KNick wrote:Hi Spacekiwi.
While that seems to be the case, it is more complicated than that. Some of the measures in the bill, such as the background check, are merely extensions of laws that are already on the books. That one has already been challenged and upheld. It has been deemed to be in the public interest to attempt to exclude criminals from purchasing a gun of any type. The new parts of the law add point of sale requirements that are not covered by previous law (the so called gun show exemption). They also add some classes of people that are not currently covered. That amendment to the law would pass almost anywhere.
The assault weapons part of the bill is the one I personally have the most trouble with. Not with what it attempts to do, but the language with which it is written. Under the proposed definitions, even a handgun could be classified as an "assault weapon". The second reason I think this is bad law is the fact that such a law already exists, with very precise definitions, very strict controls and has already been in use for over fifty years.
I object to the magazine measures because it makes owning such a magazine illegal. That would automatically make anyone who owns one a criminal, even though it was legal when purchased. Separate the different parts and let each one be decided separately.
the wording on assault rifles has baffled me multiple times when researching this, so i agree that people will have a lot of trouble with it. it seems to be worded to ban parts, not actual guns. And I had always wondered about those exemptions for gunshows.
as for the magazines, what if you were to grandfather it in over a year or two, with a buyback time so the state government would buy back the magazines. it gets them off the streets, doesnt penalise the owners as much, and gives an incentive to hand them in.