steveincowtown wrote:steveincowtown wrote:Could you provide an explanation as to why the geographical location of a background check on the private sale of anything makes it any more or less reasonable?
baldeagle wrote:Sure.
At a gun show a private seller is selling to any party that is interested without any previous interaction other than the buyer's questions regarding the weapon at the time of the sale, just the same as any other gun dealer at the show. The equipment to do a background check, if needed, is readily available and can be used easily.
In a private two party transaction, the seller normally would either know the buyer personally or would use their personal judgment regarding the person's trustworthiness. For example, guns are sold on this forum a lot, and many of the sellers and buyers "know" each other through their interactions on this forum. Many also will only sell to someone who holds a CHL. Forcing them to insert an FFL into the transaction increases the cost of the transaction and inconveniences the parties while having zero impact on preventing sales to felons, because those sellers and buyers will simply ignore the law.
Using this theory, I assume you would support making all gunbroker.com, texasguntrader.com, etc. subject to back ground checks as well? I haven't known any if the folks I have sold guns to through these websites.
I would not, because the present system of going through an FFL works perfectly fine - unless it would be less expensive. Every one of those transactions that already goes through a background check would still go through a background check, so the only reason to change would be to reduce costs or reduce hassle.
steveincowtown wrote:Also how well would someone have to "know" someone to be excluded from the background checks?
It's irrelevant, because private party transactions outside gun shows can't be monitored any way. Even if you required background checks for private party transactions while excluding familial sales (which is what they are proposing), there would be no reasonable way to enforce it without requiring total gun registration and regular inspections. At gun shows it would be easy to enforce. Those sellers who didn't want to deal with it would simply sell elsewhere.
steveincowtown wrote:Lastly, I this compromise, what are we as gun is owners getting in return?
Private sales outside of gun shows would remain untouched, and the political windbaggery of the "gun show loophole" would be gone. The pro-2A folks could simply say, "That loophole was closed. Why do you want to penalize law abiding citizens when everyone knows the criminals will not comply? The average uninformed citizen would nod their head in agreement with that statement.
steveincowtown wrote:I am a little befuddled that you can say that implementing background checks on private individuals would have zero impact on the felons getting guns, while at the same time inferring that background checks at gun shows somehow would keep felon from getting guns.
I'm not at all inferring that. Doing that would take the wind out of the emotional rhetoric the gun grabbers use to stir people up without costing us any of our rights. I guarantee you that most of the anti-gunners know full well that background checks won't solve any problems, but they use the "gun show loophole" as a hammer to demonize pro gun folks. By agreeing to that, you take that emotional argument away from them and place the onus on them to explain why they think private citizens should have to go through the hassle when everyone knows that criminals will simply ignore it just like they do every other law. You turn the argument around and force the anti-gunners to explain why they want to punish law abiding citizens.
To an uniformed American there is a day and night difference between the term "gun show" (which may appall them) and Uncle Joe selling Nephew Johnny his pistol.
steveincowtown wrote:I do agree with your point that as gun owners we should use our best judgement when selling firearms, but I strongly disagree that I need help or guidance on this or any other issue from the Federal goverment.
I strongly disagree as well. But in the present political environment, if all we have to give up is background checks for private gun sales at gun shows, that's a small price to pay for protecting our rights and stripping the anti-gunners of one of their most powerful emotional arguments. Face it, even a lot of gun owners think background checks at gun shows are a reasonable thing to do.
You have to think of this fight in the terms it's being fought, not the terms you'd like to fight it in. I'd like no background checks at all, just like it was when I was a kid. I still own a Western Auto bolt action single shot .22 that was bought by walking in to the Western Auto store. I'd like to return to those days. To get there, we have to start defanging the anti-gunners and find ways to expose their true agenda, which is total disarmament of the citizenry.