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what single constitutional guarantee is most important to you?

 
 
FreeDuck
 
  2  
Reply Wed 13 May, 2009 07:41 am
@genoves,
genoves wrote:

I am heartened by a movement in Montana which proposes to manufacture guns and ammunition to be used only in the state of Montana. This, as I undeerstand it, would preclude firearm regulation by the federal government.

How do you prevent the guns and ammunition from being taken outside the state of Montana? A giant invisible dog fence and shock collars for everyone?
DontTreadOnMe
 
  2  
Reply Wed 13 May, 2009 11:51 am
@FreeDuck,
FreeDuck wrote:

genoves wrote:

I am heartened by a movement in Montana which proposes to manufacture guns and ammunition to be used only in the state of Montana. This, as I undeerstand it, would preclude firearm regulation by the federal government.

How do you prevent the guns and ammunition from being taken outside the state of Montana? A giant invisible dog fence and shock collars for everyone?


build a fence? we already know that works just great.
genoves
 
  1  
Reply Thu 14 May, 2009 01:51 am
@DontTreadOnMe,
Guns taken outside of the state of Montana would be subject to the Federal Law. The important element of this idea is that guns and ammunition which are manufactured inside Montana and used in Montana alone, would not be subject to federal law.

NOTE

link to an AP story.


Montana is trying to trigger a battle over gun control " and perhaps make a larger point about what many folks in this ruggedly independent state regard as a meddlesome federal government.
In a bill passed by the Legislature earlier this month, the state is asserting that guns manufactured in Montana and sold in Montana to people who intend to keep their weapons in Montana are exempt from federal gun registration, background check and dealer-licensing rules because no state lines are crossed.

That notion is all but certain to be tested in court.

...

Carrie DiPirro, a spokeswoman for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, had no comment on the legislation. But the federal government has generally argued that it has authority under the interstate commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution to regulate guns because they can so easily be transported across state lines.

...

Montana's leading gun rights organization, more hardcore than the National Rifle Association, boasts it has moved 50 bills through the Legislature over the past 25 years. And lawmakers in the Big Sky State have rebelled against federal control of everything from wetland protection to the national Real ID system.


Under the new law, guns intended only for Montana would be stamped "Made in Montana." The drafters of the law hope to set off a legal battle with a simple Montana-made youth-model single-shot, bolt-action .22 rifle. They plan to find a "squeaky clean" Montanan who wants to send a note to the ATF threatening to build and sell about 20 such rifles without federal dealership licensing.

If the ATF tells them it's illegal, they will sue and take the case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, if they can.

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