Trump Administration Set to Announce Pointless, Legally Dubious Bump Stock Ban
Even the Obama administration recognized it didn't have the authority to ban bump stocks.

Bump stocks are modifications that can be attached to a rifle to increase the rate of fire, often at the expense of accuracy. Nine months after President Donald Trump endorsed a ban on the devices, the administration appears to be on the verge of banning them.
CNN was the first to report the news yesterday evening, citing "officials familiar with the matter." An administration official confirmed to The New York Times that the rule would be unveiled "in the coming days to weeks." Under Trump's new regulation, a source tells CNN, bump stock owners would have 90 days to get rid of the devices on their own or turn them over to authorities.
The issue first rose (temporarily) to the forefront of the national conversation after the October 2017 Las Vegas shooting, where a gunman used such devices as he killed 58 people.
In February 2018, another mass shooting occurred, this one at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Though the shooter did not use a bump stock, Trump announced in the aftermath of the tragedy that he would be banning the accessories, directing then–Attorney General Jeff Sessions "to propose regulations that ban all devices that turn legal weapons into machine guns."
In the following months, Trump continued signaling his intention to make bump stocks illegal. "So we're knocking out bump stocks," the president said in October. "And we are in the final couple of weeks."
The administration probably doesn't have the legal authority to do this. Under federal law, a machine gun is defined as "any weapon which shoots, is designed to shoot, or can be readily restored to shoot, automatically more than one shot, without manual reloading, by a single function of the trigger." But a gun equipped with a bump stock is still able only to fire just one round per trigger pull. "Instead of squeezing the trigger, the shooter holds his trigger finger steady while pushing the barrel forward with his other hand, thereby firing a round," Reason's Jacob Sullum explains. "The recoil repositions the trigger, and continuing to exert forward pressure on the barrel makes the rifle fire repeatedly."
As Reason's Christian Britschgi explained in March, this is probably why the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) has said multiple times that federal restrictions on machine guns do not cover bump stocks. The Obama administration affirmed the legality of bump stocks on three different occasions: once in 2010, again in 2012, and once more in 2013.
As Sen. Diane Feinstein (D–Calif.) said in a February statement: The ATF "currently lacks authority under the law to ban bump stocks."
In addition to being legally questionable, a bump stock ban probably wouldn't do very much. No mass shooters before or after Las Vegas have used bump stocks to carry out their massacres. Even in Las Vegas, the death toll wasn't necessarily higher because the shooter used one.
Most gun enthusiasts have little need for bump stocks. So they're a relatively easy target for those who want more gun control, and a relatively easy sacrifice for gun rights advocates. Hence the reportedly pending ban. As Britschgi argued in October 2017: "Banning bump stocks is something that can be done without pissing too many people off, placating the crowd that after every shooting in America screams for somebody to do something."
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Trump will now be the hero to the left.
You place too little faith in cognitive dissonance. Both the left and right will find a way to spin this to fit their preferred team's politics.
As Britschgi argued in October 2017: "Banning bump stocks is something that can be done without pissing too many people off, placating the crowd that after every shooting in America screams for somebody to do something."
It's naive to think that this or any other gun control measure short of a total ban will "placate" the antigun crowd.
The UK is the prime model. Now the cops go on weapons sweeps confiscating everyone's butter knives. And I'm not exaggerating.
As long as they don't touch my margarine knives, I'm cool.
Waiting for LC1789 to come here and breathlessly tell us all how Trump is the most libertarian of all presidents.
He's probably in gym class right now.
Does anybody else want to smell lc1789's sweaty gym clothes? The smell of a pubescent boy after a period of physical exertion is heavenly.
Trump or LC1789?
I'm waiting for him to come in and beat the crap out of you vexatious morons for the thousandth time. And I doubt he supports the bump stock ban. But then, people like him are capable of independent thought separate from political dogma, or or soft headed, emotional, sophist thinking.
Solid satire.
No, he is that crazy. Often worse.
What will be the penalty for hooking your thumb in your belt loop and bump firing from the hip? Or simply bump firing from the shoulder without using a belt loop?
I see no indication there would be.
How would THAT cause your gun to fire dozens of shots in a few seconds?
A bump stock ban is meaningless because unless it is a law passed by Congress is only applies to the definition from the ATF. The ATF can restrict the sale of bump stocks like it does suppressors but Congress is the only entity that can ban them by passing a law.
Congress is supposed to be the only branch to levy taxes and tariffs as well. How is that working?
Are they coming after rubber bands next?
Shoelaces and keyrings.
The BATFE has already rule that a shoelace is a machine gun, although they later changed their minds.
Let's just cut to the chase and outlaw murder.
No, that's not nearly enough. We need to outlaw hate thoughts!
Redrum! Redrum!
No murder? Fuck off, slaver.
...after the October 2017 Las Vegas shooting, where a gunman used such devices as he killed 58 people.
There was a mass shooting in Las Vegas?
Well, Sparky, only the worst mass shooting in US history
I could probably become a billionaire, if I launch a website where nobody can post unless they have an IQ above 75, and can prove they are not totally ignorant of recent major news events. If nothing else, that would eliminate 77.3% of the commenters here.
As would I, if I could develop a sarcasm detector that didn't require repeated recalibration.
#MAGA
#(M)y(A)llegiance(G)overnment(A)dulation
Trump's eleventy-dimensional chess to make Democrats oppose it.
More likely, Trump will push it but doesn't really care. It will get challenged in court. His administration will defend it weakly. It will be overturned and the precedent will be set.
I'm not sure if that was the intention. It's more likely a blind squirrel finding a nut. But it does seem likely to end up being a setback for Gun control advocates.
>>>get rid of the devices on their own or turn them over to authorities.
or what?
Or you don't.
Don't worry our pretty little heads about administrative overreach! The courts will overturn this regulation faster than you can say Jack Robinson. That will destroy the Republicans' disingenuous efforts to duck this issue after the next "mass shooting." Do we really think we can get 40 Senators to stand up against a proper bump stock ban statute at that point? And then it will be "legitimate." Turn in your bump stocks, gentlemen. Next stop we revisit that Bush-era long-shoelace ban suggestion.
Scalia's Heller ruling will be overturned by a conservative SCOTUS? Why did they refuse to overturn the Assault Weapons Ban (what it's called)
Then again, Obama is a Muslim from Kenya.
And those space aliens in Roswell, New Mexico.
Because that was a statute, Einstein. I didn't say overturn it on 2A grounds.
Cowardly diversion, Skippy,
Read again what he quoted you saying, and then responded .
I would have ridiculed your attempt to foment hysteria over a long shoelace ban "suggestion" that you pulled out of your ass, squeezing it around your head, Einstein.
Only if someone is going to challenge it.
As far as I can tell the bump stock makers have folded up shop.
The NRA certainly isn't going to file suit, they were on the bandwagon cheering this.
So, it will become administrative "law".
You have to turn over your bump stocks. So anyone who owns one would have standing.
I don't have one.
I also doubt that any individual is going to challenge it.
That would cost a lot of money and I doubt that Gura (Heller etal) would pursue it, nor any of the gun rights organizations.
I could be wrong of course.
What role do you keep seeing a gun rights organization playing here at all? They typically are not plaintiffs themselves in gun-rights cases anyway, as they're not normally the easiest party to demonstrate standing; they simply can pay legal expenses if necessary. All you need is a single person who wishes to keep his bump stock; and a law firm who wishes to work pro bono for the sake of the 2A, or a libertarian group, or gun rights group who opposes a bump stock ban (like the GOA). It's not very hard to find any of that.
gun rights orgs would bankroll the suit.
that single person buy the way is going to likely have to be arrested first, convicted and then take his case thru the courts.
you know ANY gun owner willing to do that?
As I said, yes, a gun rights org, a libertarian org, or the law firm itself could bankroll the suit. All of which there are plenty who oppose bump stock bans.
Also there are plenty of libertarians willing to get themselves arrested on principle. Some of them are big YouTube personalities. I think you could find a room's worth in New Hampshire alone.
Also all it would take is one bump stock owner to actually get convicted for possession, whether or not he planned it deliberately.
Also since when would it even take that? What exactly were Heller or McDonald arrested for? (And which one was bankrolled by the NRA?)
*or a generous individual
Actually I take that back about the libertarians. It depends on the penalty. It will probably be pretty severe, so maybe not. Everything else stands.
*libertarians being willing to go to prison for this
Are YOU going to volunteer?
Heller and MacDonald didn't need to be arrested. They could apply for the license, be turned down and sue on that basis.
Your hypothetical gun owner willing to risk becoming a Federal FELON (15 years in the pokey) over a toy is a much rarer commodity.
The mfg's had the financial incentive to sue to overturn the administrative "law" and I don't see any indication they're going to do so.
But I'll look forward to reading about YOUR pursuit of justice over bump stocks.
First of all, I didn't say ME. I am just a dude sitting at a keyboard; maybe I am a pussy. Second of all, I realized I made a mistake about that and took it back. Third of all, YOU are the one who imagines that one needs to be convicted to have standing in the first place. I have been disputing that from square one.
Perhaps no bump stock owner will deliberately provoke a 15 year sentence over this. But as I explained, he will not need to. You think every single bump stock owner is now going to turn over his toy to the Feds? Or will some of them decide to roll the dice, the way every day countless Americans hold on to small personal drug stashes that risk them felony collars if the cops do decide to bust down their doors and search the place? Well, all it takes is one unlucky fellow to do that. Perhaps it's stupid. So be it. (By the way how has that New York State SAFE Act registration compliance been going?)
Second, suppose I did buy a bump stock. Now the ATF has announced a law saying I will have to hand over my property to the government before a certain date. I don't want to do that, and I claim the law requiring me to do that is unconstitutional. Boom. Standing. It does not depend on any criminal penalty even existing; the loss of my property is sufficient.
Maybe you can challenge the law without being arrested, maybe not. Maybe you can do this with very little money, maybe not.
My response to you is based on the fact that YOU are ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN this will be overturned by the courts. My ire gets raised real fast by people who are ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN something will happen.
I think it is far from certain, indeed much closer to the certain that it won't be overturned by the courts because no individual is going to challenge it.
I am sorry about your ire. I am quite confident nonetheless that some person in the United States of America will eventually be caught, or claimed to be caught, with a bump stock. And I am quite confident that having to hand over your private property to the government (or any other party) in accordance with a law gives you standing to challenge the law's constitutionality. I don't know what to say if this is not obvious to you.
"The courts will overturn this regulation faster than you can say Jack Robinson."
"will eventually be caught, or claimed to be caught, with a bump stock."
You keep moving the goal posts.
"And I am quite confident that having to hand over your private property to the government (or any other party) in accordance with a law gives you standing to challenge the law's constitutionality"
I've never said otherwise.
Most of the people who have bought bump stocks are sophisticated gun owners who will likely know that they now have a prohibited item and will take great care to see that they are not caught with it.
So, I think you'll likely be able to say "jack robinson" a gazillion times before anyone gets a chance in court to challenge this "law".
And no individual is going to place themselves in the Federal cross-hairs over this on purpose.
No, I don't. I acknowledge that it might take some time for someone to be caught with a bump stock. Not as much time as you believe, I think. I don't care how "sophisticated gun owner" you are (let us put aside the bizarre claim that this describes "most of the people who bought bump stocks," of all things), I do not know what sort of "great care" is going to keep you from "getting caught" with it when the police are executing a permissible search on whatever grounds. Why I don't even know why we have any limitations on law enforcement searches at all; we could all just take "great care" with anything we desire. But all of this is superfluous to my argument...
And there you have it. If you acknowledge that anyone who owns a bump stock has standing to sue the government merely by virtue of its demand to turn over his property to them, then any speculation about the likelihood of the above is moot. I do not have to wait for a bump stock owner to be caught with a secret illegal bump stock, to see this case go to court. I merely need to wait for one to say, "I have a bump stock in my ownership and possession currently. I purchased it when it was legal to do so. You now propose to confiscate this legally obtained private property of mine, to demand that I turn it over to the government. I believe that I need not do that, that this demand by the federal police is illegal and not authorized by statute. Therefore I am suing to have this regulation overturned and keep my property."
There are no "Federal cross-hairs" to this action. It does not require that the individual be convicted or even be at risk of being convicted. No I do not believe it will take a long time to find a bump stock owner willing to take a stand like this. Fuck, a libertarian activist with no interest in bump stocks or even guns could find a bump stock owner planning to meekly turn over his property to the state, buy it instead from him, and file this lawsuit. And yes, there would be plenty willing to do it because again there would be no risk of criminal prosecution.
Again, I've never said no one has standing.
And yes, you could even theoretically sue based upon the case that you want to BUY one but can't because it would be illegal and you challenge that, and so not be in any cross-hairs.
My argument has always been that no individual is going to do that because it costs too much money.
Why don't you do it?
You won't?
Point taken?
If you don't use it you are extremely likely to not "get caught".
It is possible of course that the Feds could/would get the sales and go looking for them. CA has done such.
But I'm not so sure the Feds will go that far in this instance.
Additionally, they are just substitute stocks for rifles, easy to take off and can be hidden away without great difficulty and the AR returned to normal functionality. I know someone who has 2 of them. And all he has to do is store them off his property and stay mum when/if the Feds come around (5th A and all that). No, I think the Feds know that this would be a pretty fruitless method of rounding them up.
But let us suppose someone is stupid enough to "get caught".
That is not oh just give us the bump stock and be on your way you can fight us in court if you want it back.
No, that is oh hey we're putting you in JAIL for 15 years. Now you've got to fight just to get acquitted of a Federal Felony and that ain't cheap.
Sure you can throw out the Constitutionality defense but I'll give you good odds the local Federal court is going to convict you. I wouldn't want to bet 15 years on any jury.
So after that you're fighting an appeals process. A LOT more money. And, you are in jail.
It isn't going to be reversed faster than you can say "Jack Robinson".
No libertarian org would finance such a suit.
We're not so uneducated unalienable rights.
No libertarian org would finance such a suit.
We're not so uneducated unalienable rights.
The faggots at the NRA ASKED for this ban.
The pussies at GOA have filed no suits, despite insisting they're "No compromise."
Constitution?
GOA has said that they're going to file suit.
They'll win on a regulation and lose on a law.
The bump stick increases firing speed to almost full automatic.
And even semi-automatics may be banned, since 1939
nth dimension chess.
Trump "bans" bump stocks.
Courts toss the ban.
Trump gets to have it all ways. He gets credit for a ban. He gets to lash out at the judiciary. The gun constituency doesn't hate him as much because the ban was ineffective.
And if he has to sacrifice a few pawns (Americans) so be it? Someone needs legal standing to sue which means they got fucked.
So what's the primary difference between the Obama-administration BATF and the Trump-administration BATF? I imagine that about 99% of the BATF employees in both cases are the exact same people and 99% of them don't give a rat's ass who's nominally in charge, they know who really runs things at the BATF and it's them.
This doesn't go nearly far enough. We need to ban deadly military style assault weapons.
Related: David Hogg has another brilliant idea!
Congress ought to create a federal tax on gun sales to fund gun violence research.
Guns and ammo should be taxed at rates far higher than they are now. Partly to discourage people ? especially poor people ? from buying them, of course, but also because the additional research money will produce valuable results. For example, research shows the assault weapons ban of the 1990s was a smashing success, but the NRA's influence kept it from being renewed. So once again these weapons of war are legal on our streets, and the results have been predictable.
Related: David Hogg has another brilliant idea!
LOL! You've really had your "A" game going lately!
Or go much further. A ban on all semi-automatics has been constitutional since 1939, as reaffirmed by Scalia's Heller ruling. Don't forget (unless you already have) the NRA was totally powerless against the Assault Weapons Ban.
Only a small percentage were included, because of so many poliitcial exemptions
Thanks for admitting they were powerless against it for 10 long years. because it was and is constitutional, right?
If it were up to me we'd overturn Heller and recognize that the Second Amendment only protects a collective right. That's why it refers to a "militia" after all.
Of course I want to ban assault weapons, but that's only the first step.
The right to keep and bear arms is no more a collective right than freedom of speech, religion, the right of assembly, protection against unreasonable searches and seizures, protection against double jeopardy, protection against self-incrimination, due process, trial by jury, right to confront one's accusers, or right to an attorney are.
The term militia is in the prefatory clause which describes the purpose of the amendment but doesn't limit it to a collective right. Prior to the ratification of the US Constitution several states had amendments to their Constitutions describing the right to keep and bear arms as and individual right not dependent on service in a militia.
MARYLAND (November 11, 1776)
"That the people have a right to bear arms for the defence of themselves and the state; and as standing armies in the time of peace are dangerous to liberty, they ought not to be kept up; and that the military should be kept under strict subordination to, and governed by, the civil power."
Those state amendments were obsolete with adoption of the federal Constitution. Check the Supremacy Clause.
And it was Scalia who reaffirmed the constitutionality of a ban on semi-automatics in Heller, since 1939, by noting the bans on "unusual and dangerous:" weapons at ratification.
That's not even how that works. Since a state constitution is binding only on that state, there is no reason that state constitutions can't provide greater protections than the federal constitution, and many do. Granted, these protections are binding only on the state government and not the feds, but that does't make them "obsolete".
Semi-auto weapons been in common use for more that a century. They've been used by the military, police, hunters, target shooters and ordinary citizens seeking to protect themselves. They are neither unusual nor uniquely dangerous, and therefore clearly not open to a blanket ban. (Scalia's language was unusually sloppy there. After all, a weapon that isn't "dangerous" to at least some degree isn't much of a weapon.)
The reasons are two.
1) If the Constitution forbids THAT protection to violate a different protection/right. Even if that right has not yet been acknowledged. (9A).
2) The Supremacy Clause
The ones mentioned violate the Supremacy Clause.
And it was Scalia who reaffirmed the constitutionality of a ban on semi-automatics in Heller, since 1939, by noting the bans on "unusual and dangerous:" weapons at ratification.
Semi-auto weapons been in common use for more that a century. Non responsive. And wrong. The NRA (and anyone else) was totally powerless against the Assault Weapons Ban for 10 long years. It's been constitutional since 1939 (Miller)
Irrelevant. Totally. They prove was the Founders intent was based on accepted practice at the time. -- and that none of them were affected.
On what authority?
Look again at what I placed in quotation marks.
Cont.
There were also alternate versions of the Second Amendment that acknowledged that the right to keep and bear arms was an individual right.
The Address and Reasons of Dissent of the Minority of the Convention of Pennsylvania To Their Constituents
"That the people have a right to bear arms for the defence of themselves and their own state, or the United States, or for the purpose of killing game; and no law shall be passed for disarming the people or any of them, unless for crimes committed, or real danger of public injury from individuals; and as standing armies in the time of peace are dangerous to liberty, they ought not to be kept up: and that the military shall be kept under strict subordination to and be governed by the civil powers."
"The inhabitants of the several states shall have liberty to fowl and hunt in seasonable times, on the lands they hold, and on all other lands in the United States not inclosed, and in like manner to fish in all navigable waters, and others not private property, without being restrained therein by any laws to be passed by the legislature of the United States."
The people living at the time of ratification knew what the second amendment meant, they also knew that people would lie and distort it's meaning:
Samual Adams
"The Constitution shall never be construed...to prevent the people of the United States who are peaceable citizens from keeping their own arms."
A well-educated electorate, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and read books shall not be infringed.
Only the well-educated electorate have the right to keep and read books.
Which means everyone not liberal.
I'm okay with that.
It's not a collective right. The entire amendment is obsolete and should be repealed, It's been a long time since we used as citizens militia to defend the security of a free state. duh
Gun nuts scream about original intent except when it's incon-vweeeeeen-yent. They've also been brainwashed to believe gun controls don'r save lives.. whereas we've had 31,000% more mass shootings than England in -- I think it was the last 10 years.
Gun nuts are easily manipulated, because they falsely believe gun ownership is an absolute right, when no rights are totally absolute, even life, because two absolute rights can be in conflict.
Repeal and replace 2A, to assure self-defense as a right -- which is unnecessary because it's a fundamental right anyhow, most obviously under 9A.
Okay, I think my head just imploded. You want to repeal the 2A to assure a right to self-defense? I can't even begin to fathom the thought process behind that. We're well into insane troll logic territory here.
Let's examine the idea with some real logic. Is there a right to life? I believe so, and you claim to. If there is, then a right to self-defense logically follows, since a right without a means to enforce it is meaningless. A right to self-defense logically implies a right to own and possess an effective means of self-defense. Otherwise, this right once again degenerates into meaningless rhetoric. As to what constitutes an effective means, that has obviously changed with time. Currently, guns represent the most effective means, but this wasn't true in the past (when guns didn't exist or weren't reliable and widely available) and may not be true in the future (when someone invents something better). This is precisely why the founders used the generic term "arms" in the 2A.
If you believe the 2A should be repealed, fine, argue for that. Don't try to redefine it.
Is that why you failed to read (or misunderstood) almost all of it?
I said the exact opposite.
Of course.
See my final clause.
So you agree it is NOT dependent on 2A, andis separate -- and that final clause you missed explains why (which amendment applies)
They were EXPLICIT about why - militia service.. And purpose -- the security of the nation. We now use a professional army for that. And protected arms have been constitutionally defined as the modern equivalent of the weapons in common us at ratification, brought from home for ,militia service, (he militia clause) since 1939, affirmed by Scalia in Heller
Now read the THIRD sentence.
Anything else? (IF you read it.)
Despite Scalia's somewhat confusing Dicta Heller does not stand for that proposition.
If and when the SC actually takes up the question of so-called "assault rifle" bans then we will get an answer to that question.
I don't think your confidence in the preferred answer is something you should be that sure of.
He EXPLICITLY defends it twice, in affirming the Limits in US v Miller (1939)
US v Miller (1939)
Only one question: how long did you study? Because, seriously, no one is born this stupid.
Also, close your damn tags!
Bend over. This will go in and up with less pain. Then see my response to AZ Gunowner
Quote the language where he EXPLICITLY defends "it".
Yes, PLEASE tell me where.
"At the time" means at ratification. As does bans on "dangerous and unusual weapons"
Any questions
Good examples of reading words and assigning different meanings to them.
Be more specific. so I can drop-kick your pathetic ass again.
The conclusion is obvious. There's no reason to buy a bump stock, since -- if this is correct, they can't shoot any faster. But this is misleading, since the bump stock increases the firing rate to to dozens in a few seconds.
Only murderers then?
Why compare with machines guns, when it's totally constitutional to blame semi-automatic weapons since 1939, and reaffirmed by Scalia in Heller (The NRA was powerless against the ban for 10 long years)
Not sure why Reason sucks up to the NRA so shamelessly, in clear violation of individual liberties and fundamental rights, since NO unalienable rights can be absolute, But, sadly, Reason is now a breeding ground for the alt-right, whose spiritual godfathers include faux libertarian Ron Paul Perhaps all the bellowing in the commentariat - one reason the libertarian brand is rejected by 91% of libertarians (Cato survey commissioned from a top independent pollster.)
Then again,many believe that reality can be changed by forceful bellowing. And the entire universe can disappear, if we simply refuse to see it.
This is not the Reason of 50 years ago, not to anyone who was there (as a reader)
Wow, this post is filled with many of the same insights I used to read in Michael Hihn's comments. Sadly, it seems Reason banned him. But I'm happy there are still plenty more anti-NRA libertarians around here. In time I'm confident the rest of the libertarian movement will embrace the Democratic Party's position on guns.
#LibertariansAgainstTheNRA
#BanAssaultWeapons
#GunSense
OBL, you magnificent bastard!
Love it!
You'll run intro all sorts of lies and bullshit on what Heller said, all out of context. The Assault Weapons Ban trumps all that, The NRA was indeed powerless against it.
Hihn was banned solely because he defended libertarian values against the raging aggression here by the alt-right cyber-bullies. How many fuckoffs doers it take? How many debates on how to feed a judge into a wood chipper, head-first or feet-first? When you see "chipper" in so many usernames, THAT is what they glorify. A major cause for the libertarian brand being rejected by 91% of LIBERTARIANS. I'm one of three helping Hihn gather more evidence for a MAJOR lawsuit,. top attorney will handle it for a share of the settlement (no fees)
His latest is to repeal the entire 2A as obsolete, since it's been a few years since we used a citizens militia to defend the security of a free state!!! To be both libertarian and politically wise, repeal would be within an amendment explicitly defending the right of self-defence -- technically unnecessary since 9A already does that.
"Hihn was banned solely because he defended libertarian values against the raging aggression here by the alt-right cyber-bullies."
George likes his chicken spicy.
Says one of the worst bullies on the board.
See yours immediately below genius (smirk)
Oh, dear gods, there's another one? How have I been lucky enough to miss them?
David Nolan - Sock = Hihn
So you fail to challenge what he says .. instead using a childish ad hominem based on your delusions.
Tell uis Sluggo, how the FUCK does it matter WHO posts a supported position. What a chickenshit pussy.
"what *he* says"
George likes his chicken spicy.
buybuydandavis ... Called out as a loser ... FOLDS
Even MORE infantile!
"What a chickenshit pussy"
This is your counter-example of a polite and well-reasoned argument?
I hope it doesn't matter too much, because it must get rough keeping track of which of your alters is currently driving.
CALLING OUT A PSYCHO LIAR, Wizard4160
The psycho lie (Quotes me, LIES what I said)
Bend over (sneer)
The FIRST psycho
Wizard4160 (2nd psycho) Piling on
Chcikenshit evasion
So you fail to challenge what he says .. instead using a childish ad hominem based on your delusions.
Tell uis Sluggo, how the FUCK does it matter WHO posts a supported position. What a chickenshit pussy.
WHAT the losers CANNOT challenge
"Breeding ground for the alt-right"?
It's been sucking ctrl-left cock for most of the last five years.
Your pun is brilliant.
But he is quite accurate on that.
It traces to Ron Paul, who is a founding godfather of the alt-right, says s the southern racist version of states rights is federalism, as an enabler for bullshit like "rogue judges" overturned DOMA ... and the most fascist action of the century, sponsoring a bill that would have banned SCOTUS from even considering any challenges to DOMA.
Can you think of ANYONE who had been denied any defense of Constitutional rights since ... slavery ... except those fucking fags? /sarc
"It traces to Ron Paul, who is a founding godfather of the alt-right"
In case anyone missed these words of wisdom.
THIS ia what buybuydandavis DEFENDS! (vomiting)
How large is your Klavern, chump.
Alt-right be fascists and anti-liberty bigots .. and THIS one is PROUD to be a slug,
Let's play Hihn bingo! Pretty sure this post won the cover-all. Every single logically and factually incorrect assertion, contradiction and talking shrieking point.
Bump stocks make it easier to fire rapidly, but do not increase the weapon's actual rate of fire. As several other commenters have pointed out, there are many techniques for firing rapidly which require either perfectly ordinary items or no additional items at all. Bump firing, with or without a bump stock, may allow more rounds to be fired in a given amount of time, but it also makes it somewhere between difficult and impossible to fire accurately. If someone tries to murder me, I hope he uses a bump stock. Odds are excellent he'll burn through the mag without ever hitting me.
What a PATHETIC loser.
Bend over AGAIN (sneer)
Fortune
"A bump stock, also called a bump-fire stock, is an attachment that makes a semi-automatic weapon ? like an AR-15 rifle ? shoot nearly as fast as fully-automatic machine guns. This accessory replaces the standard stock on a rifle with a piece of plastic or metal molded to the lower end of the gun. This harnesses the gun's natural recoil, allowing it to slide back and forth freely and rapidly and re-cock after each round fired."
Neither Miller (I assume that's what you're referring to with the "1939".) nor Heller support your persistently incorrect assertion. In Miller, the Court declared that the 2A only protected weapons "suitable for militia service". Since the AR15 and many other semi-auto weapons are clearly suitable for militia service, a blanket semi-auto ban is clearly unconstitutional. Scalia said that weapons "in common use" were protected. Semi-auto firearms have been widely used for more than a century, so once again there's clearly no grounds for a blanket ban.
The NRA failed to challenge the AWB for political and tactical reasons, not because of its ironclad constitutionality.
You must be very intelligent, because this is the special kind of stupidity that's only available to the very bright. How can unalienable rights not be absolute? And while I'd agree that the NRA doesn't do a perfect (or sometimes even very good) job of defending individual liberties and fundamental rights, I don't think supporting them is necessarily a "clear violation" of said rights.
Projection, thy name is Hihn. It doesn't matter how many times you repeat your stupidity, it doesn't get any less stupid. Being wrong consistently and for a long time doesn't make you any less wrong.
Really, Congress just needs to declare every American's body a "bullet free zone."
Magic force fields for everyone!
The clear legislative intent is to ban automatics but not semi-automatics, not merely in that particular law, but throughout the legislative history.
Bump stocks effectively create an automatic by a mechanism attached to the trigger. That they cleverly made your finger part of that mechanism does not make it any less a mechanism. That Congress didn't anticipate this work around to the regulation doesn't change their intent. It's about speed of fire and human agency in the choice to fire each bullet.
It's hard to write requirements. They wrote them poorly here.
"The administration probably doesn't have the legal authority to do this."
Maybe. Maybe not. And that's the problem. It's unclear.
This will get challenged and the Supremes will rule.
If in favor, then the clear legislative intent will be given force.
If against, then the Supremes will give their interpretation, likely giving direction for how the law could be written to achieve the clear legislative intent.
This is not marching off people to the ovens. This is working through an imperfect process of codifying legislative intent. Laws are often unclear. They get clarified by actually challenging them. You can't ask for an advisory opinion from the Court.
Semiautos can bump fire. It's not an "illegal technique" or anything. If Congress meant to ban bump firing, ban weapons that can do that, it would have banned semiautos. Bump firing is certainly not the functional equivalent of full auto. And I have not heard of a product being said to include parts not even present within it, let alone the user himself.
In any case the dominant conservative legal philosophy does not claim to recognize legislative intent. And the newest SCOTUS justice is known, perhaps above all else, for his desire to real in administrative overreach. And the Obama ATF, and the present Democratic leadership, have all insisted that the executive does not, in fact, have the legal authority to do this.
Also Congress hardly needs Court advice on how to write a law banning bump stocks. It would be an incredibly straightforward undertaking. The cases where they need the Court's advice on how to redraft a law are those where there is a potential clash between the statute and the Constitution. This they can redraft tomorrow, quite easily. (For instance, just copypaste the new ATF regulation into your bill; whatever devices the former does indeed succeed in specifying as illegal, a statute explicity including that wording will make illegal.)
"Bump firing is certainly not the functional equivalent of full auto."
Bump firing is between normal fire and full auto designed as full auto. We'll see what the Supremes have to say.
"In any case the dominant conservative legal philosophy does not claim to recognize legislative intent."
True enough. I didn't say that it did.
"Also Congress hardly needs Court advice on how to write a law banning bump stocks. It would be an incredibly straightforward undertaking."
The Supremes will rule on the specifics of bump stocks under the current law. Congress will find out if they *need* to ban bumpstocks, or if they are considered already banned under current language.
A weapon is either semi-auto or full auto. Pulling the trigger really fast doesn't change that. Bump firing, with or without a bump stock, is just a method for pulling the trigger faster. This is an idea so simple that even F Troop got it right.
NOW Wizard 1469 says there were bump stocks in F TROOP!!! ,,,,, in the 1860s!!!
REPEATS his ignorance of bump stocks
Fortune
"A bump stock, also called a bump-fire stock, is an attachment that makes a semi-automatic weapon ? like an AR-15 rifle ? shoot nearly as fast as fully-automatic machine guns. This accessory replaces the standard stock on a rifle with a piece of plastic or metal molded to the lower end of the gun. This harnesses the gun's natural recoil, allowing it to slide back and forth freely and rapidly and re-cock after each round fired."68% of all comments here -- defending bump stocks here --- DO NOT KNOW how fast they fire ... or lied.
Correct source
68% of all comments here -- defending bump stocks -- DO NOT KNOW HOW FAST THE FIRE!.
Or are liars.
You have absolutely no fucking idea what you're talking about, regarding how firearms function.
Well reasoned retort!
Bump stocks don't attach anything to the trigger.
What part of SHALL NOT BE INFRINGED don't folks understand?
Probably the "shall." Who the fuck talks like that? Plus back then it was all "?hall not be infringed" and shit.
Damn! Probably right.
All of it, clearly.
What part of Scalia's Heller ruling don't you folks understand?
"At the time" means at ratification. As does bans on "dangerous and unusual weapons" You people are starting to scare me. And you're armed. PLEASE tell me you don't vote!
I'm very pro gun and I couldn't care less. They are a means to circumvent laws against fully automatic weapons and should be illegal.
Yep.
The clear intention and expectation of the legislative history is to ban automatics. One bullet per willful firing.
Making your finger part of an automatic fire mechanism is a clever attempt to circumvent those intentions. Maybe the Supremes agree it does. Maybe not.
And why should automatics be illegal? I am of the opinion that if the police can have it, the civilian population should as well. They are a civilian police force, not an occupying army and should not be equipped any better than the people in the community where they work.
The police are not and occupying army.
"They are a civilian police force."
Next ....
I won't miss bump stocks, BUT READ THE FINE PRINT!
Not only does this effort make possession or manufacture of the stocks illegal, IT WILL REQUIRE CURRENT OWNERS EITHER TO DESTROY ANY THEY OWN OR OBLIGE THEM TO TURN THEM INTO THE GOVERNMENT.
Which has to be the WORST precedent attempted in this never-ending battle to "control" guns by violating the Ninth and Second amendments.
If the Government can assert power to force a turn-in of the stocks, then that will become precedent for future demands that citizens surrender the entire weapon.
Which is why everyone needs to write Congress and the President today, saying you oppose such a ban.
So, you oppose pro-life? And are clueless about Court rulings.
On what basis do you fantasize that the government has no charge to defend LIFE,liberty and the pursuit of happiness.?
Were owners of automatics grandfathered in, or did they have to turn them in?
I would have expected the latter.
In this case, no one has to turn in their semi autos, they just have to turn in their bump stocks for them.
So it's okay to steal some property?
As for full autos (and other NFA items), it was originally possible to keep them, with restrictions only applying to transfers of new and existing machine guns. Over the years, there were several amnesties allowing for registration of existing NFA items. Then the Hughes Amendment banned the sale of any new machine guns to private citizens. Machine guns that were privately owned prior to passage may still be possessed and sold. Making this part of the "Firearms Owners Protection Act" is a bit of irony that I'd savor, if it weren't so stupid. One more reason I don't kneel at the altar of Saint Ronnie.
As for why it's stupid, do you know how many crimes have been committed with legally owned machine guns since passage of the NFA? I'm aware of two. Fun fact: both of those crimes were committed by cops, not private citizens. To the best of my knowledge, exactly zero private citizens have committed any crime using a legally owned machine gun.
But NOT aware of how fast bump stocks fire.
How many legal machine guns are there?
Whether or not bump stocks are the equivalent of an automatic weapon, or indeed whether automatic rifles etc should be subject to regulation and such does or does not run afoul of the 2A is not the most important part of this discussion.
The MOST IMPORTANT idea here is that an administrative agency can declare you to be a felon one day for owning an otherwise benign contraption when 3 times (?) previously it determined said contraption wasn't a fully automatic weapon and that it couldn't classify as such under the law.
Now it is.
This is the RULE OF MEN, not of LAW.
It is perhaps the most important idea the Founders fought a Civil War with England over.
I'm so glad to see that YOU, and whole lot of other people, no longer give a sh&t about the dangers of the RULE OF MEN.
I see you are rather uninformed regarding SCOTUS rulings on 2A
Agree on the regulatory authority. Perhaps. The best solution, morally and politically, is a Constitutional amendment to
1) Assure the right of self-defense (already implied by 9A)
2) Repeal 2A as obsolete. You do realize, right? that we have not used a citizens militia to defend the security of a free state for quite some time now, We libertarians HATE the hypocrites who screech about "original text" and "founders intent" unless it's in-con-veeeeeeeem-yent to their agemda,
"We libertarians" who want to "Repeal 2A as obsolete".
I guess that the Royal We of socks Ellis Wyatt and David Nolan.
Even pomo Reason hasn't come out for repealing the 2A yet.
EVERY can see the paatheric winger lied about my comment
Because I NAILED his sorry ass
HE SAYS WE HAVE NO PROFESSIONAL MILITARY,
Army
Navy
Air Force
Marines
And NO militia even exists
FUCK your "Living Constitution"
And NO militia even exists
??????
wrong. Google "State Defense Force" and tell me there are no militias
There's no CITIZEN militia, Original intent NOT your living constitution.
Which is totally irrelevant anyhow,
As I stated in boldface, " we have not used a citizens militia to defend the security of a free state for quite some time now,".
Original intent. NOT your "living constitution."
"I see you are rather uninformed regarding SCOTUS rulings on 2A"
I've forgotten more about the 2A than you ever knew.
As the SC EXPLICITY said in Cruishank (then endorsed AGAIN in Miller) the right to arms existed PRIOR to the adoption of the Constitution/2A and "doesn't depend on that instrument for its existence".
The militia clause of the 2A is probably the only phrase in the Constitution that actually has ZERO effect.
It neither adds nor subtracts from Congress's power over the militia (ditto for the States).
It was a "consolation prize" to the anti-Federalists who tried to stop the adoption of the Constitution, and tried to amend it to remove the power of the Congress to raise a standing army and return control of the militia's back to the states.
They lost at every turn in that regard.
All we got from the anti-Federalist opposition to the new Constitution was the Bill of Rights. A bill protecting INDIVIDUAL rights.
The militia issues you raise are irrelevant to all of this discussion.
I'll ignore the snippiness. And stick with facts and proof.
You explicitly reject the Founder's intent for a "living constitution." I cite original intent from SCOTUS rulings. And I'll respect you enough to PROVE your source is ?dishonest. Or ignorant.
Do I believe you or Scalia? REASD Cruikshank. That PARAGRAPH says the KKK had engaged in "conspiracy" to deprive the right from blacks,
Miller's RELEVANT part says (by Scalia, to fact-check more easily, link follows)
"At the time" means at ratification. Some say that means "currently." -- which requires ignoring the paragraph! Bans on "dangerous and unusual weapons" also prove them wrong. (Miller cites many sources at ratification)
cont'd
Part 2/3
That's a "living Consrtuition." Do I believe you or Scalia?
(The limitation on protected weapons does NOT infringe on the right, merely defines what the right protects. )
Your source may have ignored (or confused) that Miller has two separate sections, as does Heller, for the same reason. Miller dealt with restrictions on pistols. Then, like Scalia did, the broader right is required for context ? to define the protection is ONLY the modern equivalent of 18tth common weapons.
You REJECT what the founders ratified?. On what authority?. I'll take Scalia.
cont'd
Part 3/3
Was it ratified? When was it amended?
So, you AGREE it was the Founders intent
Then so do you.
Who convinced you, that ANY words in our Constitution can be ignored. When you read the Constitution, Article 5 says how and why you need to amend )
No offense, but I suggest you replace your "living constitution"with ... google "originalism." That's a lot easier than plowing through Scalia and Miller!
Anything else?
An actual cogent argument would be nice. But we won't get that from you so what is the point.
He TOTALLY humiliated you!
And your severe denial can be a serious mental affliction.
Different interpretations of statutory law by different administrations. An inevitable part of the Rule of Law.
That's what SCOTUS does.
As a CHECK on the power of the Executive! (And Legislative)
Check and Balances. THREE co-equal branches.
It needs to get struck down, on separation of powers grounds if nothing else - although it should get whacked on takings clause grounds and second amendment grounds too (I'm not terribly hopeful there). POTUS and his minions - whatever the agency, but in this case the ATF - should NOT be able to unilaterally redefine things to ban them. Allowing POTUS to do that is a horrible, horrible precedent.
Except that they won't stop screaming because we "did something." The only way to guarantee no mass shootings is to ban an confiscate all guns and institute a police state. Until we do that, they'll still keep screaming.
Oh, they'll keep screaming even then. Even if it were seriously attempted, universal confiscation is doomed to failure. Even if someone could wave a magic wand and make every firearm on earth disappear, along with the knowledge of how to make new ones, that would hardly put an end to violence. After all, people managed to kill and injure each other for thousands of years before guns were invented.
I totally agree that it's a bad idea to even toss the grabbers a bone with a bump stock ban. When they're being honest, they freely admit that their proposals are merely first steps. And when those first steps don't have the desired effect, they'll just call for more. I find it hard to believe that they will ever step back and admit it's not working. Failure can only mean we haven't gone far enough!
The only time they're willing to admit they were wrong and repeal something is if it costs the government money (like the Maryland stamping rule that didn't solve a single crime). As long as the burden is borne by someone else, they don't care. That's why the idiotic interstate handgun ban is still on the books. It's absurd that if you have a Texas carry license that is honored by Louisiana that you can't just buy a pistol in Louisiana to begin with.
That's all you've got?
Inconvenient facts (fully documented)
FACT: England's 2nd gun control (1996) saw ONE mass shooting in 22 years
FACT: United States had 317 mass shootings from 1999-2013.
Adjust for population (5:1) and they had 5 shootings in 22 years ... We had 317 in 14 years. Do the math.
Mass Shootings Per year
UK = 0.2 per year
US = 22.6 per year = 11,300% higher (adjusted for population)
Are those YOUR values on "sanctity of human life?"
Inconvenient questions:
1) If teachers are armed ... who will be killed first?
2) MIGHT it be possible that we have so many ARMED bad guys ... BECAUSE our citizenry is so highly armed? Might it work in both directions, like the nuclear arms race did?
3) In Britain, Ireland, Norway, Iceland and New Zealand, officers are unarmed when they are on patrol. WHY? And HOW
4) What happens when two absolute rights are in conflict? Which prevails? Who decides? And why?
NOT advocating gun grabs, just providing the truth.
If your examples covered more than just the US and Britain, you'd have drawn a pretty different conclusion. On a per capita basis, for both death rate and rate of occurrence, we rank below #50 - with "first world" and "developing" countries both above and below us in rates.
In 1910, England and Wales had a murder rate of .81. In 2010, it was 1.14. In that timeframe, they went from effectively no gun control, to incredibly strict gun control, and their homicide rate changed very little - in fact, a decade by decade look shows that (at least when data is available) their homicide rate can't really be attributed to any major policy, because it was incredibly stable for all years that we have data (the record high and low have less than a 1 per 100,000 difference).
Over that same timeframe, the US murder rate started at 4.6, ended at 4.8, and had a high of just over 10 per 100,000, and the fluctuations don't really correlate to the timeline of landmark gun control legislation in the US.
Your inconvenient facts aren't really inconvenient... All they demonstrate is that Brits, for some reason, are unlikely to murder each other, be it individually, or in job lots.
Intentional Homicide Rates (Latest available, UN) Per 100,000 population
5.3 United States
3.0 Europe and Asia (each)
1.7 Canada
0.9 UK
Thank you for playing,
No, thank you for playing. Using UNODC 2016 numbers:
The world as a whole is 6.2.
The Americas as a whole is 16.3
Africa's is 12.5.
Russia is 10.82
The Czech Republic (with the loosest firearm laws in the world after us) is .61
Switzerland (depending on who's stats you use, the #2 or #3 country for firearms ownership) is .54
Yemen (the other competitor for #2) is 6.66
About the only thing you can draw from current UNODC statistics is "No Correlation".
The US has twice (or more - estimates for number of guns have been fairly stable at "about 300,000,000" for over a decade) as many guns per capita as the next country on the list. Our high
Two of the top three countries by gun ownership are below the average - in Switzerland's case WELL below the average - and the third is only slightly above it.
My link proves you wrong.
You link nothing.
I'll add though, that given the EXTREME variance from one estimate to the next, about the only thing that can be said as far as how many guns are out there is that the US has a metric butt ton, probably between 1 and 2 per person.
So you can't get any closer than a 50% margin of error.
As for your questions
1. Assuming that voluntarily armed teachers are equivalent to any other voluntarily armed citizen, and assuming that they choose to engage, you've got roughly a 75% chance that it'll be the next asshole who tries to commit a mass shooting, and a roughly 18% chance that they won't stop the asshole outright, but will reduce the number of innocent lives lost.
2. Australia, the Philippines, and Brazil, with their high numbers of homemade SMGs (some of which are just as good professionally made SMGs) would suggest otherwise. As would the fact that murder and crime rates (both worldwide and internal to the US) don't correlate to gun ownership.
3. Britain has had a low homicide rate since we've been keeping track. The others are all similar, plus their total combined population is less than that of the New York Metrolitan statistical area, spread out over a much larger land area.
4. There are no absolute rights in conflict here. Gun ownership doesn't have any statistically noticeable effect on murder, mass murder, or crime in general, and there's no such thing as a right to feel safe.
You certainly seem to be advocating a gun grab. Either that, or your Google-fu sucks in just the right way to make it seem like you're cherry picking statistics.
PS: "ActualRightWingPatriot" said "guarantee", not reduce, so you didn't actually do anything to disprove his point.
1) Shooter enters ... Number of armed teachers irrelevant ... If he thinks teachers are armed ? and doesn't know which ones, he will kill EVERY in his path. Even if none are armed. Right?
2) You show no causation. And that's not what he asked.
3.) You assume causation in #2. And refuse to accept it here.
You CANNOT know that. Life is the most obvious. All inalienable rights are absolute. Life, 2 packages you cannot name, Liberty and Pursuit of Happjness. Plus a yet-unknown number of unenumerated rights in 9A. Judges do not "invent" rights. They recognize them, for over 500 years. NO right has existed (in law or natural) until declared by a judge or tribunal. ONLY they may do so, as a check against the other two balances. A right can't be recognized until there is a judicial proceeding., per founders intent. 9A says ALL unnamed rights may not be abridged or denied by ANY level of government, did not name a singje one..
How can you conclude that when you don't understand a single question, OR what was responde
Follow the link before slandering me. UN statistics for every country on earth. Now another blunder ?. Cont'd
Page 2/2
WRONG AGAIN!!! Here's what Nolan quoted, and replied to!
Plus, it's stupid, since NOBODY has even mentioned GUARANTEEING non mass shootings.
I'm not Nolan, but these have libertarian concepts for 50 years., and constitutional for over 200,
I cannot resist. What point have YOU made, by not understanding any of the question, and not knowing what he responded to?
(Others may respond to this or further questions. I shall not. I do suggest that ant further comments be both adult and civil)
Have a great day and and enjoy the holidays.
Aaand... It looks like the GOA may very well have the balls to challenge this. Or at least they're talking big about it on their Facebook.
"Bump stocks are modifications that can be attached to a rifle to increase the rate of fire,"
Bump stocks DO NOT increase the rate of fire. A semi-auto rifle can only fire so many rounds per minute regardless of whether the trigger mechanism is being actuated with a finger or bump stock. The ATF evaluated bump stocks and determined they were "accessories." If the increased the rate of fire the ATF would have banned them for converting a semi-auto rifle to full auto which must be licensed and taxed.
Yes, it's legal to own fully auto firearms provided one pays the licensing fees and taxes.
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ANOTHER gun psychio!
Guntard SNEERS at the largest mass shooting in history,
Safe to assume the rest as just another bellowing blowhard
Not that .223 designed to wound crapola again. It was not designed to wound. It was designed to be lighter and faster than previous ammunition because the terminal effects at common engagement ranges was equal to or better than previous generation ammunition, especially with the originally designed bullet shape and rifling twist. A .30-06 bullet has more energy, yes. Its also intended for longer engagement distances, which analysis during and after WW2 showed that you don't really need a bullet that's lethal to 1000 yards when most engagements occur at less than 300 yards.
Would also note that the Soviets and Chinese, who would have been the main targets, didn't carry wounded guys off the field. Medical care, if it got to you at all, would have been from the 2nd echelon coming up. The Soviets didn't give a damn about the wounded.
And jail conservatards -- all fascist thugs like you.
Whether it was "designed to wound" or not is not the point.
Shot for shot I'd prefer the .223/5.56mm to a .30-06 hitting me any day.
There is no substitute for mass and velocity.
If the Las Vegas shooter had used .308 or .30-06 the kill ratio would almost certainly have been higher.