The Biden administration is in possession of nearly one billion records detailing American citizens’ firearm purchases, far more than Congress and the public has been aware of, according to new information from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives obtained by the Washington Free Beacon.
Good! That way they'll know where to start when it comes time to stick'em up their ass!
ReplyDeleteGood! That way they'll know where to start when it comes time to stick'em up their ass!
ReplyDeleteAre you surprised???
ReplyDeleteSo? even the dimmest Fed should be able to do that math. Not only that, but prior to the unconstitutional GCA of 1968, there was no form of feral record keeping. Think of all the perfectly useful firearms produced prior to 1968. My guess is that number is way into the millions. Guns are the ultimate" durable good", so plenty of them still work just fine
ReplyDeleteWhen a background check is done during a weapons purchase there is a record made that is supposed to be destroyed after a few months. Not surprised that someone has been 'collecting' them.
ReplyDeleteCalifornia has been doing it for years. And I'm sure they share their data with their 'willing partners' at the BATFE.
DeleteJackboot Janet's excuse when she got caught doing this was the records were being "retained for audit purposes."
DeleteWell they're about to have a new one for me.
ReplyDeleteThey have me for everything except a couple of '22's, a couple of shotguns and a wore slap out .32 Police Positive. Boy, is the action smooth and crisp on that thing but I'd be afraid to shoot it.
ReplyDeleteTo me the interesting part is not that the f’n feds are breaking the law, it’s that there are a BILLION records. I knew there were more than 300 million.
ReplyDelete...and completely against the law. 18 U.S. Code § 926 prohibits "any system of registration of firearms, firearms owners, or firearms transactions or dispositions [from] be[ing] established."
ReplyDeleteNot that the Buydem or Obozo admins think that they have comply with any U.S. law.
Then TWFB tries to subtly justify the record keeping with "When a licensed gun store goes out of business, its private records detailing gun transactions become ATF property and are stored at a federal site in West Virginia."
I guess they forgot that the name of their publication is The Washington FREE Beacon. The question is FREE of or to do what.
Nemo
Kind of changes the narrative of 400,000 guns that has been parroted. Lots of guns!
ReplyDeletePaul J.
Kind of changes the narrative of 400,000 guns that has been parroted. Lots of guns!
ReplyDeletePaul J.
guns are not the weak point. ammo is. without ammo all you have is a nice rock or club.
ReplyDeletestock up on ammo. most of us should have learned that lesson back in the clinton years.
I know I did. got into reloading and casting bullets as well. ammo is always the weak point.
if you can, buy at least 2 boxes and put one away for later. hope we never have to use it.
instead of putting your guns in the ground, we should be using them against the fools trying to take them. makes me sad when my grandson comes up and wants to go to the range. I dig into my 22 stash an look at the prices on the boxes. remember 15.99 for 555 rounds of winchester ?
Well, good for them. Now let's see if they can do something about it. Still waiting...Ohio Guy
ReplyDeleteEnter the idiocy of govment "thinking" - "we're going to use those records of duly purchased and background checked guns sold by dealers to catch those "rogue" dealers who don't fill out the paperwork and do background checks." THIS is how stupid they expect the citizenry to be.
ReplyDeleteThe "rogue dealers" aren't the target of all this record keeping; you and I are the targets.
DeleteOne billion? If they include the transfers from the manufacturers to the various middle men involved, that would be quite believable. More so, if they include electronic records of firearms and ammo purchases. I am not surprised that they have their hands on these and I would not be surprised that they have all been scanned and are fully searchable using OCR software. I am surprised that this story was leaked, however. I am guessing that, if they ever catch the poor slob who leaked it, that person will be in jail for a long time or have his life ruined.
ReplyDelete