to carry a handgun... Willie . |
April 4, 2013, 05:47 PM | #59 |
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Disgusting...
I really don't see any way for this to be changed. The citizens of CT will not vote out the current lackies.
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April 4, 2013, 06:51 PM | #60 |
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In responding to another thread, I found a page put together by CT's Office of Legislative Research that explains the new laws in lay terms pretty well: http://www.cga.ct.gov/2013/BA/2013SB-01160-R00-BA.htm
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April 4, 2013, 07:12 PM | #61 |
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Move out of the state to a better place and deny them your taxes.
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April 4, 2013, 07:14 PM | #62 |
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For many, moving is not an option. Many people have families, children, jobs, schools and other such things to consider.
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April 4, 2013, 07:48 PM | #63 |
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Sorry for our friends in CT....however, I'm scared more of us are going to get a good dose or regressive 2A laws in the near future.
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April 4, 2013, 07:53 PM | #64 | |
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Suggesting someone move as a solution is shortsighted and it's not helpful. Posts will be deleted for that.
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April 4, 2013, 08:00 PM | #65 |
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Registration, plain and simple
So that CT-legal AR i bought, which has the pinned stock, plain muzzle, and no scary bayonet lug, is now illegal. But the good news is, i could keep it there if only i'm willing to comply with their registration scheme, including a thumbprint. if only it didn't have that pesky protruding pistol grip, i could avoid registration.
So it's pretty clear that the real intent behind all of this is to so heavily burden the right as to render it inoperable. They've learned not to make the ban so sweeping that it is a de facto denial of the right, or to make it so expensive that it is effectively the same. Nope, they are burying the right in paperwork, elgibility certificates, licenses, bureaucracy and delay,all in the name of reasonable regulation. Then for those of you crazy gun nuts who navigate this web of fees and background checks, you play right into their registration scheme and are all set for confiscation when they get around to that. and this from the home of Sharps, Colt, Marlin, Winchester, Mossberg, and i forget how many other fine manufacturers of firearms from a better day.
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April 4, 2013, 11:29 PM | #66 |
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I am not surprised that politics has taken what should have been simply closing loopholes to another level. Anyone bend on harming people and causing the kind of carnage done in Sandy Hook School is going to be next to impossible to stop.
You can say that limiting the magazine to 10 rounds helps or that all transactions should be recorded. The problem is that people who are mentally sick don't care about these details. Who was at fault in this case in my opinion? the mother of Adam Lanza. Why would you buy and show how to shoot and use an Ar to a kid that obviously had mental problems? I read stories where it actually said that when the parents needed to go out and hired a baby sitter, they would tell her not to turn her back on their kid. Didn't that ring any bells to them? Living in Newtown Ct, I can tell you that this horrific event has taken a tbig, big oll on this town. I spend 6 years going to Sandy Hook School to pick up my kids so I knew, not personally but knew a lot of those kids by sight. I had seen their parents picking them up while I was picking my kids up. So needles to say, even now its very emotional to write about this. These are my neighbors, great people who loved their kids, did everything right and find themselves trying to understand why this happened to them. Yes, politicians have taken advantage on what happened here but we were hit so hard that we did not have time to react. Did I expect what we got? no way. I thought it would be just closing the loopholes on gun shows and limiting mags to 10 rounds. Sadly now as a gun owner, I will have to pay the price of someone else crazy act. No disrespect to any of my fellow posters here. Just my 2 cents. |
April 4, 2013, 11:57 PM | #67 |
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New Laws Lack Thought
Saw this article in CNN:
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/04/04/us...html?hpt=hp_t3 So it appears that standard capacity magazines holding more than 10 rounds may be kept but have to be registered and you cannot load them with more than 10 rounds outside your home. This and all sorts of new purchasing permits that get taken away for 1 firearm violation (loading more than 1 round outside your home?). This is ridiculous and outrageous! Imagine if there was a gas shortage, but instead of rationing gas, the government enacts a law that makes it illegal to fully load you vehicles' gas tanks and you can only have it half-filled at any time! So now cops can pull you over, check you gas tank level indicator, arrest you if you are one drop over the limit and forever ban you from driving a car. I smell a boycott coming. This only proves that the USA is fast becoming a nation of laws, not a nation of justice. These new laws do no justice to law-abiding firearms owners. Last edited by freedash22; April 5, 2013 at 01:13 AM. |
April 5, 2013, 07:27 AM | #68 |
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So if I'm understanding this correctly...because I'm a soldier, I can keep my LCMs unregistered? And I can continue to buy them?
Fantastic, but isn't that about as anti-2a as you can get? |
April 5, 2013, 07:53 AM | #69 | |
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So while our military commands can continue to buy and use magazines of whatever capacity, I doubt that would give you or me the ability to buy them, or to avoid registration on ones we already have. |
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April 5, 2013, 08:49 AM | #70 |
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All of this gun grabbing here in Connecticut,
Nobody makes a stink about this though... Before the Dec. shootings, Gov Malloy was Preening "BUSHMASTER" here in Connecticut with tax breaks and incentives wow how things change
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April 5, 2013, 09:56 AM | #71 | ||
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Interestingly, the off-duty provision very specifically does NOT apply to employees of, or security contractors employed by, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. For some obscure reason, the law is very carefully worded to prohibit anyone associated with the NRC from possessing an AW or LCM at any time except when on-duty (*presumably excluding grandfathered personally-owned "pre-ban" firearms and magazines). Military and LE are NOT exempt from the registration requirements for AWs and LCMs. The law does, however, give active-duty service members a temporary 90-day pass from some of the registration deadlines if the person is stationed out-of-state when the deadlines take effect. The off-duty provision does NOT apply to the purchase or possession of so-called armor piercing bullets (APBs). I'm going to address APBs in a future post. [*Added note with subsequent edit.]
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April 5, 2013, 10:01 AM | #72 | |
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April 5, 2013, 12:57 PM | #73 | |
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Last edited by Punisher_1; April 5, 2013 at 01:08 PM. |
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April 5, 2013, 01:12 PM | #74 |
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No, for some folks, it's really not an option, at least not for the foreseeable future. Would you suggest that the family pack up and move without a place to stay, without a job on the horizon? What if none of the adults in the family can find a job in a less restrictive locale?
For some folks (like me), the license that lets them make a living is only valid in the state in which they currently live. If I, for example, needed to move to another jurisdiction, I would have to give up the practice of law (which pays the best money that I can reasonably expect to make with my skill set) until I get my license in the new jurisdiction. Until ~10 years ago, Arkansas didn't even have reciprocity with any other state. That meant that if I wanted to move to another state, I would have to either take their bar exam, or give up the practice of law. What if I (or someone in my position) had moved out of state and failed the bar? I don't know about anyone else, but I'm a little unwilling to send my entire family out on a limb that could leave them homeless. Besides, if all of the gun owners move out of the more restrictive jurisdictions, who will fight for gun rights there? I'm not sure where you're located, Punisher, but consider this: if every single gun owner vacated CA, NJ, NY, and IL, that would put the anti-gun folks in total control there. Those of us in less-populous jurisdictions should try to avoid that, due to the voting mechanism in the House of Representatives.
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April 5, 2013, 01:18 PM | #75 |
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Looks like i'll be dusting off my bow this season..
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