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Old May 13, 2021, 06:14 PM   #26
zukiphile
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Stagpanther, you are a smart person. My response isn't personal.

Quote:
Originally Posted by stagpanther
For all the rhetorical reflections on "bad boys are just going to be bad" what would you feel if your child was killed in a school by a "sick" kid who decided that shooting up his class was the best way to settle his grievances?
I might like to find who killed my child and drop the killer into a world of pain for the rest of his life, and I might like it to last as long as possible before the killer gets to the relief of his own death.

That's not a reasonable policy response and it's why we don't have victims and their families control criminal sentencing. It's a terrible question that sheds absolutely no light on the topic.

Quote:
It's a fairly pointless debate for me--I don't see the ATF having the will or resources to all of a sudden start executing raids to take away all our firearms--...
They will never need to do that.

After just a few raids, people like me, people who have a lot to lose by keeping regulated and prohibited items, will just turn them in as an alternative to suffering government vandalism and harassment. It's the same reason Internal Revenue doesn't need to seize lots of businesses to terrify most people.
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Old May 13, 2021, 08:01 PM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 44 AMP
One of the reasons, and perhaps the main reason that the DC handgun ban lasted as many years as it did was that it took a decade+ to find someone in DC (so they had standing) and both affected by the law and willing to go through the process of fighting it in court. The end result was the Heller decision, but it took a long time to get into the process, and more time to go through the process and reach the SCOTUS.
Standing can be a real issue. Remember that, even after cherry picking the plaintiffs in what became Heller, there were originally five or six plaintiffs. By the time the case reached the Supreme Court, Dick Heller was the only one left who hadn't been disqualified for one reason or another.

I'm pretty certain I remember that correctly. Perhaps one of the lawyer types around here could verify or correct that.
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Old May 14, 2021, 08:03 AM   #28
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Only Heller had applied for a license and been denied.
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Old May 16, 2021, 08:56 PM   #29
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So wait I just had a thought about this. This isn’t just about killing ghost guns... it’s also as much about killing internet sales of uppers and slides. A booming industry at the moment. We can’t have bubba shipping an upper receiver to his house now. After all he may slap it on a lower that he built and then the government would have zero chance of a paper trail on that firearm.

This stinks to high heaven.
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Old May 17, 2021, 12:14 AM   #30
Aguila Blanca
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zukiphile
Only Heller had applied for a license and been denied.
True -- but he applied for a license so that he could keep an operable handgun in his home.

From the decision:

Quote:
Respondent Dick Heller is a D. C. special police officer authorized
to carry a handgun while on duty at the Thurgood
Marshall Judiciary Building. He applied for a registration
certificate for a handgun that he wished to keep at home, but
the District refused. He thereafter filed a lawsuit in the
Federal District Court for the District of Columbia seeking,
on Second Amendment grounds, to enjoin the city from enforcing
the bar on the registration of handguns, the licensing
requirement insofar as it prohibits the carrying of a firearm
in the home without a license, and the trigger-lock requirement
insofar as it prohibits the use of “functional firearms
within the home.
Quote:
3. The handgun ban and the trigger-lock requirement (as applied to
self-defense) violate the Second Amendment. The District’s total ban
on handgun possession in the home amounts to a prohibition on an entire
class of “arms” that Americans overwhelmingly choose for the lawful
purpose of self-defense.
Quote:
In sum, we hold that the District’s ban on handgun possession
in the home violates the Second Amendment, as does its
prohibition against rendering any lawful firearm in the home
operable for the purpose of immediate self-defense.
Assuming
that Heller is not disqualified from the exercise of Second
Amendment rights, the District must permit him to register
his handgun and must issue him a license to carry it in the
home.
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Old May 17, 2021, 12:24 AM   #31
44 AMP
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Of course its about killing internet sales, more so than actually doing anything about so called ghost guns.

Think about it for a moment, specific to the AR, the upper (which is just another part, legally -for now-) is no more a stressed pressure item than the lower. That's why aluminum alloy works for both of them. If you can home fab a lower, you can home fab an upper with the same equipment.

Now, serializing the upper (because it holds parts needed for the gun to fire- something they are proposing) turns the upper into a firearm all on its own, just as the serialized lower is. SO, to get that upper (if they get what they want) you'd have to go through the same process you do to get a completed lower, or a complete functional firearm with all the parts installed, physically visit an FFL to fill out the paperwork, get the background check and up the part. Oh, and if your state has a waiting period, that means 2 trips to the FFL.....to get what is today a part that even the Post Office can put in your mailbox...
is that progress???

Next point, are there people that make uppers and don't make lowers??? I think there are some, and those people who are not making lowers (which are legally firearms) MIGHT have to obtain a firearms manufacturing license (and anything else required) in order to keep doing what they're doing now, and THAT added hassle and expense might just drive some of them out of business.

Another point, the way their proposal is worded, it might be applied to many other guns, possibly nearly all the semiauto pistols made, and many rifles as well.

show me the semi auto sporting rifle that doesn't have its trigger group contained in some kind of housing, even its nearly all inside the actual receiver, the trigger guard is part of it and is visible from outside, to might "qualify" under the language of the proposal.

This is VERY BAD stuff posing as something mild and "harmless"....

Not as blatant as an out right ban, it's subtle, but the possible effects are chilling to consider.
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Old May 17, 2021, 06:05 AM   #32
zukiphile
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Quote:
True -- but he applied for a license so that he could keep an operable handgun in his home.
Correct. That's why the holding was that one is entitled to possess in the home.
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Old May 17, 2021, 10:32 AM   #33
ballardw
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Would this also have an impact on "drop in trigger" units?

The cassette or plates or whatever you want to call the bits that hold the trigger, hammer, disconnector and springs are "holding parts needed for the gun to fire".
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Old May 17, 2021, 12:22 PM   #34
FrankenMauser
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Quote:
Would this also have an impact on "drop in trigger" units?

The cassette or plates or whatever you want to call the bits that hold the trigger, hammer, disconnector and springs are "holding parts needed for the gun to fire".
Ambiguous definitions are fun, aren't they?
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Old May 17, 2021, 01:34 PM   #35
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FrankenMauser
Ambiguous definitions are fun, aren't they?
Indeed.
It could easily be argued that almost every internal part which has another part attached to it would meet that definition, based on the inane, "whatever I can ever sort of make it sound reasonable that a word could have ever been meant to mean" sort of reading applied by courts/lawyers.

Technically, "literally", an AR will not fire without the spring that's attached to the various trigger parts and flips the hammer forward. Therefore, whichever piece that spring is attached to (or even pressed against to create the tension?) in any particular trigger design is "holding parts needed for the gun to fire".

How does a lawyer arguing before a court try to define "holding"?

Really, the only internal parts in most guns not "holding parts needed for the gun to fire" are the safety pieces.... otherwise... why would those parts BE THERE in the first place? Firearms aren't exactly flush with extraneous internals which exist just to look neat.
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Old May 17, 2021, 02:08 PM   #36
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Quote:
Under the proposed rule, a “frame or receiver” is any externally visible housing or holding structure for one or more fire control components.
emphasis added

Under their proposal, as written, an internal housing holding fire control parts would not be considered a receiver. BUT, its quite likely that if the trigger guard (which IS externally visible) were part of or attached to the internal housing that would be enough for them to include that housing in their definition of "receiver".

Remember we need to look at two different though related things, the proposal as worded now, and likely interpretations of the rule if it is adopted as currently written and those could be significantly different.

ONE part, identified as the receiver has been sufficient to legally define the firearm for a long, long time. Changing the definition so that other parts, and more than one part are the legal firearm does nothing but complicate the matter and make was was just parts into firearms under the law, adding to the complexity, hassle and expense of legal firearms ownership, which i'm sure was all they intend it to do, no matter what kind of claims they make.
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Old May 22, 2021, 07:24 AM   #37
Nathan
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It is now ope for comment at this LINK.
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Old May 25, 2021, 02:42 PM   #38
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The "control" of 'gun control' is actually "people control."
Do not lose sight of this.
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