If they can afford to feed it I don't care if a law abiding citizen wants a machine gun.Very respectfully, what makes it different? Look at this from the antis point of view. All guns are evil, no discussion, no compromise. They want to ban guns. Period. If they could, they would.
The 40 round Glock magazine is just the flavor of the day, last month it was AR rifles. Next month it will be something else: silencers, .50 BMG ammo; remember when Glocks were a threat because they didn't show up on x-rays?
NYS already has a 7 round magazine limit for handguns. Surprise! A career criminal violated the law. IMHO what we have here is a social problem; the lack of criminal punishment for felons. If the assailant in NYC last week was arrested carrying, but not using his 40 round Glock, he most probably would have been booked but released without bail. No much in the way of deterrence from his point of view. The solution? Criminals should go to prison for lengthily sentences for all gun crimes.
In conclusion, I don't own a high capacity Glock magazine, a bump stock, a pistol brace AR, a suppressor or many of the other marvelous inventions out there. However, I see no rational need to prohibit my law abiding fellow citizens from possessing them.
I'd mildly suggest we will lose very often when we pick the wrong fights.We will continue to lose as long as there are those among us willing to compromise.
So...as someone who actually owned a gun prior to the GCA '68, I need to say that right now we are in a golden age of firearms ownership. Concealed carry licensing is widely available, in some places without any permit required. You can buy firearms on the internet and pick them up locally; you can buy ammunition and reloading tools/components online with no restriction (except a in very few places) and on and on. That was most assuredly was NOT true for the 70s, 80s, and 90s. Why the paranoia? Firearms access has expanded, not contracted, and even with last year's bump in murder rates, we still enjoy murder rates far less than those of the 70s, 80s, and early-to-mid 90s.
I'm unwilling to screw all of this up over 40, 50, to 100 round magazines.
Typical feel good liberal legislation to say "hey look! we did something! we were thinking about the children!"
It was 30 years ago - I've slept since then.The MP-5 magazine holds 30 rounds exactly. Just saying.
I posed these questions almost 48 hours ago, and no one has answered them:
For the no-compromise never-give-an-inch folks on here...should there be no gun laws at all, since criminals don't obey them?
And politically, would that be a wise or practical position to advance?
And the best one of all - 'If it saves just ONE life'Do-something-itis. It's a major plague in all the democracies of the world.
And I'd strongly state that we lose EVERY time we compromise. The other side does NOT compromise. Their idea of compromise is US not giving up EVERYTHING they want right now.I'd mildly suggest we will lose very often when we pick the wrong fights.
And I'd strongly state that we lose EVERY time we compromise. The other side does NOT compromise. Their idea of compromise is US not giving up EVERYTHING they want right now.
Law-abiding citizens aren't the problem, until they are. Like 'ole Timmy.When one guy can rent a truck and blow up a building, using an improvised explosive device, I not going to fret if a law abiding American citizen wants to own a magazine that holds 40-50 rounds.
Name one time the anti-2nd Amendment crowd has compromised in any way other than propose something draconian and then merely accept a lesser infringement on our gun rights.That's not my experience. No one gets everything they want.
CCW laws they lost the vote. They didn't compromise - they got beat. Not the same thing.Sure!
Do you suppose anti-gun folks did NOT want to stop CCW laws, internet ammo/component sales, trading sites like gunbroker, gun shows, etc.? Have they stopped of those yet? Only in limited places that were already more restrictive than most of America.