Or you can play the legal/political game:
Do what I did. Set up a "gun trust", a legal entity spelled out in a document. Put your title 1 firearms in Appendix A, your Title 2 firearms in Appendix B.
When any agent of the government asks you, "Do you own (or have) any firearms?".
Legally and ethically you can say, "No. I do not own any firearms, nor do I have any". (That is the truth, because your Gun Trusts owns/has them).
Now if they ask you "Do you have ACCESS to a firearm, you can always say, "I'm a law abiding citizen, so I guess if I went to a gunstore and bought one, I could quickly get access to one".
This is an excellent suggestion. Our trust attorney is a conservative female, who hunted with her dad.
“Do what I did. Set up a “gun trust”, a legal entity spelled out in a document. Put your title 1 firearms in Appendix A, your Title 2 firearms in Appendix B.
When any agent of the government asks you, “Do you own (or have) any firearms?”.
Legally and ethically you can say, “No. I do not own any firearms, nor do I have any”. (That is the truth, because your Gun Trusts owns/has them). “
I will be looking into this and will be letting our younger relatives know this. They need a trust anyway.