Liste des Groupes | Revenir à ra tv |
On 6/20/24 5:13 PM, BTR1701 wrote:On Jun 20, 2024 at 12:32:11 PM PDT, "moviePig" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
On 6/20/2024 12:29 PM, BTR1701 wrote:In article <v51ik8$2kkd7$2@dont-email.me>,
moviePig <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
On 6/19/2024 11:25 PM, BTR1701 wrote:In article <s6077jpsl679hmse4jdbsf9eg38a9pf6qt@4ax.com>,
shawn <nanoflower@notforg.m.a.i.l.com> wrote:
>Yes, you are definitely technically correct. (The best kind.) That>
said you can see why people consider the bump stock to be the
equivalent of turning a weapon into an equal to a machine gun. It
isn't a machine gun but it ends throwing lead down field much like
one.
I've seen people who can pull a trigger all on their own pretty damn
fast-- certainly at a speed that most hoplophobes would consider
"machine gun adjacent".
>
Should we make it illegal for a human to pull a trigger faster than a
certain rate? Or force anyone who can do it accurately faster than a
certain rate to register their finger with the BATF as a "machine
gun"?
>I think eventually the law will be updated to include bump stocks
but who knows how long that will take. As no one who was involved in
writing the original act likely foresaw the possibility of a bump
stock.
Did you look at the 15-sec. video I posted? I submit that what you're
seeing for *both* guns is a single function of the trigger *finger* --
Even if true, the statute is silent on what the finger is doing, so
it's irrelevant.
A human finger is implied by "a single function of the trigger".
No, it's the functioning of the trigger that's at issue, not what causes it
to function. (Other things can cause a trigger pull besides a finger.)
So describe the intent of the law. Go ahead... what was the law
designed to do? To regulate and prevent.
Have at it.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.