Monday, January 08, 2018

May Also Means 'May Not'

3-D Printed Guns May Be Headed to the Supreme Court: An Update [More]
Sorry, fellas:


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Anyone familiar with Cody Wilson of Defense Distributed, and we all should be, would bet their rent money that he's not going to simply sit down and shut up. The "Fat Lady" ain't even on stage yet!

Bill in IL said...

More tyranny from the black robed tyrants. They will let the communist States pass all the infringement they desire, then the supremes will simply deny the gun rights people their petition. The long, slippery slope to outright bans.

Anonymous said...

"And your father's still perfecting ways of making sealing wax." -- Rolling Stones.

The music and movie industries are struggling to cope with consumers' ability to duplicate and spread identical copies of their products sometimes before they are even officially released. Their efforts to control file sharing would be comical if there weren't entire industries and the jobs they support at stake.

"Brick and mortar" retailers are struggling as well to try and find a niche in markets they once ruled but have been taken away from them by the likes of Amazon. J. C. Penny's and Sears will likely not survive and Best Buy is not looking so good either.

Lawmakers apparently can't see the similar shifts in the foundations of their gun control schemes. When Joe Sixpack can spend an afternoon in his basement casting a dozen AR15 lowers from high strength polymer or working with one of Defense Distributed's Ghost Gunner machines finishing 80% aluminum lowers in his basement, the old ways of "making sure guns don't fall into the wrong hands" become worse than useless. They become jokes.

Meanwhile our "leaders" seek to perfect those systems by which they determine who's hands are the wrong hands and then wonder why we no longer take them seriously on any issue.