Posted on 03/29/2019 5:27:51 AM PDT by Kaslin
Democrats want to register your guns. It isnt just something that universal background checks will eventually lead to. There is a push even in a gun friendly state such as Pennsylvania, where only antiques and guns owned by law enforcement would be exempt. Democrats in the state legislature and Governor Tom Wolf strongly support the bill.
Yet, despite what gun control advocates and Democrats claim, the proposal will take money away from law enforcement policies that work and leave Pennsylvanians less safe.
The bill would require Pennsylvanians seeking to do anything with a gun, whether that be own, possess, sell or transfer, to apply for gun registration through State Police, said Rep. Cruz, the bills lead sponsor. This [Pennsylvania State Police] database will aid all law enforcement officials with investigations and with tracking missing or stolen firearms."
Pennsylvania state police have keep records on all transfers of handguns (both private and through dealers) since 1931 and thus has already had a registration system for them. Records on handgun purchases through dealers go back to 1901. The new regulations would add in the private transfer of long guns as well as a $10 fee per gun per year as well as fingerprinting and citizenship verification.
Gun control advocates have long claimed that a comprehensive registry would be an effective safety tool. Their reasoning is straightforward: If a gun has been left at a crime scene, the registry will link the crime gun back to the criminal.
Nice logic, but reality has never worked that way. Crime guns are very rarely left at the crime scene. The few that are have been unregistered criminals are not stupid enough to leave behind a gun thats registered to them. When a gun is left at the scene, it is usually because the criminal has been seriously injured or killed. These crimes would have been solved even without registration.
Registration hasn't worked in Pennsylvania or other places. During a 2001 lawsuit, the Pennsylvania state police could not identify a specific crime that had been solved that the registration system from 1901 to 2001, though they did claim that it had assisted in a total of four cases but they could provide no details.
During a 2013 deposition, the Washington, D.C., police chief said that she could not recall any specific instance where registration records were used to determine who committed a crime.
When I testified before the Hawaii State Senate in 2000, the Honolulu chief of police also stated that he couldnt find any crimes that had been solved due to registration and licensing. The chief also said that his officers devoted about 50,000 hours each year to registering and licensing guns. This time is being taken away from traditional, time-tested law enforcement activities.
Canada and other parts of the U.S. haven't had any better luck. From 2003 to 2009, 1,314 out of 4,257 Canadian homicides were committed with firearms. Data provided last fall by the Library of Parliament reveal that the murder weapon was identified in fewer than a third of the homicides with firearms. Of the identified weapons, about three-quarters were not registered. Among registered weapons, about half were registered to someone other than the person accused of the homicide. In just 62 cases only 4.7 percent of all firearm homicides was the gun found to be registered to the accused. As most homicides in Canada are not committed with a gun, these 62 cases correspond to only about 1 percent of all homicides.
So, on average during that seven-year period, there were only nine cases annually in which it was even conceivable that registration made a difference. But apparently registration didn't make a difference even in those cases. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Chiefs of Police couldnt provide a single example in which tracing was of more than peripheral importance to solving a case.
And they want to do this instead of spending money on better domestic violence intervention initiatives or youth counselling services or other such things to deal with criminal or tragic violence regardless of the weapon used.
It’s all about confiscation once the Leftists gain total control.
This is virtue signaling by our uber-Lib Governor and the bearded bikepath loving Mayor of Pittsburgh. Won’t pass, but very troubling nonetheless.
What would be the purpose behind that? #RhetoricalQuestion #AnotherExcuseToPutYoungBlackMenInPrison
None of this would be happening if the New Yorkers and New Jerseyites didn’t come to Pennsylvania swearing up and down that they left because they hate liberals.
The politicians in PA will never pass this crap in PA during my lifetime.
From my cold, dead hands.
The liberal virus that has infected America from coast to coast.
NO!
WRONG!
Democrats want to TAKE your guns.
It’s just that they have to register them FIRST so that they know where to go and GET THEM.
Do NOT be fooled, here.
Yep!
My answer: nope!
Pennsylvania has always had a huge population of gun ownership. This will go nowhere.
Even über-liberal Boulder, CO has experienced Massive NON-COMPLIANCE with their new law constraining "assault weapons".
At $10/firearm that will cost a typical hunter/sport shooter $200 or so. I would think this law would fund itself. I don't think this would be about crime prevention as much as it is about making the deplorables pay.
Who wants to run away to New Zealand NOW..?
***Democrats want to register your guns.***
The old wish from 1964. Before 1964, they “ONLY wanted to register handguns. Long guns would not be affected!”
Now they are after anything they can get their dirty hands on.
Can’t confiscate what is not registered.
Militia, Theres Your Neighborhood LEOs.
Now ALL you demonratcommiescumbags go piss on each other.
AND DONT COME BACK!!!
No its all about DISARMAMENT OF THE PEOPLE!!!
You do know some History ?
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