Posted: 2/7/2013 8:02:21 AM EDT
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Every time gun grabbers move to reduce guns in any way they accomplish flooding the country with huge amounts out of panic. Maybe they are the good guys after all.
logic reversed < #guns x demand + panic = more guns sold. Something like that. |
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I don't see any good in any of it. I can't go shooting without considering how I'm going to replace the ammo weather it's finding factory ammo or reloading components. Back orders for every damn thing you can think of from rifles themselves to the most benign accessory. Not knowing even if I should buy anything else gun or accessory wise because if they make it illegal it'll be functionally useless for anything but squirreling away somewhere in case of some stupid SHTF scenario. We won't be able to take it to a range, or hunting or even talk about it, you never know who might see or hear.
So no, I don't think they are any good at all. Sorry. |
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The grabbers are relentless, dumb as a bunch of rats but relentless.
I see the gun community as a brick wall, that won't act sooner, won't counter these pricks but stands firm when it's attacked. We need to watch it, these asshats have been steady putting chips in the wall. I'd love to see a repeal the NFA ban movement. If we get the White House in 3 years and 11.3 months as well as the Senate, and House it needs to happen. Just to give these humps a different target. |
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I see the gun community as a brick wall, that won't act sooner, won't counter these pricks but stands firm when it's attacked. Good analogy. Given that the best defense is a good offense, we should start moving the wall closer and closer to them. Make them work to defeat a never-ending stream of pro-2A legislation. We need our own "for the children" advertising. Get the Fudds in the fight. |
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Quoted:
Plus they reward hoarders, who can now sell their other purchases of guns, magazines and ammunition for a premium. Except us hoarders don't know how to let go of the stuff in case we ever "need" it. Oh, and if we do sell something, we have to replace it with two of something else. |
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Quoted:
I see the gun community as a brick wall, that won't act sooner, won't counter these pricks but stands firm when it's attacked. Good analogy. Given that the best defense is a good offense, we should start moving the wall closer and closer to them. Make them work to defeat a never-ending stream of pro-2A legislation. We need our own "for the children" advertising. Get the Fudds in the fight. Thank you. Legislative aggression would help us a ton, provided we had the conscientious to push it. That's what I want to see and my post was about. The fudds will come along, there are alot less of them in the last decade. We'll need them as well, some NRA mailings about silencers, hearing protection and the same flyers being left out at the local gun clubs and Cabelas will fix that. |
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Let's say they could pass a ban no grandfathering and everyone complys (just for instance). All that money being thrown into the market and nothing to show for it. .gov rich you poor, just the way they like it. Sounds like the hail mary of socialism. I shouldn't even respond. A) It ain't happening. B) That's why we have the second. The shitstorm that would happen isn't wanted by this goverment nor china. Nice and easy, that's the game plan. |
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Every time gun grabbers move to reduce guns in any way they accomplish flooding the country with huge amounts out of panic. Maybe they are the good guys after all. logic reversed < #guns x demand + panic = more guns sold. Something like that. They are not good, just laughably incompetent at their gun grabbing schemes. I think that the 1994 AWB dramatically increased semi automatic rifle ownership and increased the prevalence of a pro-2nd-amendment culture. Every time a ban threat is made, more people arm themselves. In most other countries, they didn't try to ban guns, instead they had guns registered and licensed. Over time, the bureaucratic mess dramatically reduces gun ownership and gun culture--and with a majority of weapons being registered, at that point, confiscation becomes relatively easy. The American Left started banning guns without implementing universal registration first and it has backfired. I think that the cat is out of the bag now, and even the few most liberal states like NY and CA, I don't think that 2nd amendment restrictions are going to make it much further in the immediate future. I think that the NY registration/ban is going to fail just like the CA assault weapons registration failed in the 1990's. The real thing to watch out for right now is registration. I think that the current "gun trafficking" legislation is heading in that direction. The entire premise of keeping guns out of the hands of former felons is flawed IMO. Once a prisoner has served his time and is released from prison, he should regain his constitutional rights. If he is too dangerous to touch a gun, he needs to remain locked up. |