BLESS YOUR HEART.
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Right now, the smart firearms investor (if he hasn’t already done so) is investing in large diameter PVC tubing, Visqueen, and heavy grease, and he has already chosen the spot where his collection will be buried. It isn’t something I’ve invested in yet, because I never imagined that things could ever actually come to this. But when I compare the many thousands of dollars I have invested in firearms and ammunition, spending a couple of hundred bucks on PVC tubing, plastic wrap, and heavy grease seems like a paltry - but wise - purchase. Furthermore, if there is a utilities easement under your property (there is on mine) that would seem to be a perfect place to dig, as detection would be made more difficult by the presence of underground utilities lines/pipes.chasfm11 wrote:Perhaps I'm wrong but the standoff in CT is one of the indicators that the politicians are not winning this battle. If you believe the stories of 100K+ people in CT with banned firearms who didn't comply and acknowledge that the CT authorities, after much bluster on the part of some police officers about kicking down doors, have suspended enforcement attempts, you have to conclude that bans have not accomplished their purpose. I did read a story where a citizen in NY was prosecuted for a SAFE act violation but even there, action against those with now illegal firearms appears to be lacking
I agree that enforcement on job situations could result against citizens who defy firearms laws but expect that there would be actions to identify those who have those firearms first. In CT, I suspect that many have their "illegal guns" in alternate locations from their homes so finding those guns would take some extraordinary effort. Given the ease and speed of social media, any concerted effort to find those guns would become news without Main Stream Media participation. I don't think that the situation would be different in any other State. While some might comply as some did in CT, many will not. If I remember correctly, the Australian "buy back" was deemed to be lacking in success by a third.
We all saw the news (and felt the effects in empty store shelves) of the buying sprees on guns and ammo under the 44th President. I cannot imagine too many of those who felt compelled to buy guns under those circumstances willingly turning and around and complying with new gun bans. I see it as unfortunate that those who voted with their pocketbooks were unwilling to do the same at the ballot box.
The question is “Will We Fight?”The Annoyed Man wrote: I know all of this sounds kind of paranoid, but imagine the possibility of a day when you wished you had been just a little more paranoid, and it’s too late. I’ve always done everything as responsibly as I know how. I’ve always voted as if the results matter, and for the last 30 years of my life, I’ve voted as if gun rights were the primary issue. In my spoken and written words, defense of the 2nd Amendment has been a primary topic for the last 30 years. But it may not have been enough, and I fear the moment when “not enough” comes to pass. That will be the time when anyone who loves the Constitution will be compelled to dig up what they’ve buried, and get about the business of restoring the Constitution to its former place of prominence over our affairs.
Bitter Clinger wrote:Dear "Acronym Esq":
BLESS YOUR HEART.
I don’t mind drilling the 3rd hole, if it becomes necessary, but I do mind not having the internals that go with it. Further, it doesn’t require drilling the 3rd hole to think, “in for a penny, in for a pound”. And if I can fire 2-3 rounds/second on semiauto, that’s still 120-180 rounds/minute on semiauto if necessary. However, I don’t think it is absolutely necessary. I don’t think the 3rd hole is nearly as important as the willingness to pull the trigger in the first place if it ever becomes necessary. Aimed, accurate, fast semiautomatic fire can more than effective enough in most cases. If your opponent fires full auto, and it’s your day to die, it’s not going to matter much to you if you’re hit once or five times by a rifle bullet, if any one of those is a fatal hit. The key isn’t going to be the conversion of your inexpensive AR carbine into a machine gun. The key is going to be the willingness to use your civilian AR15 to kill the crews of crew served weapons and then turning those weapons on their former owners. Also, the point at which turning your guns on previously lawful authority becomes a legitimate exercise, is also the point at which decapitating the leadership becomes a legitimate exercise. Don’t think for ONE SECOND that those people currently in elected or appointed office who have it in mind to disarm you and me aren’t worried about that last possibility. It’s almost impossible to defend against it, except by moving yourself into a bunker, and living out the rest of your life there.Captain Matt wrote:Few will stand up and say NO and drill the hole for the third pin, thinking "in for a penny, in for a pound."
Not very many people, gun owners included, but most especially the anti-gun Democrat Steno Pool (AKA “the media”) (but I repeat myself), stop to think that guns are durable goods. There are MANY examples of guns manufactured in this country over 200 years ago that are still hanging on someone’s mantle. Now, those old ones may no longer be safe to fire, but you can darn bet yourself that almost any gun manufactured since 1900, that has been well take care of, is safe to fire if you can find the correct ammo for it.Total US Firearms: Not 300 Million, but 412-660 Million?
Fun With NumbersThe typical estimate of the total number of firearms in the USA is about 300 million, depending on whom is queried.
{SNIP}
We believe that the correct number is much higher — somewhere between 412 and 660 million. You may wonder how we came to that number, so buckle up (and cringe, if you’re a math-phobe, although it never gets too theoretical): unlike most of the academics and reporters we linked above, we’re going to use publicly available data, and show our work.
What if we told you that one ATF computer system logged, by serial number, 252,000,000 unique firearms, and represented only those firearms manufactured, imported or sold by a relatively small number of the nation’s tens of thousands of Federal Firearms Licensees?