Posted on 02/20/2014 12:13:48 PM PST by neverdem
A bit of miltary wisdom has it that you should never give an order you know won't be obeyed. Issuing such an order accomplishes nothing except to undermine your authority and expose the extent to which, no matter what enforcement mechanisms are in place, you rely upon voluntary compliance. But now that Connecticut's resident class of politically employed cretins has awoken to the fact that, in their state, like everywhere else, people overwhelmingly disobey orders to register their weapons, they're acting like this is a shocking revelation. They're also promising to make those who tried to comply, but missed the deadline regret the effort (proving the point of the openly defiant). And the politicians' enablers in the press are screaming for the prosecution of "scores of thousands" of state residents who, quite predictably, flipped the bird at the government.
Three years ago, the Connecticut legislature estimated there were 372,000 rifles in the state of the sort that might be classified as "assault weapons," and two million plus high-capacity magazines. Many more have been sold in the gun-buying boom since then. But by the close of registration at the end of 2013, state officials received around 50,000 applications for "assault weapon" registrations, and 38,000 applications for magazines.
Some people actually tried to comply with the registration law, but missed the deadline. The state's official position is that it will accept applications notarized on or before January 1, 2014 and postmarked by January 4. But, says Dora Schriro, Commissioner of the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, in a letter to lawmakers(PDF), anybody sufficiently law-abiding but foolish enough to miss that slightly extended grace period will have to surrender or otherwise get rid of their guns.
This, of course, is the eternally fulfilled fear of those who oppose registration of things governments don't likethat allowing the government to know about them will result in their eventual confiscation. Such confiscation, despite assurances to the contrary, occurred in New York, California, and elsewhere. Connecticut has accomplished something special, though, by making "eventual" a synonym for "right now."
You know who won't have to surrender their weapons? People who quietly told the state to fuck off.
This successful example of mass defiance horrifies the editorial board of the Hartford Courant, which shudders at the sight of the masses not obeying an order that, history, tells us, never had a shot at wide compliance. According to them:
It's estimated that perhaps scores of thousands of Connecticut residents failed to register their military-style assault weapons with state police by Dec. 31....
...the bottom line is that the state must try to enforce the law. Authorities should use the background check database as a way to find assault weapon purchasers who might not have registered those guns in compliance with the new law.
A Class D felony calls for a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Even much lesser penalties or probation would mar a heretofore clean record and could adversely affect, say, the ability to have a pistol permit.
If you want to disobey the law, you should be prepared to face the consequences.
Such shock! Such outrage!
But compliance with gun registration would have been a historical aberration. Gun restrictions of all sorts breed defiance everywhere they're introduced. About 25 percent of Illinois handgun owners actually complied when that state's registration law was introduced in the 1970s, according to Don B. Kates, a criminologist and civil liberties attorney, writing in the December 1977 issue of Inquiry. Then, when California began registering "assault weapons" in 1990, The New York Times reported after the registration period came to a close that only about 7,000 weapons of an estimated 300,000 in private hands in the state have been registered.
Similar defiance occurred in Australia, Canada, and many European countries. People, unsurprisingly, seem to think that being armed is not a bad thing, and that governments can't be trusted.
Can't imagine why.
Here's the thing: Laws rely, almost entirely, on voluntary compliance, with enforcement efforts sufficient for a tiny, noncompliant minority. If a large number of people to whom a law applies find the law repugnantand a majority of a group, consisting of scores of thousands of people, constitutes a large numberthan the law is unenforceable, no matter how many politicians and newspaper editorial writers think it's a swell idea. Governments that try enforcement, anyway, will be stuck in a pattern of escalating brutality and declining legitimacy.
Gun registration, let alone confiscation has, always and everywhere, fallen into that "unenforceable" category. We saw the same phenomenon with Prohibition, and we've also seen it with drugs.
To insist, now, that Connecticut authorities try to chase down "scores of thousands" of gun owners (using background check records that don't actually prove they still own the forbidden firearms) displays wild ignorance of the limits of government power. It also expresses disgusting deference to authority at the expense of any respect for libertyan immature morality that sees no good beyond obedience to rules. And, it's sheer lunacy.
Arrest? Hell, the SWAT commander will point at you and yell, "DOG!".
Yes. Yes they will. Unless you decide that that is where your line in the sand has been drawn. Even a casual read of history should teach you where this eventually goes. And that there is only one way to stop it.
Yes, the background database is supposed to be purged, but according to the Second Amendment Foundation, there is no penalty for not complying.
The Foundation added a penalty for noncompliance in an amendment to the last failed gun control law.
How do we know they are complying with the law?
Anti-Firearms Psychosis - AFP - comes (even more) out of the closet.
“If I recall correctly, that database is to be purged after the check has been made. They wouldn’t use an illegal database to go after “lawbreakers” defying an unconstitutional law still under adjudication, would they? /s “
Then we have the Form 4473 can of worms yet to be opened.
The editorial board of today's Courant would be for England during the War for Independence.
“When 1/3 million people dont obey this law could be there is something dreadfully wrong with the law.”
When 30,000,000 (illegal aliens) people don’t obey the law....
You got it. I only go to the courant just for UConn stuff and obits.
Ask the cops how eager they are to start going door to door? I think a major outbreak of blue flu would happen. :-)
I guess they can give it try...
You beat me to it.
Like the 55 mph speed limit?
I’ve read a piece that said that the 55 mph speed limit was one of the main reasons for disregard of all laws - people just didn’t see it as anything but arbitrary and unnecessary,
and therefore raised questions about other laws of the same era.
Yes! because you are a conservative. If you are a liberal then you will be overlooked or forgiven.
The thing about libs, though, is that they really think the State will do their dirty work for them.
Most leftists have this visceral desire to see those that disagree with them killed by the State.
COLORADO SHERIFFS STAND UP, RESIST NEW RESTRICTIONS ON GUN RIGHTS
They should also consider that while their agents are out knocking down doors they will be home alone and quite a few people just might remember who sent the shock troops out.
What I’ve said is that when the knocking down of doors starts that the homeowner/patriot has more of a duty to escape than resist.
Escape, organize, and fight back on your own terms.
Resisting on their terms and in their timing is/will be futile, by design because they will come with overwhelming force. That is an excellent reason to plant a few seedlings not easily accessed by the storm troopers.
There are so many variables, but yes... I, like most others, have sacrificial weapons. But this only works at the beginning. If all out confiscation were to ensue, most of us wont be home when they come knocking. It’s a serious catch-22 for authorities. They’ve got big balls when they try to flush 100 people out of a wooden building in the middle of the county in Waco. It’s a whole different story when you know there are 100 million armed citizens scattered endlessly from sea to sea, you are hopelessly outnumbered, your enemy isn’t concentrated, and you don’t even know what he looks like. That war is not winnable and they are quite aware of that fact
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