Will owners be compensated for their property?
This is what I am most interested in. I would like to think that particular question has been thoroughly vetted . . .
Will owners be compensated for their property?
I see no use for bump stocks unless your up to no good, or want to waste some ammo.
My money well spent
Gun Owners of America to File Suit Against Arbitrarily ATF Bump Stock Ban | GOA News
Will owners be compensated for their property?
I see no use for bump stocks unless your up to no good, or want to waste some ammo.
Ματθιας;140268496 said:So, you see the thousands of people across the nation who own bump stocks as being "up to no good, or want to waste some ammo". Really!?
I'd as soon shoot with my eyes closed than put a bumpstock on my AR. Its banning by Trump doesn't form a blip on my radar.
This will end up in court. the Guzment cannot make you surrender without compensation. what's next?
A "Ban" by regulation is what should make all of us concerned.
Lack of compensation should also make every one of us concerned. My legal education says the regulation will be struck down as an unlawful taking under the 5th amendment.
In 2006, ATF concluded that certain bump-stock-type devices qualified as
machineguns under the NFA and GCA. Specifically, A TF concluded that a device
attached to a semiautomatic firearm that uses an internal spring to harness the force of a
firearm's recoil so that the firearm shoots more than one shot with a single pull of the
trigger is a machinegun. Between 2008 and 2017, however, ATF also issued
classification decisions concluding that other bump-stock-type devices were not
machineguns, primarily because the devices did not rely on internal springs or similar
mechanical parts to channel recoil energy. Decisions issued during that time did not
include extensive legal analysis relating to the definition of"machinegun." ATF
undertook a review of its past classifications and determined that those conclusions did
not reflect the best interpretation of "machinegun" under the NF A and GCA. ATF decided to
promulgate a rule that would bring clarity to the definition of "machinegun"-
specifically with respect to the terms "automatically" and "single
function of the trigger," as those terms are used to define "machinegun."
I have never owned a bump stock but I have owned a .30 carbine and a .45ACP carbine and many times I have saw just how fast I could empty a 30 round mag. I killed a lot of tin cans and dirt banks. Why was that up to no good? As for the cost I worked and and bought my own shells so I don't see that the cost is any bodies business. The only shell I have ever wasted was one time I dropped a .22LR in a foot of soft snow and never did fine it. Larry
Never said wasting ammo was a bad thing. Have done some of that myself. I over reached saying the "up to no good" thing.
There's only been one use of a bump stock that I know of that was for no good. Should of said don't know what good they are for (ok, fun aside).
Could somebody school me on what they are used for?
Hunting, maybe trying to bring down a group of flying quail?
Target shooting, better have a big target.
Bringing out the manly-man that full auto shooting does? I know all about that, having carried a M16 for 18 months. Glad uncle Sam was footing the bill for that ammo.
Never said wasting ammo was a bad thing. Have done some of that myself. I over reached saying the "up to no good" thing.
There's only been one use of a bump stock that I know of that was for no good. Should of said don't know what good they are for (ok, fun aside).
Could somebody school me on what they are used for?
Hunting, maybe trying to bring down a group of flying quail?
Target shooting, better have a big target.
Bringing out the manly-man that full auto shooting does? I know all about that, having carried a M16 for 18 months. Glad uncle Sam was footing the bill for that ammo.
A "Ban" by regulation is what should make all of us concerned.
Lack of compensation should also make every one of us concerned. My legal education says the regulation will be struck down as an unlawful taking under the 5th amendment.
I see no use for bump stocks unless your up to no good, or want to waste some ammo.