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To: dcwusmc
What difference does my opinion make? It's my opinion that the Beatles are overrated, but that's neither here nor there and makes no difference to the real world.

The law that these people are trying to enact is a natural outgrowth of GCA '68 and the Instant Check system. What point is there in prohibiting people from selling firearms to wife beaters, criminals, and the mentally ill if you have no way of finding out if someone falls into that category?

The data required to enforce the law is not available to those charged with following the law and those charged with enforcing it, because of the absence of state records.

Instead of attacking this bill, you should be attacking GCA '68, because this bill is just part and parcel of that package.

But if you're so insistent on my opinion, here it is: I think that the state of affairs prior to the enactment of the National Firearms Act of 1934 is the proper state of affairs with respect to firearms. I think that the United States Supreme Court should have been asked to strike it down on the basis of the precedent set by Bailey v. Drexel Furniture Co., [259 U.S. 20], in 1922, to wit:

Grant the validity of this law, and all that Congress would need to do, hereafter, in seeking to take over to its control any one of the great number of subjects of public interest, jurisdiction of which the states have never parted with, and which are reserved to them by the Tenth Amendment, would be to enact a detailed measure of complete regulation of the subject and enforce it by a socalled tax upon departures from it. To give such magic to the word 'tax' would be to break down all constitutional limitation of the powers of Congress and completely wipe out the sovereignty of the states.

After all, what is the NFA but a "detailed measure of complete regulation of the subject," enforced by a "socalled tax on departures from it?" When it was enacted, it imposed a $200 tax on a $5 shotgun.

I also agree with Samuel Adams' qualification of the Second Amendment:

The Constitution shall never be construed... to prevent the people of the United States who are peaceable citizens from keeping their own arms.
I think that we, as peaceable citizens, should hold the legal authority as a society to disarm those who are not peaceable, just as we hold the legal authority to deprive them of their freedom or, in many states, their very lives. That is, at least until our society deveops to the point of L. Neil Smith's Confederacy, where schoolchildren carry guns on their hips.
87 posted on 11/14/2002 12:02:59 PM PST by mvpel
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To: mvpel
I would like GCA '68, NFA and ALL victim disarmament laws gone, PERIOD.

We as peaceable citizens DO hold the authority to deal with someone who is NOT peaceable. Then we can prosecute him if he survives. So where's the need for gooberment intervention? Or gooberment lists and databases? The idea is that government does not need to know who is and is not armed unless for some reason (military forces) it has armed them. Or holds them unarmed for a period of incarceration. That's it and that's all.
88 posted on 11/14/2002 12:17:13 PM PST by dcwusmc
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To: mvpel
I think that we, as peaceable citizens, should hold the legal authority as a society to disarm those who are not peaceable, just as we hold the legal authority to deprive them of their freedom or, in many states, their very lives.

Would the Sons of Liberty be considered "peaceable"? How about the TRT?

It seems to me that you are using the Founding Fathers words to support today's gun control. That is not honest use of their words.

120 posted on 11/15/2002 2:34:18 PM PST by Eagle Eye
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