Absolutely. There's no reason that a simple can can't be mass produced and sold for less than the price of a cheap Tasco scope. They're not rocket surgery.I'll bet you the big guys in that market can produce these cans for under $100/unit.
Absolutely. There's no reason that a simple can can't be mass produced and sold for less than the price of a cheap Tasco scope. They're not rocket surgery.I'll bet you the big guys in that market can produce these cans for under $100/unit.
Definitely onerous. It's a national registry of such items.I get the removal of the $200 part but isn't the paperwork still onerous?
That's why that GOA group has already filed suit. I don't know the real story behind the origination of the registry and if the tax was the workaround that the gov't needed to put in place, but based on GOA's version, it would seem that the registry would have to go away.I get the removal of the $200 part but isn't the paperwork still onerous?
Yup. There are quite a few guys at AR15.com that have explicitly said this and already started.Note: As I understand it, the effective date is 90 days after the signing of the law, in the quarter year. The exact date will be determined by appropriate authority (whatever that might be). Given that info, I expect a lot of suppressors and SBRs will just sit, as folks wait for the 90 days to expire. Why pay an extra today when you can wait three months to save $200?
Or, the court may ask Congress to modify and or clarify the law.There is also a good chance that Bondi and Driscoll will decide to not fight this suit and let the court make the law rather than wait for congress.
This would make suppressors, SBS and SBRs normal firearms
Suppressors are an accessory. How can anyone call them a firearm ? They don't have a trigger, they can't shoot a bullet, and the devices that use them function just fine without them, just like a scope/dot, etc.There is a bit of interesting irony in that some anti-2A states are attempting to claim that suppressors are not "firearms" (despite the incredibly clear language in federal law in 18 USC 921; see below). The basis of the claim is that suppressors are accessories
It doesn't work that way and that's not the courts job. Their job is to interpret the law as written. If they interpret it differently than Congress intended, then Congress can consider changing it or leaving it as-is. Even if they find it is unconstitutional, the law just becomes unenforceable until it's fixed.Or, the court may ask Congress to modify and or clarify the law.
The National Firearms Act explicitly defines silencers as firearms. It's not rational but it's the law.Suppressors are an accessory. How can anyone call them a firearm ? They don't have a trigger, they can't shoot a bullet, and the devices that use them function just fine without them, just like a scope/dot, etc.
It doesn't work that way and that's not the courts job. Their job is to interpret the law as written. If they interpret it differently than Congress intended, then Congress can consider changing it or leaving it as-is. Even if they find it is unconstitutional, the law just becomes unenforceable until it's fixed.
Suppressors are an accessory. How can anyone call them a firearm ? They don't have a trigger, they can't shoot a bullet, and the devices that use them function just fine without them, just like a scope/dot, etc.
As far as an individual filing a Form 1 for an SBR or silencer they wish to make themselves...the process IS the punishment. There might be 10% of the population who could both navigate the necessary steps and have the conviction to follow the process all the way through. I believe that to be by design.Not accordingly to federal law ... as I showed in the link. 18 USC 921 clearly declares suppressors ("silencers") as "firearms" for the purpose of that Title.
I understand your position, but that is why I believe there's a huge amount of dichotomy and confusion. The law takes no real logic into account. (that could be said of many laws). IMO, the failed logic may well work to a pro-2A favored position. Either way, it's a win for 2A. Either a full win for all, or a major win for some.
I never said this is the courts responsibility. In many of the court's decisions, however, they have stated that certain statutes may need to be modified or clarified by the Congress, effectively throwing the issue back in the lap of Congress.Suppressors are an accessory. How can anyone call them a firearm ? They don't have a trigger, they can't shoot a bullet, and the devices that use them function just fine without them, just like a scope/dot, etc.
It doesn't work that way and that's not the courts job. Their job is to interpret the law as written. If they interpret it differently than Congress intended, then Congress can consider changing it or leaving it as-is. Even if they find it is unconstitutional, the law just becomes unenforceable until it's fixed.
There certainly is a reason: economics.Absolutely. There's no reason that a simple can can't be mass produced and sold for less than the price of a cheap Tasco scope. They're not rocket surgery.
That business model is basically over once they become generally legal. That kind of shop won't be able to compete. The other thing to understand is that currently, people want their cans to be indestructible because of the headache and cost involved in aquiring one. Once that goes away, cheap semi-disposable aluminum or even plastic units will dominate the market. They are simple devices that do not require fine craftsmanship or crazy high tech engineering to function well.There certainly is a reason: economics.
Imagine you were a one man shop making silencers. What’s a decent daily salary for a skilled machinist? That’s how much profit you have to make each day. Now figure out how many cans you can make each day, and then work out how many you have to sell every day to make that much profit, minus material and operational costs. Unless you already have a good inventory of automated production machinery you probably need to tack on a huge amount just to pay your salary.
Yeah, I ain't shooting 7.62x54 out of a screw together can.I think that will be true for rimfire cams but full auto capable centerfire will still need to be made well just for safety.
I realize what the law says, but I'm referring to common sense. Why suppressors got lumped in and called a "firearm" along with actual firearms, makes no sense.Not accordingly to federal law ...
This is the only can that I have held off on. Its hard to pay 3-450 for a 22 can and then pop another 200 on top of it.I wouldn't mind a suppressed .22 for quieter plinking