Posted on 09/06/2017 12:32:15 PM PDT by marktwain
The DemoRats have been pushing for gun control for decades.
This is how it has been working out for them.
And in the last two months... (Nov. 2012 and Dec. 2012)
And it continues...
And there is more...
And more...
And yet more...
And more and more and...
We just keep buyin' more...
And we bought more more more...
And more and more and more...
Could it be? More?
More Americans buy more guns...
KEEP FLAPPIN' YOUR LIPS, DEMOCRATS! WE'LL BUY MILLIONS MORE. ;-)
An armed society is a polite society.
So what's the big deal?
Every year there are more "private" vehicles on the roads than there were the year before.
What a big nothing burger.
DACA is DemoCACA! How about TACO: Trump’s Action for Child Outsiders?
It appears I’m falling behind.
Great news!
WINNING.
Thanks for posting this.
404 million
With this large number it really amazes me that there are:
very few accidents/year
very few murders/year
Great post with all those gun stats!
Thanks.
That figure is way too low. People that own guns tend to own several. I have a “small” collection at 6 total. I live in Massachusetts which isn’t exactly a gun owners paradise. We do have a great rod and gun club in town and I have my concealed carry permit. I know many people with multiple guns.
Now my father-in-law in Texas? At last count he had 45 guns. Many he inherited from his own father. But in Texas that might be only a medium sized collection. I bet the real national number is north of 500 million
A ten year old vehicle is nearly finished and ready to scrap.
With reasonable maintenance a hundred year old firearm still
works nearly as well as it did the day it was manufactured.
My pleasure!
This really warms my heart! I’m guessing there are considerably more than 400 million privately owned firearms in the US. This figure is based on what information the ATF has available to them. There are countless private transactions that are impossible to track.
“What a big nothing burger.”
Perhaps that’s the point. With 400 million guns out there, if gun ownership was going to be a problem you’d know about it.
Don’t fall in to the trap of placing any responsibility on the hardware or mere ownership of it. Compare the total number of gun-owners against those criminally-charged for illegal use and you can figure out that illegal use is a very insignificant number. Then, you can revise your statement to reflect the real situation: If gun ownership and gun owners were really the problem, it would be plain to see.
Private transactions don’t increase the number of firearms in private hands they just move them from one hand to another. However it is true that not all firearms existent in the U.S. have been recorded from the point of manufacture. For example, firearms brought home by veterans as souvenirs would not be recorded as entering the stream of commerce. Smuggling would be another unrecorded source.
Ok about 3 more each ought to about do it .
When asked what it would be like to invade the continental US, Japanese admiral Isoroku Yamamoto blanched, and said it would be a fools errand. “There would be a rifle behind every blade of grass” he was quoted as saying. Nice to see that some things remain the same.
CC
Not really. My two vehicles are 12 and 18 years old. Not finished, not ready for scrap.
OTOH, my oldest rifle is about 80 years old, and many are decades old. They'll outlast any car I ever own.
Be careful with estimates, In some locations any sale of a single firearm can result in up to 2 instant checks. (guy sells to store, put in inventory, store sells to an ultimate buyer.) If the second purchaser tries it, but ultimate doesn’t like it and purchases a different firearm the number of instant checks can go even higher.
Just as with churning in stock trading, firearms that have been in a gun collection for decades can suddenly be sold to other owners. That sale doesn’t add a new firearm to the national inventory of privately owned firearms, it just transfers it. So some of the instant checks represent no change in the net number of firearms.
My Mosin-nagant is 75 years old, and is just getting broken in. Ugly as a mud fence, though.
CC
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