It Is The Guns

If someone has an accident on a construction job site with a nail gun, the cost for
Me to buy materials and nails and an air compressor and a gun should go up 150%!!!!
 
A dilusuonal person, a homeless person, a gender neutral person or an immigrant can not shoot another with a box of wax paper.

Ergo ...
 
POLITICO:

"Biden to close ‘gun-show loophole’ and expand background checks for firearms.
The final rule ... would eliminate a loophole that has allowed sales of guns
without background checks of guns outside of brick-and-mortar stores."
 
POLITICO:

"Biden to close ‘gun-show loophole’ and expand background checks for firearms.
The final rule ... would eliminate a loophole that has allowed sales of guns
without background checks of guns outside of brick-and-mortar stores."

There is no such thing, fyi
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_show_loophole

History
In 1968, Congress passed the Gun Control Act (GCA), under which modern firearm commerce operates. The GCA mandated Federal Firearms Licenses (FFLs) for those "engaged in the business" of selling firearms, but not for private individuals who sold firearms infrequently.[42][43] Under the Gun Control Act, firearm dealers were prohibited from doing business anywhere except the address listed on their Federal Firearms License. It also mandated that licensed firearm dealers maintain records of firearms sales.[42] An unlicensed person is prohibited by federal law from transferring, selling, trading, giving, transporting, or delivering a firearm to any other unlicensed person only if they know or have reasonable cause to believe the buyer does not reside in the same State or is prohibited by law from purchasing or possessing firearms.[44][43]

In 1986, Congress passed the Firearm Owners Protection Act (FOPA), which relaxed certain controls in the Gun Control Act and permitted licensed firearm dealers to conduct business at gun shows.[n 1] Specifically, FOPA made it legal for FFL holders to make private sales, provided the firearm was transferred to the licensee's personal collection at least one year prior to the sale. Hence, when a personal firearm is sold by an FFL holder, no background check or Form 4473 is required by federal law. According to the ATF, FFL holders are required to keep a record of such sales in a bound book.[47][48] The United States Department of Justice (USDOJ) said the stated purpose of FOPA was to ensure the GCA did not "place any undue or unnecessary federal restrictions or burdens on law-abiding citizens, but it opened many loopholes through which illegal gun traffickers can slip." The scope of those who "engage in the business" of dealing in firearms (and are therefore required to have a license) was narrowed to include only those who devote "time, attention, and labor to dealing in firearms as a regular course of trade or business with the principal objective of livelihood and profit through the repetitive purchase and resale of firearms." FOPA excluded those who buy and sell firearms to "enhance a personal collection" or for a "hobby," or who "sell all or part of a personal collection." According to the USDOJ, this new definition made it difficult for them to identify offenders who could claim they were operating as "hobbyists" trading firearms from their personal collection.[49][50][n 2] Efforts to reverse a key feature of FOPA by requiring criminal background checks and purchase records on private sales at gun shows were unsuccessful.[52][53] Those who sold only at gun shows and wanted to obtain an FFL, which would allow them to conduct background checks, were prohibited from doing so through question 18a on the ATF Form 7 (Application for Federal Firearms License).[54] The April 2019 revision of the Form 7 removed this restriction,[55] allowing them to obtain licenses.

In 1993, Congress enacted the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, amending the Gun Control Act of 1968. "The Brady Law" instituted federal background checks on all firearm purchasers who buy from federally licensed dealers (FFL). This law had no provisions for private firearms transactions or sales. The Brady Law originally imposed an interim measure, requiring a waiting period of 5 days before a licensed importer, manufacturer, or dealer may sell, deliver, or transfer a handgun to an unlicensed individual. The waiting period applied only in states without an alternate system that was deemed acceptable of conducting background checks on handgun purchasers. Personal transfers and sales between unlicensed Americans could also still be subject to other federal, state, and local restrictions. These interim provisions ceased to apply on November 30, 1998
 
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Pointing to a bunch of media outlets who constantly report fake things does not undo the fact that there is no gin show loophole
 
call it what you will. Biden Administration has implemented the
background checks at gun shows( and a waiting period?)
not part of the Brady bill

in the information above
 
call it what you will. Biden Administration has implemented the
background checks at gun shows( and a waiting period?)
not part of the Brady bill

in the information above

I'll call it the Biden administration making up a problem that doesn't exist and claiming to solve it
 
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