Saturday, July 23, 2016

Dig me up America!



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cityzens are some of the most gullible people alive. Whenever they buy a firearm for ex, they get a federal firearm license transfer. The dealer has to sign for it but the cityzen is recorded!

This is why so many folks I been seeing lately, either used a different name or exit out of the system first. Seize back their rights before even getting a firearm, then lock up as needed.

But most Citysens don't look at how every action they do leaves a paper trail a mile wide....Its no wonder most folks opt out first..owning explosives or whatever else for a rainy day made easy.

Freewill said...

The National Firearms Act of 1934 (NFA) defines a number of categories of regulated firearms. These weapons are collectively known as NFA firearms and include the following:

Machine guns
This includes any firearm which can fire more than 1 cartridge per trigger pull. Both continuous fully automatic fire and "burst fire" (e.g., firearms with a 3-round burst feature) are considered machine gun features. The weapon's receiver is by itself considered to be a regulated firearm. A non-machinegun that may be converted to fire more than one shot per trigger pull by ordinary mechanical skills is determined to be "readily convertible", and classed as a machine gun, such as a KG-9 pistol (pre-ban ones are "grandfathered").
Short-barreled rifles (SBRs)
This category includes any firearm with a buttstock and either a rifled barrel less than 16" long or an overall length under 26". The overall length is measured with any folding or collapsing stocks in the extended position. The category also includes firearms which came from the factory with a buttstock that was later removed by a third party.
Short barreled shotguns (SBSs)
This category is defined similarly to SBRs, but with either a smoothbore barrel less than 18" long or a minimum overall length under 26".
Suppressors
This includes any portable device designed to muffle or disguise the report of a portable firearm. This category does not include non-portable devices, such as sound traps used by gunsmiths in their shops which are large and usually bolted to the floor. In October, 2015 Arizona Congressman Matt Salmon introduced the Hearing Protection Act to remove suppressors from the NFA.[8]
Destructive Devices (DDs)
There are two broad classes of destructive devices:

Devices such as grenades, bombs, explosive missiles, poison gas weapons, etc.
Any firearm with a bore over 0.50 inch except for shotguns or shotgun shells which have been found to be generally recognized as particularly suitable for sporting purposes. (Many firearms with bores over 0.50" inch, such as 20-gauge or 12-gauge shotguns, are exempted from the law because they have been determined to have a "legitimate sporting use".)

So by legal definition, long guns (shotguns & riffles), pistols, and revolvers are NOT firearms!

Legal definition of a weapon is anything used during the commencement of a crime. A banker's ink pen is a weapon when a fraudulent loan is made.