Posted: 5/4/2012 1:28:08 AM EDT
| If I was to move back to NY, am I able to bring a pre-ban AR and dated pre-ban magazine 20-30 rounds? Would I have to register it? |
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So you can "import" one? What does that mean? NYC has registration laws the rest of the State doesn't. (there are some additional restrictions in a few Cities like Albany) If you've got a "Pre-Ban" AR-15 (or any other pre-ban weapon) they are good to go in NYS. If they were made after 9/14/1994 then the must comply with the provisions seen in the now expired Federal Assault Weapon Ban. Magazines: Pre 9/14/94 have no capacity limit. Post, may not exceed 10 rounds. Please don't ask what/if/but questions, read the tacked threads on top. We also have a "No Legal questions on Friday" Policy here, but since you're out of State, I'll let it go. [:// |
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Quoted: unless you have to move back for work with a HUGE increase in pay, I wouldn't. I laugh at people who say they're moving to NY with 35-50% increase in gross pay. At the end of the day after taking into consideration moving expenses, real estate/rental costs, auto/home insurance rates, utility costs, food prices, fuel prices, NYS/local sales taxes and NYS income taxes etc. they're probably going to net less than they're currently making or close to it. |
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i regret every day moving back to NY. if it wasnt for my wife, id still be in colorado. Get a GF in CO and move back there. Problem solved.
I shouldnt shit on my state so much, i do like it here. I just hate how much big brother has to be up our ass. |
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New York, minus the state assembly and all their stupid laws and taxes, would be a great place to live. Amen. I love the climate and geography. I hate the idiots. Roger that. Driven all around the country on various vacations over the years. NY is one beautifully frustrating place to live. Just about anything you could want to do within easy driving distance. If you do move back here. Welcome Back!!!!! |
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Not to mention: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/slaves_of_new_york_yO0DTfKbiTExNWFBYd3oeL Slaves of New York - State is dead last in liberties New York's notoriously high taxes and public spending, combined with restrictive "nanny" policies, make it the "least free" state in the country, a new study has found. The Empire State ranked 50th in George Mason University's biannual "Freedom in the States" rankings. "New York has by far the highest taxes in the country," the study reads, citing steep levies on property, income and corporations compared to other states. The high taxes, in turn, fuel massive spending, according to the analysis by George Mason's Mercatus Center, a libertarian think tank. "Spending on public welfare, hospitals, electric power, transit, employee retirement . . . are well above national norms," concludes the report, which covers the 2007-through-2009 period. Ranking worst in the categories of economic freedom and fiscal policy, New York also landed near the bottom for the categories of personal freedom (48th) and regulatory policy (40th). |
