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Fun to joke about but today when they have to scrutinize a lot more (pressure from the party with an agenda) we need to be a bit more professional.
Get the form approved and then joke all you want, but don't piss in the punch bowl for all of us.
Respectfully,
Fuzzyone........
wow, we got some uptight people in here. ive seen a few Form 1's and form 4's be approved with similar wording. all you guys whining about being professional and all that, lighten up some. only thing this does is delay his own form. its definitely not "pissing in the punch bowl for all of us".
LMFAO.......would have been even funnier if you got a declined letterand had to wait another 9 months
When did you send that one in? I have a few SBR's I'm waiting on
How do you figure?
If the guy in front of you at the DMV doesn't have his shit together and takes an hour instead of the typical 20mins, he has just wasted 40mins of your time. The same applies here, only with thousands in line and an extremely limited amount of agents processing forms.
Why not be professional and ensure your form moves forward and the next guy's wait wasn't in vain.
You don't have a right to own NFA weapons. And the ATF does not administer voter registration.What authority does the ATF have to determine what is a valid reason to exercise a right? Pretty dangerous when you give a person that authority. Could they ask and reject voter registration forms based on a "why do you want to vote" question?
You don't have a right to own NFA weapons. And the ATF does not administer voter registration.
You might want to have another read of the Heller decision. To save time I would skip the preamble and start around page 50.Actually, you DO have a 2nd Amendment right to own an NFA item. That's the only reason the NFA exists in the first place. If the government could just ban machine guns and the like, it would have done so long ago. That's why the 86 "ban" was not a ban on the possession of machine guns, it was a ban on the MANUFACTURE of machine guns FOR CIVILIAN SALE ONLY, something they could do under their Commerce Clause authority. It only applies to manufacturers, not to private citizens.
The NFA isn't about whether you have a right or not, you absolutely do because if there are any "arms suitable for use by the individual soldier" it's machine guns. They just found a way around the 2nd Amendment using the Commerce Clause as an excuse to control manufacture. And if they can do it for machine guns, they can do it for ANY firearm at all. The only thing that keeps hostile administrations from shutting down the civilian firearms market completely is the Congress, which has refused many times to exercise that authority as applied to other than NFA defined items. But it could do so at any time, if it thinks it can get away with it without losing too many votes.
It's about REGISTRATION AND TRACKING of "dangerous weapons" like machine guns and silencers. And it's about making sure that felons don't get government approval for them. Remember when the NFA was enacted: 1934. Gangster era. Tommy guns. John Dillinger.
You used to be able to buy a Thompson machine gun at your local hardware store for about $150 back in the 20s with no paperwork at all, which is how Dillinger and his ilk got them, and why Congress enacted the NFA in the first place. Didn't used to be a problem for them because the $200 tax was traditionally enough to keep the riff-raff from seeking NFA items because it was often double the cost of the item itself...or more. Today, it's a pittance. Just imagine what the impact would be if the NFA tax had risen along with inflation. You'd be paying $6,000 just for the tax stamp. It was intended as a deterrent to civilian ownership of NFA items.
But make no mistake, unless you plan on committing a crime with it and tell them that, storing it or using it in a state where it's illegal, or you're legally disqualified from owning ANY firearms, the NFA Branch is compelled to issue the tax stamp if you've met all the standards in the law...eventually. But there's nothing preventing Obama from "reassigning" the NFA Branch personnel and leaving but a single examiner to examine all 40,000 annual applications. The administration's distaste for NFA users is why the NFA staffing has not been radically increased. The administration is not required by law to process an application in any particular period of time (something we should try to get changed...I say 90 days max), so it doesn't have to make it easy or convenient for us.
The reason that you used to see silly reasons being accepted is because the government CANNOT DENY a valid NFA registration. They can only deny you if you are disqualified or if you fail to provide the REQUIRED information.
Note that the examiner said he would "prefer" that the reason be removed. He didn't REQUIRE it because he cannot do so, it's not up to him to judge what a legitimate reason is...unless you are stupid enough to announce you're going to rob a bank with it or something. It's a question that they really don't have any constitutional authority to ask, but they do it anyway because it's one more hoop to make you jump through so they can mess with you and delay approval, as just happened in this case. They can make him wait a month or two (or ten) longer by "requesting" the change, so they do.
Being bureaucrats under the command of the Administration, a "work to rule" order from on high must be obeyed (it's not their fault) and it also keeps them from getting dinged for making an error or showing favoritism. They don't make the rules, the political appointees do.
So yeah, go ahead and be flip, but don't be surprised if you get delay after delay based on the tiniest technical error.
Rejection is Infringement. Call the NRA?
Does the person at the DMV get to decide what is acceptable documentation to provide? Or do they just verify that the documentation provided is legit?
You might want to have another read of the Heller decision. To save time I would skip the preamble and start around page 50.
The Second Amendment is not the reason the ATF exists. And the government did ban machine guns, not so very long ago.
The ATF approval process for NFA items is not governed by the Second Amendment, it's a policy issue.
Update: Got approved on September the 25th and got it back yesterday!
When did the gov't ban machine guns? I'd only heard of them banning the production of new machineguns for civilians, and of course requiring registration of existing weapons. Unless you're talking about state governments, some of which have had machinegun bans in place for some time.
It was rejected for a douche bag reason,
BTW why call the NRA? They are useless when it comes to NFA stuff.
Shooting paper is a douche bag reason.
See what I did there?
These things are not meant to be left up to personal opinion.
Maybe because defeatists do not bother to call them. How are they supposed to know it's important?
You don't have a right to own NFA weapons.
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A suppressor is a firearm under NFA rules.As it stands now; you are correct, but let me ask you this; what if all firearms were rendered "NFA"??? Don't think it couldn't happen? Btw, not everything "NFA" is considered a "weapon"; unless you wanna "club" someone w/ a suppressor! ;-)
A suppressor is a firearm under NFA rules.
And you have a constitutional right to a handgun in your own home for self defense, provided you are not a felon.
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The NFA does not regulate computers, and the Second Amendment does not mention them.Graham,
Do you have a right to a computer in your home? I am guessing more damage can be done w/ a computer then a can?