Groveling on guns
The fact is, the Brady law (which provides for a background check on retail gun sales) will not successfully prevent any criminal from obtaining a firearm. It can only prevent criminals from obtaining firearms through a retail sales channel at best, and that's assuming the criminal is unwilling or unable to obtain a fake ID and use that to make the purchase. Criminals have an extensive black market in which they can acquire firearms.
228 transactions, over 6 months, out of millions of transactions per year. Think about that. And while you do, remember that the 24 hour period applies to gun sales that are given the go-ahead -- that is, gun sales to law-abiding citizens. If the transaction is denied or delayed it can be retained. But once the check has come back clean, the sale can go forward legally -- and the records should be destroyed, rather than used as a de-facto gun registry. And a "gun registry" is the correct term. Firearms are not like library books; they are not loaned out and then returned. They are purchased and then retained by the buyer. The appropriate analogy would be a Federal government registry that kept, for 90 days, a record of all the books each person had bought -- and occasionally went back to reclaim books that the purchaser wasn't "allowed" to have. Do you think that policy would survive First Amendment review? If not, why should the identical policy survive Second Amendment review? |
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