It doesn't need a new law. But the NRA is asking for regulation, not legislation. The ATF should never have ruled that bump fire stocks were outside the bounds of existing laws.
Overall, I'm torn:
--Banning bump fire stocks would not have stopped this guy. He had the commitment and resources to achieve the ends he desired with or without them. He would have acquired automatic weapons eventually, and barring that, he had a pilot's license and two airplanes. Do the math.
--Legislation in general hasn't worked in France, and won't work here.
--Bump fire stocks don't really serve any sort of purpose, but just because something doesn't have a purpose to me (or Bloomberg, Feinstein, Schumer or Guillabrand) doesn't mean it should be banned. Pretty much every gun I own, short of my carry gun, has absolutely no practical purpose. Only one of them currently exists for competition, the rest are for the hell of it.
But:
--Bump fire stocks are clearly designed to skirt automatic weapons regulation...
...but...
--NY/CA-compliant modifications and parts are clearly designed to skirt those states' draconian legislation, and I think they're just fine.
So on the whole, I guess:
--Maybe wait until we're done with the funerals before we start sponsoring bills (ugh), or talking about how their should have been sharpshooters et al (the gunny crowd can be real damn tasteless themselves).
Overall, I'm torn:
--Banning bump fire stocks would not have stopped this guy. He had the commitment and resources to achieve the ends he desired with or without them. He would have acquired automatic weapons eventually, and barring that, he had a pilot's license and two airplanes. Do the math.
--Legislation in general hasn't worked in France, and won't work here.
--Bump fire stocks don't really serve any sort of purpose, but just because something doesn't have a purpose to me (or Bloomberg, Feinstein, Schumer or Guillabrand) doesn't mean it should be banned. Pretty much every gun I own, short of my carry gun, has absolutely no practical purpose. Only one of them currently exists for competition, the rest are for the hell of it.
But:
--Bump fire stocks are clearly designed to skirt automatic weapons regulation...
...but...
--NY/CA-compliant modifications and parts are clearly designed to skirt those states' draconian legislation, and I think they're just fine.
So on the whole, I guess:
--Maybe wait until we're done with the funerals before we start sponsoring bills (ugh), or talking about how their should have been sharpshooters et al (the gunny crowd can be real damn tasteless themselves).
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