trickyasafox
Member
i dont think my gun purchases will get me flagged, im virtually positive TSA will flag any of us though for traveling with anything firearm related, no matter how assinine.
Not in Washington State, PP. If you can manage purchasing 10 firearms in a thirty-day period up here, I believe you actually get a certificate of commendation signed by Christine herself ...I was wondering if there is ever any reason to be concerned about getting red flagged because of purchasing a large number of firearms.
ALL DoD phone systems are subject to monitoring, and for very good OPSEC reasons. How is this germane to the discussion of firearms purchases INCONUS?Our son is in Bahrain, and whenever we initiate a phone call, there's always a little "click" after the disconnect. It's to the point that I wait to hear it!
WRONGIf you buy multiple firearms at once, you do need to get a seperate NICS proceed number for each.
"The Constitution does not specifically mention a right to privacy. However, Supreme Court decisions over the years have established that the right to privacy is a basic human right, and as such is protected by virtue of the 9th Amendment. The right to privacy has come to the public's attention via several controversial Supreme Court rulings, including several dealing with contraception (the Griswold and Eisenstadt cases), interracial marriage (the Loving case), and abortion (the well-known Roe v Wade case). In addition, it is said that a right to privacy is inherent in many of the amendments in the Bill of Rights, such as the 3rd, the 4th's search and seizure limits, and the 5th's self-incrimination limit."Norm357 said:There is no guarenteed right to privacy in the Constitution.
I was wondering if there is ever any reason to be concerned about getting red flagged because of purchasing a large number of firearms. With a govt that likes to wire tap individual citizens phones at random and use any reason to lock people away without council it is something I was just curious about. I have bought 8 firearms in less than a month and it will be 9 if I can ever find the elusive Ruger .454 Alaskan.
The majority of them are simple farmers with no desire to hurt anyone.
The Constitution does not specifically mention a right to privacy. However, Supreme Court decisions over the years have established that the right to privacy is a basic human right, and as such is protected by virtue of the 9th Amendment. The right to privacy has come to the public's attention via several controversial Supreme Court rulings, including several dealing with contraception (the Griswold and Eisenstadt cases), interracial marriage (the Loving case), and abortion (the well-known Roe v Wade case). In addition, it is said that a right to privacy is inherent in many of the amendments in the Bill of Rights, such as the 3rd, the 4th's search and seizure limits, and the 5th's self-incrimination limit."
I am not one of "those people" that feel they have the right to be armed every minute of every day (never understood guys who want a gun on their hip all the time...is it a small penis thing?
No injuries in recent years but when I was younger I was shooting cans with my grandmother (our tri-county marksmanship champion) and I decided to try a draw and shoot from my holster with her weapon which had a longer barrel than mine and the barrel hooked on the holster and I fired straight into the top of my foot with a .22 cal revolver.
Talk about paranoid crap...you have a far better chance of being struck by lightning then being taken hostage in or be involved in a bank robbery. Although, that very reason you gave of better to have and not need is better than needing and not having is why I carry a pistol in my car so I agree with you to a certain point. As far as employees being defenseless during a robbery...the fact is that clerk/cashiers that were armed were involved in more fatal shootings than unarmed clerks according to the 2004 statistics. If you have a job that is soooo dangerous and you are not allowed a weapon then get another job if you truely feel unsafe. I just feel that the vast majority of people are not stable/mature/competent enough to carry a weapon.
Originally Posted by epijunkie67
By the way, you brought up "the militia". I'm sure you're aware that at the time the 2nd amendment was written "the militia" consisted of all able bodies adult men able to fight? What we consider the national guard or other militia type organizations didn't come along until several years after the fact. (end epijunkie's post)
Are you saying that the 2nd Amenedment is outdated since we now have national Guards and State militias? I am missing your point.
Ohhh...motorcycles...a love I am no longer allowed to enjoy. A couple shattered knees, a pin in my collarbone, and several concussions and broken bones later and I am told they are too dangerous and unless I want to be single again I will stay off them. MOTORCYCLES DO NOT MAIM PEOPLE !!!!PEOPLE MAIM MOTORCYCLES..err...wait....people maim people...whatever...am I making sense???
If you buy more than 1 handgun from the same dealer in a 7 day period, the dealer is required to report it to the BATFE.