Moonbat gun commentary

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And here i had been thinking that the politicians reserved idiocy like this just for those of us still stuck here in NJ...
 
Kentak said:
Seriously though, wouldn't a serial number engraved in the chamber imprint each case?

Right up to the point where someone took a Dremel or emery board to the breechface and polished it off, or filled it in with weld/solder/epoxy.
 
You mean the airplane pictures?

Pete Mancus posts here occasionally; there's a few of us have a link to his Cloud9 Photography site, helpin' out with the ratings.:cool:
 
Dear editor, I read your hilarious nonsensical article regarding bullet stamping to deter crime dated June 22.
Were you taken over by space aliens from the national enquirer???

The reason I ask is because the 9th circus (not circuit) court ruled a few years ago that criminals could not be prosecuted under the gun registration law for failure to register their weapons, because it violated their 5th amendment protections against self incrimination.

Isn't the editorial staff at the LA times, or the California legislature worried that having criminals use these guns will also violate their rights under the 5th amendment??
After all this would be requiring them to incriminate themselves, if you required the serial number on all ammunition or the stamping technology be used in all Guns.

You folks really are hilarious.
 
Sure glad that I just purchased a S&W 22-4. If I ever have to shoot anyone in California I will just make sure to pocket the moon clip with my six empties prior to loading a fresh moon clip. Even if S&W secretly snuck in some "laser micro-engraving" on my new weapon without me knowing about it (along with the "Infernal Lock"), I won't leave any shell casings around for them to find.

(If the antis would just spend a fraction of the time that they devote to dreaming up ways to deprive us of our rights trying to solve the real problems....)
 
Sistema1927:

You may have missed this part:

California has some of the strongest gun laws in the country, but more are needed. The state requires extensive background checks, monthly limits on handgun purchases and records of even secondary handgun sales. This makes its gun-owner database one of the most up-to-date in the country. Adding bullets to the paper trail would help cops do their job better without impeding citizens' right to bear arms.

See the part where more laws are needed. Part of that new law will have you leave your casings at the scene. Its hard to pull the wool over the eyes of CA legislators! Sarcasm of course.
 
answerguy's reply from LA Times:
For The Record
Los Angeles Times Monday June 26, 2006
Home Edition California Part B Page 10 Editorial Pages Desk
1 inches; 51 words
Type of Material: Correction
Guns: An editorial on Thursday about a new technology that gives bullets
a unique identifier said it uses a small laser inside the gun to mark each
bullet. Lasers are used to etch engravings on the gun parts that are used in the
process, but they are not inside the gun.

It will probably also be illegal to alter/destroy those markings.

And I suppose the criminals will follow that law to the letter.

Just like they follow the rest of them.
 
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