Posted on 02/11/2007 3:52:30 PM PST by Copernicus
In response to inquiries about what "you" can do, Akins Group Inc. has prepared a sample letter to the Acting Director of BATFE. We will also generate a short list of lawmakers who can and should be contacted by you, your family, friends and anyone else who might be interested.
Please check www.firefaster.com frequently for updates.
Details here:
http://www.firefaster.com/CalltoAction.pdf< /A >
And here:
< A HREF = "http://www.firefaster.com/Reconsideration.pdf " >http://www.firefaster.com/Reconsideration.pdf < /A >
and a history of previous posts here:
< A HREF ="http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/search?m=all;o=time;s=Akins " >http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/search?m=all;o=time;s=Akins< /A >
Best regards to all,
(P.S. I am tired of fooling with the HTML Code, you guys are sharp enough to find the locations)
Best regards,
Also, incidentally, since Chuck Schumer derided as liars those who called the "two-shot" MP5's machine guns, does that mean they're not?
ATF should be a corner store, not a federal agency!
- Yes.
- Yes.
- Quite possibly yes - which is particularly interesting, since many shotguns do this.
- No. Pull trigger once, get more than one shot - that's the federal definition of a MG. (Some states define it differently, such as Georgia which requires more than 6 shots per pull.)
Incidentally: Most semi-autos can, by gunking up the works carefully and loading dangerously-ultra-soft-primer ammo, be persuaded to - occasionally - "double" ... the ATF uses this technique to make any semi pass its "is this a machinegun?" test (and apparently has ALWAYS succeeded).
In response to the first "yes", weren't there some older designs like that (double-barrel gun which could fire both barrels if the selector was mis-set)?
In response to the second, a combination of parts sufficient to build a machine gun is considered to be a machine gun. Does anyone have a double-trigger gun who does not have the parts necessary to join both triggers together?
My point #4 was that Charles Schumer says the people who called the MP5's were lying. Charles Schumer would never make any false accusations, would he?
Key words are "older" and "mis-set". New ones, IIRC, don't mis-set.
The "combination of parts" involves parts with an obvious intent to be combined for an illicit purpose. AFAIK, nobody makes a trigger-joining part just for that purpose. On a comparable note, IIRC, the ATF has recinded their infamous "shoelace ruling", as the shoelace is not a part made with intent for such use.
As for Schumer, "antis" usually don't know what they're talking about.
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