That said, I'm still not convinced the majority is necessarily wrong. Based on what little information I have, it seems that the anti-ghost gun argument is wrong, but that does not automatically mean that there should be an injunction before the judicial process plays itself out.
Yeah, this is confusing. Here are some more documents. I read it as follows: Alito didn't stay anything, but presented the request for a stay to the court - which granted it with Alito opposed to granting it.
They kind of treat components like cars when it comes to emissions. Or they're trying to. An exhaust does nothing on its own, therefore you'd think it's not subject to separate environmental regulation. However, they've been trying to stop people from selling such on the basis that once fitted to a vehicle said vehicle would necessarily be out of compliance since untested. The only way to comply would be to modify and certify every vehicle that you purport to sell the exhaust for.
If regulations are constitutional when applied to ordinary guns
They aren't.
why not to 'ghost guns'?
It's used as a scare tactic, and just further gun grabbing. Same as "semi-auto," "assault weapon," pistol braces, and the like. Those three examples are, respectively; most guns, stupid made up category, don't make guns more lethal or even do what gun grabbers pretend they do.
Ghost guns are the same and, as someone else pointed out, often not even guns. They're either chunks of metal or plastic, or illegal guns gangbangers have filed the serial numbers off of. And they all get lumped together, and treated like Bad Guys are making their own big scary guns in large numbers. Which might at some point be true, but the people making their own guns now are mostly hobbyists and enthusiasts.
As far as crimes go, "ghost guns" are not a thing. It's a lie, another attempt to wedge something into a chink in the armor.
Ghost guns aren't real. You've always been legally allowed to build your own firearms and you still are. The feds are mad that a company decided to follow the rules to the letter by selling kits to make guns because the feds don't get their cut.
If regulations are constitutional when applied to ordinary guns, why not to 'ghost guns'?
Because the word ghost scared all the female judges into voting against it
LOL
But not true, of course, Neil Gorsuch voted for it.
What a surprise, CNN is deceiving people again?
That said, I'm still not convinced the majority is necessarily wrong. Based on what little information I have, it seems that the anti-ghost gun argument is wrong, but that does not automatically mean that there should be an injunction before the judicial process plays itself out.
Yeah, this is confusing. Here are some more documents. I read it as follows: Alito didn't stay anything, but presented the request for a stay to the court - which granted it with Alito opposed to granting it.
If a thing is not a firearm, the atf shouldn't get to regulate it as one.
I'm not sure how this is complicated to anyone.
They kind of treat components like cars when it comes to emissions. Or they're trying to. An exhaust does nothing on its own, therefore you'd think it's not subject to separate environmental regulation. However, they've been trying to stop people from selling such on the basis that once fitted to a vehicle said vehicle would necessarily be out of compliance since untested. The only way to comply would be to modify and certify every vehicle that you purport to sell the exhaust for.
They aren't.
It's used as a scare tactic, and just further gun grabbing. Same as "semi-auto," "assault weapon," pistol braces, and the like. Those three examples are, respectively; most guns, stupid made up category, don't make guns more lethal or even do what gun grabbers pretend they do.
Ghost guns are the same and, as someone else pointed out, often not even guns. They're either chunks of metal or plastic, or illegal guns gangbangers have filed the serial numbers off of. And they all get lumped together, and treated like Bad Guys are making their own big scary guns in large numbers. Which might at some point be true, but the people making their own guns now are mostly hobbyists and enthusiasts.
As far as crimes go, "ghost guns" are not a thing. It's a lie, another attempt to wedge something into a chink in the armor.
Ghost guns aren't real. You've always been legally allowed to build your own firearms and you still are. The feds are mad that a company decided to follow the rules to the letter by selling kits to make guns because the feds don't get their cut.