Virginia.
Our governor is in the process of proposing new legislation to call for universal background checks, court mediated flagging, restore one-hand-gun-a-month limit and ban assault weapons defined as any firearm with a magazine greater than 10 rounds. These proposals contnue an inane focus on the "what" of guns without a proper focus on the "who" other than the first and second elements.
I'm not a supporter, and in trying to read more about the legislation and its calendar for the purposes of objecting, I came across an interesting proposal posted on politico by Jon Stokes.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/s...federal-semi-automatic-firearm-license-218072
Stokes make the audacious proposal to replace the patchwork of State laws with a federal license for the possession of semiautomatic weapons. I grew up in Illinois where we had FOID, firearm owner identification, cards so this idea isn't foreign to me.
Thoughts? My belief, and I think Stokes' too, is that there is a big debate on this coming and if there is no new idea or nationally actionable idea, then states will only further divide, setting more restrictive laws that then become precedent to be used on the national stage by the politicians now accustomed to them. Stoke's proposal seems more like functional reform rather than half assed compromises like current proposals and, looking back, legislation like FOPA.
GB
Our governor is in the process of proposing new legislation to call for universal background checks, court mediated flagging, restore one-hand-gun-a-month limit and ban assault weapons defined as any firearm with a magazine greater than 10 rounds. These proposals contnue an inane focus on the "what" of guns without a proper focus on the "who" other than the first and second elements.
I'm not a supporter, and in trying to read more about the legislation and its calendar for the purposes of objecting, I came across an interesting proposal posted on politico by Jon Stokes.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/s...federal-semi-automatic-firearm-license-218072
Stokes make the audacious proposal to replace the patchwork of State laws with a federal license for the possession of semiautomatic weapons. I grew up in Illinois where we had FOID, firearm owner identification, cards so this idea isn't foreign to me.
Thoughts? My belief, and I think Stokes' too, is that there is a big debate on this coming and if there is no new idea or nationally actionable idea, then states will only further divide, setting more restrictive laws that then become precedent to be used on the national stage by the politicians now accustomed to them. Stoke's proposal seems more like functional reform rather than half assed compromises like current proposals and, looking back, legislation like FOPA.
GB