• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

NRA, Democrats and White House for regulation on bump stocks, GOP on the fence

ianpm31

Member
NRA willing to lose "bump stocks" to deflect the argument away from making changes/discussion to the 2nd amendment.
 

Tobor

Member
NRA willing to lose "bump stocks" to deflect the argument away from making changes/discussion to the 2nd amendment.

I’ll take it. Call it what you will, it’s still a compromise that will save lives.

I don’t care if they blame Obama or whoever, just get these stocks off the shelves.
 

Kusagari

Member
I don't know why any GOP member would oppose this. It doesn't really do anything for "gun control" and it gives them something to deflect toward when Democrats say they'll never go for gun reform.
 
Eh, im okay with this. Id even turn mine in if required, its a novelty item at best. Fun for wasting money real fast at the range, but not much else.
 

Ogodei

Member
I feel like this is the NRA walking into a trap, frankly. They spend all their time screaming about how any regulation is a violation of our sacred rights, now they propose a regulation. They get the regulation passed, and mainstream gun owners (e.g., not the crazies) realize that the sky didn't fall just because congress regulated firearms, and they'll wonder "well, why not have more of these common-sense regulations?"

You're never going to get Australian-style gun control to happen here, but you could certainly clamp down on straw buying, gun shows, maybe something like affirmative licensing for ownership (like in Japan where you have to specifically prove that you are mentally well to own a gun, while here the onus would be on the state to prove you were unwell to take it away).
 
You don't even NEED a bump stock to do this. I recall reading something about Richard Winters marveling at somebody in Easy showing him how to fire a Garand in what looked like full-auto (for what 8 shots would be worth anyway) but not quite remembering how they did it. Many people figured it was just bump firing. Sure, it might make it a bit more accurate, but when you've got 22,000+ people enfiladed on lower ground, it really is like the proverbial fish in a barrel.

You don't need a bump stock to make it shoot rapidly. I've seen my friend bump fire his AR using his belt loop on his jeans just like this guy.... https://youtu.be/hI86T8RghWY
 

Duxxy3

Member
It's a start.

Next up should be large capacity magazines.

If it was me I'd ban all assault rifle sales going forward, but that's not going to happen.
 

legacyzero

Banned
dg78wL4.png

https://twitter.com/BBCJamesCook/status/916011919223296005

DLVcQwXV4AEykC1.jpg
 
You don't even NEED a bump stock to do this. I recall reading something about Richard Winters marveling at somebody in Easy showing him how to fire a Garand in what looked like full-auto (for what 8 shots would be worth anyway) but not quite remembering how they did it. Many people figured it was just bump firing. Sure, it might make it a bit more accurate, but when you've got 22,000+ people enfiladed on lower ground, it really is like the proverbial fish in a barrel.

A common argument I hear about things like this, is that they don't do anything that you couldn't manually do with enough practice and ability.

Which, you know, sounds like a good argument against regulation, until you remember that taking something like full auto fire rates, and ensuring that only a few highly skilled firearm operators can do them, vs any moron, is still a big improvement.
 

Piggus

Member
It's a start.

Next up should be large capacity magazines.

If it was me I'd ban all assault rifle sales going forward, but that's not going to happen.

The problem with saying your want to ban "assault rifles" is you have to define exactly what those are in order to develop legislation around it. What makes an AR-15 or AK-47 an assault rifle but not a Ruger Mini 14 or an SKS? The only real differences between them are aesthetic.
 

studyguy

Member
Eh, im okay with this. Id even turn mine in if required, its a novelty item at best. Fun for wasting money real fast at the range, but not much else.

My cousin bought one literally to use at a range exactly one time and then complained about ammunition pricing for the rest of the week. Yeah no shit you just burned through your ammunition, what the fuck do you think would happen?
 

DarthWoo

I'm glad Grandpa porked a Chinese Muslim
A common argument I hear about things like this, is that they don't do anything that you couldn't manually do with enough practice and ability.

Which, you know, sounds like a good argument against regulation, until you remember that taking something like full auto fire rates, and ensuring that only a few highly skilled firearm operators can do them, vs any moron, is still a big improvement.

Well, the point I'm making is that maybe we should get rid of the things that don't need the extra accoutrements to be so deadly.
 

Rentahamster

Rodent Whores
How many people didn't know what a bump stock was or how easy it is to acquire before Sunday? If anything, one of the more dangerous aspects of the shooting and its subsequent news coverage is the dissemination of information of how easy (relatively) this kind of thing can be.
 

Duxxy3

Member
The problem with saying your want to ban "assault rifles" is you have to define exactly what those are in order to develop legislation around it. What makes an AR-15 or AK-47 an assault rifle but not a Ruger Mini 14 or an SKS? The only real differences between them are aesthetic.

I'd qualify it as a long barrel gun that can accept a large capacity magazine.
 

Piggus

Member
How many people didn't know what a bump stock was or how easy it is to acquire before Sunday? If anything, one of the more dangerous aspects of the shooting and its subsequent news coverage is the dissemination of information of how easy (relatively) this kind of thing can be.

Agreed. They've been around for years, been featured on the biggest YouTube shooting channels, etc and everyone acts surprised by their existence. Most pro-gun politicians had no idea they even existed.

I'd qualify it as a long barrel gun that can accept a large capacity magazine.

Well, that effectively bans every semi-auto rifle and shotgun on the market that uses a detachable magazine. That's unlikely to get through the courts. It's worth keeping in mind that we've limited magazine capacity before, and mass shooters (Columbine, Virginia Tech) just got around it by using more magazines.
 

Ominym

Banned
"subject to additional regulations"

How about uh, just banning them?

And its cute the NRA think its doing something.
They know precisely what they’re doing. They get to pat themselves on the back for “agreeing“ to a “solution” to the problem and it pushes the conversation away from other topics about gun regulation.
 
How many people didn't know what a bump stock was or how easy it is to acquire before Sunday? If anything, one of the more dangerous aspects of the shooting and its subsequent news coverage is the dissemination of information of how easy (relatively) this kind of thing can be.

They're seeing a spike in sales now too which I guess is inevitable if people are talking about bans.
 
Funny wording there. It was a Law-abiding citizen who purchased 30+ weapons in the span of a year, along with ammunition and bump-stocks then proceeded to commit the most deadly Mass Shooting in US history using his legally purchased equipment.

Yep, that stuck out to me too because it's a situation where guns being banned might have stopped this compared to common sense gun regulation which I don't think would have prevented it.
 
The problem with saying your want to ban "assault rifles" is you have to define exactly what those are in order to develop legislation around it. What makes an AR-15 or AK-47 an assault rifle but not a Ruger Mini 14 or an SKS? The only real differences between them are aesthetic.

Now, to be fair while the SKS may shoot the same ammo as an AK, there is one big difference, and that's the magazine. By default, an SKS's mag isn't detachable, so you have to load ether lose rounds or use a stripper clip.

So really, what you want to do is declare an assault weapon to be any semi-auto rifle with a detachable magazine that fires center fired ammunition. That would take care of about 90% of what seem to be the troublemakers, while sparing the pure plinking guns.
 

Piggus

Member
Now, to be fair while the SKS may shoot the same ammo as an AK, there is one big difference, and that's the magazine. By default, an SKS's mag isn't detachable, so you have to load ether lose rounds or use a stripper clip.

So really, what you want to do is declare an assault weapon to be any semi-auto rifle with a detachable magazine that fires center fired ammunition. That would take care of about 90% of what seem to be the troublemakers, while sparing the pure plinking guns.

A detachable magazine can easily be added to an SKS. I don't think a ban on centerfire semi-auto rifles would ever happen. But I do think it's reasonable for all semi-auto handguns and rifles to be considered Class III NFA items that you can't just pick up at a local Wal-Mart. The ATF would have to be greatly expanded to meet demand, however.
 
A detachable magazine can easily be added to an SKS. I don't think a ban on centerfire semi-auto rifles would ever happen. But I do think it's reasonable for all semi-auto handguns and rifles to be considered Class III NFA items that you can't just pick up at a local Wal-Mart. The ATF would have to be greatly expanded to meet demand, however.

Easily yes, but then it would fall under assault weapon by my definition. The goal would be to limit it to greater concern weapons, and not those that load from en-bloc or stripper clips by default.

I'm actually greatly in favor of moving semi autos to Class III NFA status. This would be paired with ether an increase of the transfer tax from 200 to 1000 USD, or closing the registry after the reclassification.

Likewise, any mag with 10+ rounds would be a NFA item, with a separate transfer tax per. Maybe $200 for the mags and $1000 for rifles or something.
 

Duxxy3

Member
There are bolt action rifles that fit your description that no one would call an assault rifle.

Okie doke.

Agreed. They've been around for years, been featured on the biggest YouTube shooting channels, etc and everyone acts surprised by their existence. Most pro-gun politicians had no idea they even existed.



Well, that effectively bans every semi-auto rifle and shotgun on the market that uses a detachable magazine. That's unlikely to get through the courts. It's worth keeping in mind that we've limited magazine capacity before, and mass shooters (Columbine, Virginia Tech) just got around it by using more magazines.

It's still what I would push for.
 
Banning these devices seems like a no brainer to me. I feel stupid for believing all the shit gun advocates said about them being useless.

Well they are useless for 99.999% of gun owners. Just because one person found a use for them doesn't stop them from being useless. They are dangerous however.
 
Well they are useless for 99.999% of gun owners. Just because one person found a use for them doesn't stop them from being useless. They are dangerous however.

You make it sound like the increased fire rate is an unintended side effect when it's the whole point of them. There's a reason automatics are banned. I know what you're trying to say but I wouldn't call a device doing what it's intended to do useless. And apparently they sold these things in walmart? Seems crazy to me.
 

Arkeband

Banned
This is such a farce. The NRA pretends to be against bump stocks, a super niche mod for guns, while Republicans push legislation to allow for easier access to silencers and armor piercing rounds.

They're distracting us with one hand and stabbing us with the other.

Meanwhile, bump stock sales are going through the roof. It's a win/win/win for gun nuts.
 
You make it sound like the increased fire rate is just a side effect when it's the whole point of them. There's a reason automatics are banned. I know what you're trying to say but I wouldn't call a device doing what it's intended to do useless. And apparently they sold these things in walmart? Seems crazy to me.

The point of an automatic is not just rate of fire. Automatics would be useless if they were as accurate as bump fire stocks. Obviously when they say useless they're referring to any practical value. It doesn't help with sporting, or self-defense or hunting. Hence useless.
 

Ashby

Member
Agreed. They've been around for years, been featured on the biggest YouTube shooting channels, etc and everyone acts surprised by their existence. Most pro-gun politicians had no idea they even existed.



Well, that effectively bans every semi-auto rifle and shotgun on the market that uses a detachable magazine. That's unlikely to get through the courts. It's worth keeping in mind that we've limited magazine capacity before, and mass shooters (Columbine, Virginia Tech) just got around it by using more magazines.
http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/05/politics/gun-laws-magazines-las-vegas/index.html

"Whether a state has a large capacity ammunition magazine ban is the single best predictor of the mass shooting rate in that state, " said Michael Siegel, a community health science professor at Boston University, who conducted the analysis. These states are associated with a 63% lower rate of mass shootings, according to his analysis."
 

Plinko

Wildcard berths that can't beat teams without a winning record should have homefield advantage
Of course NRA wants this. It's the absolute minimum you could do aside from doing nothing.

"Look, see? We want safety, too!"
 

linkboy

Member
Well they are useless for 99.999% of gun owners. Just because one person found a use for them doesn't stop them from being useless. They are dangerous however.

Even the US military rarely uses the burst mode on a M16/M4 as it decreases the accuracy of your shots.

I was in for 12 years and only got to shoot in burst mode once.
 

TaterTots

Banned

What? After reading the OP I thought to myself, "Dems want it, now the NRA, which would lead to more Republicans for it. Trump is going to back it and say, "I've done something the last 2 administrations could not achieve after a mass shooting. Gun legislation."

I scroll down to your post and think what a dumb fuck. He doesn't even want the pathetic smaller w's. He loves the L's.

EDIT; I'm watching the video now and that's not exactly what was meant. Misleading actually. She said they want to focus on leading and unifying the country, but then says they want to be a part of the conversation and open to it.
 

Horns

Member
The first rule of the NRA is don't believe them. They claimed they supported the background check system, but they sued numerous times to try to weaken it. They worked to undermine it and undercut the effectiveness of it.
 
The point of an automatic is not just rate of fire. Automatics would be useless if they were as accurate as bump fire stocks. Obviously when they say useless they're referring to any practical value. It doesn't help with sporting, or self-defense or hunting. Hence useless.

So do you think automatics would be legal if they were as inaccurate as a bump stock? I thought the point of them being illegal was the amount of damage you can do in a short time with that rate of fire. Accuracy doesn't really matter if you're firing indiscriminately into a crowd.
 

TaterTots

Banned
NRA willing to lose "bump stocks" to deflect the argument away from making changes/discussion to the 2nd amendment.

Honestly, they are for it because its an accessory/add on. Its not the firearm you purchase, so they can get away with this. Either way, its hard for me to imagine that psycho could of killed and injured as many people as he did without it. If we can get rid of it, we should.
 
So do you think automatics would be legal if they were as inaccurate as a bump stock? I thought the point of them being illegal was the amount of damage you can do in a short time with that rate of fire. Accuracy doesn't really matter if you're firing indiscriminately into a crowd.

I don't know. But I do know if bump stocks we're useful the military would use them. Automatics obviously have their place in the military.
 

Guevara

Member
3 days ago I had never even heard of bump stocks.

It's obvious we should ban them.

But even if we do, that just takes me back to.... 3 days ago. It's not really progress.
 

DarthWoo

I'm glad Grandpa porked a Chinese Muslim
The first rule of the NRA is don't believe them. They claimed they supported the background check system, but they sued numerous times to try to weaken it. They worked to undermine it and undercut the effectiveness of it.

Wasn't it that they supported it wholeheartedly when the technology was totally infeasible to actually implement it and they knew it, but as soon as computers became a thing and it actually could be done, they abruptly changed their stance?
 

RMI

Banned
Man that NRA statement is disgusting. A few crocodile tears sandwiching bullshit talking points about freedom to protect your family. ridiculous.

Well, that effectively bans every semi-auto rifle and shotgun on the market that uses a detachable magazine. That's unlikely to get through the courts. It's worth keeping in mind that we've limited magazine capacity before, and mass shooters (Columbine, Virginia Tech) just got around it by using more magazines

This isn't a great argument. Any amount of extra time spent changing magazines is time that could potentially save lives.
 

linkboy

Member
I don't know. But I do know if bump stocks we're useful the military would use them. Automatics obviously have their place in the military.

The military rarely shoots full auto to begin with.

The AR-15 is a civilian model of the M-4, with the main difference between the two being the M-4 has a burst mode that shoots 3 bullets with one pull of the trigger.

A M-4 in semi is the exact same firearm as an AR-15.
 
Top Bottom