Colt and Remington may be moving.

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Werewolf

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Oct 1, 2005
Messages
3,471
Reaction score
7
Location
OKC
These laws are thought up by people that don't know jack **** about firearms. Maroons.

These laws are thought up by people who absolutely know about firearms.

Microstamping 1st Stage: Pass law. Firearms manufacturers move out of state. Won't microstamp. Can't sell into states with MS law. Defacto ban in states with said law.

Microstaming 2nd Stage: Enough states pass MS requirement that manufacturers must comply to sell enough weapons to stay in business. firearm prices go up. Result partial ban due to decreased demand at higher prices.

Microstamping Stage 3: Law enforcement vigorously enforces law. Seizes weapons not in compliance. Jails folks like us with safes full of firearms not compliant. Many owners say screw it. Divest themselves of all firearms.

and on and on and on it goes until lawmakers have sidestepped into a legal ban of firearms and only criminals will have them.

How many of us will become criminals to retain ours? Hmmmm.... How many?
 
Last edited:

Werewolf

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Oct 1, 2005
Messages
3,471
Reaction score
7
Location
OKC
I agree, microstamping is about making things difficult on manufactures and making firearms more expensive for consumers. The majority of firearms used in crimes are unregistered or registered to someone other than the person committing the crime, i.e. stolen. It would have no significant impact on crimes committed with a firearm.

The majority of firearms in the USA (perhaps >90%) are unregistered. Few places in the US require firearm registration at citizen level. The trace is lost at the 1st buyer and that trace isn't even a direct trace. It must go thru the FFL that sold the weapon. One might call that registration but then one would be wrong.

Besides - as you say registration doesn't work to solve crimes no matter what form it takes.

It never ceases to amaze me that even on gun boards how many people believe in the myth of gun registration in the US.
 

Werewolf

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Oct 1, 2005
Messages
3,471
Reaction score
7
Location
OKC
Since when do criminals bother to register their guns?

When's the last time you registered a gun?

My point being that just like OK most states in the US have no formal system nor requirement to register a gun.

Gun registration is just another hollywood gun myth.
 

68mustang

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Nov 9, 2009
Messages
875
Reaction score
35
Location
Oklahoma City
These laws are thought up by people who absolutely know about firearms.

Microstamping 1st Stage: Pass law. Firearms manufacturers move out of state. Won't microstamp. Can't sell into states with MS law. Defacto ban in states with said law.

Microstaming 2nd Stage: Enough states pass MS requirement that manufacturers must comply to sell enough weapons to stay in business. firearm prices go up. Result partial ban due to decreased demand at higher prices.

Microstamping Stage 3: Law enforcement vigorously enforces law. Seizes weapons not in compliance. Jails folks like us with safes full of firearms not compliant. Many owners say screw it. Divulge themselves of all firearms.

and on and on and on it goes until lawmakers have sidestepped into a legal ban of firearms and only criminals will have them.

How many of us will become criminals to retain ours? Hmmmm.... How many?

I understand your theory, but you're giving these people too much credit.

 
Last edited by a moderator:

cktad

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Sep 25, 2007
Messages
1,381
Reaction score
457
Location
Claremore
The majority of firearms in the USA (perhaps >90%) are unregistered. Few places in the US require firearm registration at citizen level. The trace is lost at the 1st buyer and that trace isn't even a direct trace. It must go thru the FFL that sold the weapon. One might call that registration but then one would be wrong.

Besides - as you say registration doesn't work to solve crimes no matter what form it takes.

It never ceases to amaze me that even on gun boards how many people believe in the myth of gun registration in the US.
Buying from an FFL and filling out a Fm 4473 is a form of registration. All your personal information and the information about the firearm you bought is on the form and the FFL dealer must keep it for 20 years. If they go out of business prior to the 20 years, the records must be sent to the ATF. The ATF can also gain access to those records when needed to trace a weapon. This has been done numerous times by the ATF. Of course, if you sell that firearm without doing a FM 4473 then the paper trail is broken. That''s why they want to close the gun-show-loophole and require all firearm sold to have a FM 4473 filled out. Then the paper trail would not be broken at least not for 20 years.

And California requires registration of all "assault" weapons.
 

KOPBET

Duck of Death
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Jun 28, 2008
Messages
13,734
Reaction score
10,394
Location
N36º11.90´ W95º53.29´
You know if this comes to fruition the market for brass catchers is going to explode.

Do brass catchers still work when pointed straight up?

thebsreport.files.wordpress.com_2009_12_thug_sideways_pistol_aim.jpg
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom