General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLet Me Tell You About The Rifle I Need to Purchase
What is the reasoning behind the need for an assault rifle to hunt with? How can people selling these things rationalize setting up a buyer with equipment that could take out a small town?
1.It needs to be semi-automatic that is easily convertible to full automatic. Ah, you can just throw in a bump fire stock.
Reasoning: Animals just don't want to die after being hit by only a few rounds. I need to put at least twenty rounds into an animal.
2.It needs to be powerful enough to carry at least four hundred yards while maintaining decent accuracy.
Reasoning: Look, I'm sitting in my blind with my beer, all comfy. I don't want to come out and actually have to move in closer to the animals I want to murder.
3.It needs to come with a clip that holds at least fifty rounds, and I need to buy at least ten clips to go with it.
Reasoning: See number two. I'm comfy in here, dammit!
4.It needs to come with a suppressor.
Reasoning: I'm enjoying the nice quiet of the outdoors, and I don't want to disturb the other animals that I don't want to murder (for the moment).
5.I'm going to need at least 1,000 rounds of ammo to go with that order.
Reasoning: I'm a really bad shot and need a hell of a lot of ammo in order to bring down one animal.
6. You know what, let me buy a dozen of those rifles.
Reasoning:
guillaumeb
(42,641 posts)You need armor piercing bullets. And more beer if you are going to shoot 1,000 rounds.
ProudLib72
(17,984 posts)Yes, that an absolute necessity! You know, there is that playing soldier fantasy that is surely a contributing factor in some of these shootings.
VOX
(22,976 posts)You can get another 18-20 in your single-wide. Can't be too over-prepared when hunting varmints.
ProudLib72
(17,984 posts)If a seller does a background check and sees that a person already owns a dozen rifles, you would think that he/she would question why the buyer needed more. It should, at least, give the seller pause and maybe prompt some questioning.
But gunhumpers are gunhumpers, and they understand you can never have too many guns.
ClarendonDem
(720 posts)Care how many guns a buyer legally owns? I'm not sure why anyone needs a dozen guns but it isn't illegal and isn't the gun dealer's place to place limits on purchases. The states (some have in the past) and federal government can do that.
Does a background check even show how many guns an individual has purchased?
maxsolomon
(33,432 posts)BTW, gun dealers sometimes refuse to sell to people who seem unstable. why is that their place?
"welcome to DU".
ClarendonDem
(720 posts)I "fucking know" what doesn't? That a background check shows number of gun purchases? I have no idea what a background check does or does not show. I've never seen one or had the contents described to me. That's fairly rude to be frank.
Refusing to sell a weapon to someone who seems unstable strikes me as a completely different animal than refusing to sell a firearm to someone who already has other firearms simply because they have other firearms. But I applaud the store that makes the call to refuse to sell to someone who appears unstable.
Thanks for the welcome.
maxsolomon
(33,432 posts)not tracking purchases or the number of weapons one owns is a dearly-held tenet of gunner theology.
when a low-count DUer throws out bait of this sort I suspect the worst. sorry.
ClarendonDem
(720 posts)I legitimately have no idea what a background check shows, or who sees it.
maxsolomon
(33,432 posts)you'll learn lots that will make you blanch.
did you know that well-regulated has nothing to do with the militia itself, but only with their weapons functioning well? I learned it on DU.
Lurks Often
(5,455 posts)and if in doubt, I strongly recommend doing your own research.
Marengo
(3,477 posts)Or otherwise known to the seller, prior purchases would be unknown.
New piece of legislation needed.
This isn't like buying paper towels to clean up an island. This is about one person's questionable reasoning behind owning an arsenal. I don't want to hear any arguments against such a record based on the logistics of creating and maintaining such a record over state borders and decades. If conservatives thought it was a good idea, you wouldn't see any red tape holding them back.
Marengo
(3,477 posts)Firearms, especially those of historic significance, have a justifiable reason to own a large number?
I know of some collections of military surplus arms of various past periods, world wars one and two for example, that number in the dozens or more. Mostly bolt actions, but semiautos as well.
ProudLib72
(17,984 posts)Special dispensation can be afforded. If the registry is complete, then it should be clearer whether or not the person is collecting historical pieces. I know what you're thinking. What if they are collecting pieces from, say Vietnam or even Desert Storm? I admit, there are gray areas.
apkhgp
(1,068 posts)A disgusting display of "My dick is bigger than yours"
Stallion
(6,476 posts)Watchfoxheadexplodes
(3,496 posts)Although some do and I'm with you on why.
Wounded Bear
(58,743 posts)They are for all of the "Man with no Name" and "Roland Deschain" wannabes out there who think they're gonna save the world.
Life is just a live action first person shooter game to them.
VOX
(22,976 posts)Defending gun-loving behaviors gets all couched in 2nd Amendment "liberty lingo" and "Don't Tread on Me" posturing, when, in fact, it's a major power-rush to empty a 30-round mag into a silhouette target. If your a poor-to-bottom-middle-class white male who can't find work, and your life is a shambles, the shooting-rush is a quick symptomatic fix for one's troubles. It's never enough, though, as the multiple hardware purchases stack up.
Hey, I've gone "out shootin'" a few times in my life. It's super fun to put holes in cans or paper targets, to see if you can close your spread. Here's the thing. I used bb guns and an ancient pump action .22 to have my fun. While I imagine that letting loose a hail of larger caliber bullets is much more fun, it isn't absolutely necessary to enjoy the gun range.
BTW: A few years ago, I served on a jury in a case involving a man who accidentally shot his dog. It turned out that this man owned a semi-automatic .22 with a banana clip that he kept fully loaded with the safety off right next to his bed. The story was that, in the middle of the night, his dog crawled under his bed and farted. Half asleep, he reached for something to poke at the dog to get her to move. What he grabbed happened to be his gun. Several rounds were fired while he was "poking" his dog.
raven mad
(4,940 posts)I love this post................