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Government United States

'Ghost Gun' Loophole Leads US Justice Dept to Propose New Definition of 'Firearm' (upi.com) 301

America's Justice Department proposed a new rule Friday to update the definition of "firearm" for the first time since 1968, in an effort to close the so-called "ghost gun" loophole.

UPI reports: Attorney General Merrick Garland said the modernized definition would require retailers to perform background checks on customers before selling some ready-made kits that allow people to build their own guns. Such guns are known as "ghost guns" because they don't have serial numbers and can't be traced. "Criminals and others barred from owning a gun should not be able to exploit a loophole to evade background checks and to escape detection by law enforcement," Garland said...

Under the proposed rule, manufacturers must include a serial number on the firearm frame or receiver in a kit. Firearm dealers also must add serial numbers to 3D-printed guns or other un-serialized firearms they take into their inventory.

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'Ghost Gun' Loophole Leads US Justice Dept to Propose New Definition of 'Firearm'

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  • SUPER illegal (Score:5, Insightful)

    by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @03:42PM (#61363244)

    It's already illegal for a criminal to own a gun. This rule is designed to put 80% lower manufacturers out of business and restrict people's ability to build their own AR-15s, timed before the Democrat's AR-15 ban. The vast majority of gun violence is perpetrated with stolen handguns, a fact that seems to be purposefully ignored time and again.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      Gun violence is the excuse. A well-regulated militia is the reason.

      Don't them drag you down to their level.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Ostracus ( 1354233 )

        Calling the American people "A well-regulated militia" is like calling Chef Boyardee "a good cook".

        • Re:SUPER illegal (Score:5, Insightful)

          by chuckugly ( 2030942 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:25PM (#61363372)

          Well that's sort of the point. In order for the militia to function properly (be well regulated) they have to have proper equipment as a fundamental first step. That's exactly what the 2nd is saying. That, and that the existence of such a properly functioning group of armed citizens is essential to the survival of a free state.

          It's fair to disagree with that, but that's what it says.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Wouldn't it make more sense to organise the militia and train them before handing them the weapons?

            Like how in the military they don't just give you a howitzer on day one, they figure out if you can be trusted with it and then give you instruction first.

            • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

              by rickb928 ( 945187 )

              "Wouldn't it make more sense to organise the militia and train them before handing them the weapons?"

              Yes it would, save that if you require training before permitting firearm ownership, you'll soon find out that training will cease when the government no longer can tolerate your ownership of firearms.

              'shall not be infringed' is the precise wording. We've allowed common-sense and not-so-common sense restrictions. Many ought to be rescinded. Not all. But many.

              • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                You can't separate the "shall not be infringed" part from the "well regulated" part though. Also it's already been established that "arms" has limits too, e.g. no nukes in private ownership. Background checks and prohibitions on criminals owning guns have also been found to be constitutionally valid.

                Clearly it's not an absolute licence.

          • Well, it's also fair to say that the second amendment is an impenetrable grammatical travesty where honest people can have vastly different interpretations of a single sentence. It sucks when committees craft language.

            I read it as a well-regulated militia (meaning conforming to the laws and restrictions in place) is critical, and THE PEOPLE (not a PERSON) have the right to keep and bear arms as part of that militia.

            • Two factors lessen that argument. First, the constitution was written by armed revolutionaries, and logic indicates they intended to preserve the ability of future generations to keep the power of arms in the hands of individual citizens rather than the government. Second, they included other provisions in the constitution indicating that they expected some of the most powerful weapons of the time, namely warships, to be owned by private citizens. That’s why there is a reference to letters of marqu
            • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

              by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @06:05PM (#61363672)
              Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Calling the American people "A well-regulated militia" is like calling Chef Boyardee "a good cook".

          When it wasn't being used as part of a term of political art to distinguish the general population, with their own guns and skills but no permanent government employment or rank, from the "select militia" - part-timers with ongoing enlistment, rank, officers, organization, etc., the "well-regulated" part referred to being in good tune/adjustment and able to function well.

          A well-regulated clock kept accurate ti

        • Your comment is ironic given that chef Hector Boiardi was a good chef.

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]

        • If the federal government gets to decide who is a member of the "well regulated militia" then the states cannot build a militia without the permission of the federal government, a situation the 2nd Amendment was enacted to avoid. The right to keep and bear arms is protected for all people so that the states are able to pick from the people those suited for a militia.

          Let us assume that the US Constitution protects only the states' authority to build a militia. Further assume that this isn't some oversight

      • Re:SUPER illegal (Score:5, Informative)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:00PM (#61363300)

        In 2019, there were 39,773 gun deaths in America. Most were suicides. Of the 14,861 classified as homicides, this many are reliably known to have been committed with ghost guns: 0.

        Perhaps the politicians and bureaucrats should instead focus on things that actually matter.

        Chicago has one of the highest gun homicide rates in America. 80% of poor kids in Chicago get their water from lead pipes, and they have blood lead levels twice the national norm. Lead is a neurotoxin that causes reduced intelligence and violent anti-social behavior.

        But it costs money to stop poisoning kids while banning stuff is free, so whatever.

        • "committed with ghost guns: 0" - A classic politician act is to pretend to do something, while actually doing sweet blue all. So banning ghost guns is a perfect political act. Anyhoo, ghost or not, the US has a constitution, is a Federation and not a Republic and some states (about a dozen) actually care enough about it to resist Federal overreach and Republican creep.
          • Re:SUPER illegal (Score:4, Insightful)

            by Entrope ( 68843 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:19PM (#61363356) Homepage

            The point of banning ghost guns isn't to reduce crime, or even to solve it after the fact. It's to disarm the people who might stand up for the Constitution.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              I mean, it literally says a "well regulated militia". Unregulated weapons with no background checks seem to be the opposite of that.

              • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

                This is the problem when you take things out of context. Thankfully, SCOTUS wasn't so shortsighted.

                "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

                • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                  That just raises the obvious question: is a well regulated necessary for the security of a free state?

                  Many other states seem to get buy without one, and I can't see how it would have helped at e.g. the Capitol back in January.

                  • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

                    It can easily be argued one way or the other, but it is what it is right now. And, if people don't like what the founding fathers wrote, they gave us the opportunity to amend it. That won't be so easy (nor should it be) because according to WaPo, only 1 in 5 Americans want it repealed.

              • Re: SUPER illegal (Score:4, Insightful)

                by TomWinTejas ( 6575590 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @06:25PM (#61363708)
                Sweet Jesus, please learn history for all of our sakes. Regulated in 1789 did not mean restricted by laws.

                A well stocked refrigerator, being necessary to feed a family, the right of the People to store food shall not be infringed.

                The shall not be infringed part is rather clear, no matter what mental gymnastics you fools wish to perform.
                • So what happens when a well stocked refrigerator is no longer necessary to feed a family? Does that not render the rest of your statement moot as well?

              • When our founders wrote the Constitution, the word "regulated" did NOT mean "tightly constrained by laws and rules enforced by armies of anonymous unelected government bureaucrats". The word "regulated" generally was used as in "to make regular". Mechanical clocks back then that were accurate were said to be "regular" and were sometimes sold as "regulators". When the founders wrote the interstate commerce clause, it was obvious to everybody that the Constitution was requiring the federal government to assur

          • >>> A classic politician act is to pretend to do something, while actually doing sweet blue all.

            Otherwise known as the "Politicians Syllogism" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        • by kackle ( 910159 )

          80% of poor kids in Chicago get their water from lead pipes

          Eh, maybe that's a contributing factor, but I think it's much more about "No dad, no chance."

          • What if that contributes to no dad?

            • What if that contributes to no dad?

              Bingo. Selfish anti-social behavior like abandoning your kids is exactly what heavy-metal neurotoxins cause.

              Impact of blood lead levels on maternal quality of life [sciencedirect.com]

              To be fair, the link correlates family dysfunction with maternal lead levels, but the dads come from the same communities and had similar exposure.

              • by kackle ( 910159 )
                Yeah, maybe. I would think they would be able to statistically differentiate "single-parent households with lead piping" from "single-parent households without lead piping", and then count. Then again, I doubt such a study has been done.

                Speaking of statistics and Chicago, you may like this collection. [heyjackass.com]
            • by kackle ( 910159 )
              Yeah, maybe. I would think they would be able to statistically differentiate "single-parent households with lead piping" from "single-parent households without lead piping", and then count. Then again, I doubt such a study has been done.
        • Agree, If we could pass that infrastructure bill there's some $110B for the replacement of lead pipes. School improvements and public transport improvement too. Will do far more than this change will.

        • To say about the water quality in Chicago, right? He's Attorney General, not God King.

          Also that Biden has a plan to fix those pipes currently held up by Republicans and two right wing Senators who are basically Republicans?
        • BINGO! Politicians always go after the easy meaningless stuff because their vote base doesn't know any better. Politicians stay away from hard problems because they can get their votes with empty virtue signaling gestures, "tougher sentences for child molesters", "rewrite all laws and replace the pronouns to gender neutral", "rename this or that" - ignorant people eat it up and consider these things actual accomplishments. "Raise people out of poverty", "provide affordable education", "decrease unemployment

        • by chill ( 34294 )

          I agree the proposed actions are going to be ineffective [reason.com] and most likely unConstitutional. But your argument uses the weasel words "reliably know" to attempt to exaggerate your position. It doesn't, it makes you appear to be a zealot and your arguments will be lost on anyone who isn't already in agreement.

          "Forty-one percent, so almost half our cases we're coming across are these 'ghost guns'," said Carlos A. Canino, the Special Agent in charge of the ATF Los Angeles Field Division

          https://abc7.com/5893043/ [abc7.com]

          41% isn't 0. This isn't a complete political misdirection, as this is an issue law enforcement has actually complained about. That doesn't change the fact that the only impact thi

    • Re: SUPER illegal (Score:5, Insightful)

      by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @03:51PM (#61363274)
      US department of justice does not get to Define a firearm. That definition exists in 18 USC chapter 44 when they passed the gun control act of 1968. Which, btw already had a provision to build your own gun. Why? Because the 10th amendment forbids them from doing this. They only could regulate commerce and building your own gun is not interstate commerce. This is going to backfire for them in huge ways. They might end up with SCOTUS throwing out the entire 18 USC chapter 44 regarding gun contol based on. 10A violation. If you cant get a bump stock ban to stick via executive privilege, whst makes them think something more 10A violating is going to stick? There is only one procedure available, and thats constitutional amendment.
      • Re: SUPER illegal (Score:3, Interesting)

        by mrchew1982 ( 2569335 )
        It almost makes me wonder if that was the plan all along.... "Oops, we have to start over because of that evil NRA" and "think of the children" etc. Gun free zones are the least safest place on earth. Mass casualties almost never happen in Texas because *someone* is going to shoot you in quick order.
        • I've only heard of one mass shooting taking place at a gun store or convention, and that was in February.

          https://www.independent.co.uk/... [independent.co.uk]

        • Re: SUPER illegal (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Frank Burly ( 4247955 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:22PM (#61363364)

          Mass casualties almost never happen in Texas because *someone* is going to shoot you in quick order.

          I guess even the definition of "almost never" is bigger in Texas. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

          It reminds me of the "You'll never see someone try shit at a shooting range" argument (also in Texas). https://www.nbcnews.com/news/u... [nbcnews.com]

          I'm not saying every proposed gun control measure is a good idea. But like the conservative arguments against addressing smoking, air pollution, health care costs, global warming, and covid, there is no acknowledgment of a problem--only a deep resentment of the proposed solution.

          It's also worth noting (contra GP) that the DOJ does have some say in what constitutes a firearm under 18 USC 44 section 921(a)(4)(B)

          (B) any type of weapon (other than a shotgun or a shotgun shell which the Attorney General finds is generally recognized as particularly suitable for sporting purposes) by whatever name known which will, or which may be readily converted to, expel a projectile by the action of an explosive or other propellant, and which has any barrel with a bore of more than one-half inch in diameter;

          (Though I haven't looked into the full scope of the AG's discretion or whether the DOJ's 'ghost gun' would properly fall within it.)

          • I believe that's part of the definition of a weapon of mass destruction, not a firearm. Interestingly, both 4th of July fireworks and the mortars that loft them into the air fit the definition of a weapon of mass destruction.

            • These statutes demand a closer reading than I am willing to give at this point, but I believe there was a recently a case about whether bump-stocks count as destructive devices (if you're looking for a nuanced discussion). Having said that, I don't think my lazy Saturday interpretation is useful or incorrect:

              (3) The term “firearm” means (A) any weapon (including a starter gun) which will or is designed to or may readily be converted to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive . . . or (D) any destructive device.

              (4) The term “destructive device” means— . . .
              (B) any type of weapon (other than a shotgun or a shotgun shell which the Attorney General finds is generally recognized as particularly suitable for sporting purposes). . .

              For the determined: Always look for the exception to the exception!

          • by ghoul ( 157158 )
            The point of the second amendment is that if the govt is getting too big for its britches, the common public have guns to overthrow the govt. Whenever you see the govt talking of gun control its a sign of guilty conscience that the people in power feel what they are doing is onerous to trigger a revolution.
            • I understand that a lot of conservatives say they believe that the Second Amendment was to allow an insurrection by citizens, but I believe Vinson, Burger, and Bork (to name three conservative jurists) believed that it was exclusively to safeguard the state militias--I suppose potentially against Federal tyranny, but possibly just to avoid the power inherent to a standing army. The Second Amendment originally applied only to the Federal government--so the states could do as they wished in this regard (stil

      • They only could regulate commerce and building your own gun is not interstate commerce.

        I'm pretty sure there's lots of things that aren't interstate commerce that the federal government regulates. Controlled substances, for example. Or what exactly did you mean by that?

        • Re: SUPER illegal (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:32PM (#61363408) Homepage Journal

          In 2005 controlled substances became defined as interstate commerce. More specifically, if you grow marijuana for personal use and it never leaves your land, it's still interstate commerce. Granted, it wasn't interstate commerce back in the 1790s, but it retroactively became so.

          • What exactly prevents the federal government from making an analogical decision in case of other goods?
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              Nothing and they have. The interstate commerce loophole is the most widespread and blatant way the US government ignores the constitution.
        • The controlled substance act is in fact a 10A violation. Why do you think we had the 18th amendment and not just bullshit laws passed by congress? Back then they knew it was never enumerated to the federal government. The only reason the controlled substance act is still standing is because nobody challenged it based on the fact the powers were never enumerated. But again, commerce clause wiggle room. Pharmaceuticals are interstate commerce.
      • It's a calculated strategy. First, pass a law that will stand no chance of surviving a Constitutional Challenge. Next, push a strong narrative about how this is because of all the Conservatives in the Court. Finally, use this as political leverage to support Stacking the Court. Then the Dems will have control of all three branches of government.

        The only thing they'll be missing at that point is a Supermajority in the Legislative Branch.

      • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

        They only could regulate commerce and building your own gun is not interstate commerce

        That makes a lot of sense, but hasn't SCOTUS strongly disagreed since Wickard v. Filburn (1942), and re-asserted throughout the years, e.g. Gonzales v. Raich (2005)?

        AFAIK there is no possible human activity which isn't interstate commerce. Did you just fart? Then you just impacted the interstate market for canned farts.

        • These people live in a fantasy world were the anti-gun lobby (an actually small group) has convinced them that a super majority of the public is against any sort of gun ownership. And for some reason, the politicians did not spend even an hour at a gun store last summer. The number of first time gun buyers last year dominated all gun sales.
      • To be fair, it looked to me (IANAL) like the major change WRT making guns (which is not the same as manufacturing them in GCA -speak) is the definition of 80% kits as "readily convertible" and thus subject to serialization etc, and the inclusion of AR upper halves as "frames" instead of just the lower half.

        Lots of other fiddly changes but those seemed the big one, along with some record keeping changes.

        • Readily convertible?? Have you not built one? The tools required cost more than a black market completed gun. You need a jig ($300) you need a a handheld high end router ($140) an endmill specially made for that end mill ($60), a drill press ($150+), a block vice ($100), and a shop-vac ($100) all so you can convert a $100 80% lower into a $40 part.
      • by larwe ( 858929 )

        They only could regulate commerce and building your own gun is not interstate commerce.

        Selling an 80% lower is, unless the seller and recipient both live in the same state, interstate commerce. It's going to be interesting to see how this rules revision impinges on those "2A sanctuary" laws that are springing up around the country. This whole thing, like almost anything that circles through the ATF, is packed with edge cases and fuzzy situations. Despite the fact that the press release claims they are clarifying what can "readily" be made into a gun, I don't really get any clearer sense of de

    • Re:SUPER illegal (Score:5, Informative)

      by technothrasher ( 689062 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:01PM (#61363302)
      This is more about the 80% Glocks than the 80% AR-15s. I've built up both. The AR-15s take a bit of work to finish, since you have to mill out a significant amount of metal. 80% is about right. But the Glock copies are just complete bullshit about being 80%. It takes around an hour with a couple of hand tools to build one up and be ready to shoot. With a bit of practice, I suspect you could get that down to under 10 minutes. They're about 98% complete. Either you let people buy firearms without a background check, or you don't. But there's no way you can pretend that these Glock kits aren't background check free firearms through the mail.
    • A background check when you build your own AR-15. If the very loose checks we do for a firearm purchase run somebody out of business I'm pretty sure they should be run out of business.

      That said, the left and the Dems in general should drop gun control. It's a losing issue. It's impossible to even have a discussion on the topic. There are better ways to save lives in America.
  • by mosb1000 ( 710161 ) <mosb1000@mac.com> on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:12PM (#61363334)

    Why do they think they can just slap the word loophole on something and everyone with just go along with making it illegal.

    • It worked with "gun show loophole".

      There is no gun show loophole, but the words are scary enough that gun shows are now banned in my region. The last few years before the total ban was sad. There were no guns except for some rare collectibles. You could get accessories like scopes and cases, but no guns. It was my choice for buying ammo in bulk. I'd always stock up on a few thousand rounds of each caliber I used whenever the gun show came around. Now I can't even do that.

  • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:19PM (#61363354)

    It'll never work, there are far too many guns in the US already and it's a unique cultural issue for us. The culture I would say is part of the real issue but you cannot legislate that away. It's also very true that a good majority on the farther left, socialists, anarchists and many progressives are actually pro to ok with guns.

    If Democrats were smarter about this they would lowkey drop the issue and continually focus on the socioeconomic issues at the root of most crime. Drop the drug war, fix some of the perverse incentives in the education system, pass a universal healthcare reform, all these things will reduce crime long term, shootings included. Even the infrastructure bill will likely lead to a reduction in crime.

    Gun control is not winning them any new voters, anyone in favor of the issue is still going to vote for them without these measures on the platform and it would probably end up netting them a lot of "moderate" conservatives and independents.

    • Use UBI to solve this. Every month when you get your UBI check you hae to hand in a handgun - no questions asked. You can break into gun owners houses to get the gun and have immunity for the act as long as you turn the gun in. Crowdsourced gun control
    • Why are all these things that other countries have done, too hard for America? How do you square that with American exceptionalism?
      • Why? REALLY? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by tiqui ( 1024021 ) on Sunday May 09, 2021 @02:27AM (#61364596)

        Just because other countries take nosedives into various forms or Marxism and totalitarianism, we're not obliged to.

        We have gun ownership, in part, because we value the individual, as an individual. Societies that disarm their people clearly do not trust their people, and are explicitly placing the value of the individual and his/her right to self defense below other values. Not a single nation on Earth has been able to eliminate criminals and criminality - so by disarming their people, they are actually only disarming their best and most-civilized people (who were unlikely to use those arms for ill purposes anyway) while leaving them vulnerable to the violent criminal elements they have failed to disarm, and THAT is a rather bold statement-by-actions about who the priorities are on, whether the dumbed-down populations (usually educated by those very same governments) notice it or not.

        Incidentally: I'm rather proud that we're exceptional enough that no actual goose-stepping fascist/totalitarian regime has ever arisen here, precisely because we're an armed population - a statement many nations with gun control cannot make. In fact, we've had to come and clean-out the goose-steppers from some of those nations whose people love to pretend to be superior. Oh, and our friends in the UK should remember that at the start of the last world war, their disarmed population was so ill-equipped to stand against the Germans that they had to turn to America for guns - and all across the USA average Americans were implored to donate/sell hunting rifles and other firearms to the Brits and many were shipped to the UK in a program coordinated by FDR and Churchill. Had our population been as disarmed, the UK could not have turned to us for the needed firearms at that early time in the war and the UK might have fallen. As long as we, the individuals of America are armed, our nation will be sufficiently free that we can come and save your butts from your superior systems again when needed...

        • Re:Why? REALLY? (Score:4, Insightful)

          by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Sunday May 09, 2021 @04:26AM (#61364770)
          It's not just cleaning up guns though, it's everything. Climate change? too hard. Health care? too hard (who knew?). Building a wall? not even close. High-speed rail? Move to China if you want that, you Marxist. Is anyone really happy with crumbling infrastructure?

          I actually think America can do hard things. And I think it's unpatriotic to say they can't.
  • by HotNeedleOfInquiry ( 598897 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:28PM (#61363386)
    Just like pilots are allowed to build their own airplane, subject to FAA regulations, and amateur radio operators could build their own transmitters, subject to FCC regulation, firearms enthusiasts are able to build any firearm that they would otherwise be permitted to own, subject to BATF regulation. In all three cases, citizens could do these things in the name of education and research. In terms of homebuilt guns, BATF regulations are quite clear that the firearm built is not to be sold, distributed or otherwise given to others. Likewise, a machine shop cannot do the work for someone else taking possession of the firearm. It's the flagrant violation of this rule that's the problem.
    • by habig ( 12787 )

      Adding to this, if you're building a gun from parts: the receiver counts as a firearm. If you want to build a gun from parts, and buy a receiver: it's got a SN, you have to obey whatever rules there are for buying a gun (BG checks, licensing, waiting period, whatever your locality requires) to buy that part. Without a receiver, you don't have a gun: because the most harm it could cause is if you threw it at someone.

      I'd never even heard of this "ghost gun" scary phrase before very recently. As is often th

    • It's the flagrant violation of this rule that's the problem.

      Wrong.

      It's the flagrant violation of the Constution by our own fucking leaders that's the problem.

      What do you do with people who perform "flagrant violations" of the law?

      You go after THEM and put them in fucking prison. You do NOT punish 100+ innocent responsible citizens to fix that.

      This is nothing more than a bullshit gun grab to disarm a nation, done by Democrats. I just hope there are enough Democrats who are also responsible gun owners that they can also work to put a stop to this.

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:28PM (#61363388)

    After a 47 year 'war on drugs'
    you can't keep drugs off the streets,
    you can't keep drugs out of the schools,
    you can't keep drugs out of prisons.

    Yet, you want me to disarm myself and trust
    you can keep guns away from criminals?

  • by c_spencer100 ( 714310 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:33PM (#61363410)
    Just yesterday a 6th grade girl brought a gun to school and shot 3 people. Please tell me how banning "Ghost Guns" or Universal Background Checks would have prevented this. We don't have a gun problem - we have a mental health and violence problem.
    • We don't have a gun problem - we have a mental health and violence problem.

      If a 6th grade girl can easily get access to a gun and shoot 3 people, you have a mental health, violence and gun problem.

    • by ghoul ( 157158 )
      Just imagine if the gymnasts being didled by their coach had access to guns in 6th grade. An armed society makes for a polite society.
  • As Expected... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by IonOtter ( 629215 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @04:39PM (#61363422) Homepage

    ...everyone is missing the point.

    The entire "Ghost Gun" issue is a complete fabrication, pun intended.

    The ORIGINAL POINT of making guns out of plastic, and using home fabricators to make gun parts, was to force the world to confront the disparity in copyright law.

    Yes, you heard that right.

    When virtually any item (including weapons) can be manufactured by a 10-year old with a home-made milling machine and a Raspberry Pi, but copyright law can put that child in federal prison for violating copyright or patents (it's no longer a civil crime, remember?) then the system is fundamentally broken, and needs to be reworked.

    The people behind Defense Distributed wanted to force the government's hand on the matter.

    But as with ideologues throughout history, they consistently and continuously fail to overlook history, and underestimate the durability of established profit generation systems. [medium.com]

  • The Anti-Gun lobby is made up of control freaks who also happen to be idiots. Control the border and I will at least talk about it until then pound sand.
  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Saturday May 08, 2021 @05:42PM (#61363598)

    ... a kit?

    A rusty shovel [thechive.com]?

    Under the proposed rule, manufacturers must include a serial number on the firearm frame or receiver in a kit. Firearm dealers also must add serial numbers to 3D-printed guns or other un-serialized firearms they take into their inventory.

    This isn't any different than the current law now. You can make a gun for your own use. But if you sell it (manufacturers, dealers) it must be serialized and reported.

  • New Definition of 'Firearm' as anything we deem it to be at the moment. In order to use the law to do, what we want, to whom ever we want, when ever we want.
  • One can make a zipgun with like, $15 worth of parts from a hardware store. Also unregistered. But it's the 3-d printers that are dangerous.
  • Since when does an individual who plans to use a gun to commit a crime give two shits about the weapon having a serial number on it ?
    ( OMG I can't commit mass murder today, my gun isn't legal !! :| )

    That's akin to thinking the sign on the front of the Bank that says " No Guns Allowed " is going to stop an armed robbery . . . . . .

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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