Remarks About President Biden's New Crimes

in Outdoors and more3 years ago (edited)

Well, Ramblin' Joe Biden just announced new regulatory overreach, so it's time to dismantle some authoritarian nonsense and blatant dishonesty. Below are some key excerpts from this speech. I know many people outside the US do not understand US gun culture or gun laws, so I'll try to add some context along the way, but feel free to add questions. I'll also try to keep my minarchist dunce cap on, and not go full anarchist here. I will use the Constitution and historical context from the founding fathers.

AR15.png
Image via Pixabay

A year ago this week, standing here with many of you, I instructed the Attorney General to write a regulation that would would rein in the proliferation of ghost guns because I was having trouble getting anything passed in the Congress, but I used what we call “regulatory authority.” A year later, we’re here. We keep that promise.

He's bragging about completely dismantling the Constitutional framework for how laws are made. The President has no legislative authority. Neither do law enforcement agencies. This is completely outside his Constitutional authority as chief executive.

Look, the idea that someone on a terrorist list could purchase one of these guns is extreme? It isn’t extreme; it’s just basic common sense.

No, if someone has not been convicted of a crime, they are innocent until proven guilty. Secret lists do not justify infringement of rights even if those lists are completely foolproof, and there is precedent for concern.

Take a look. Take a look at this. It comes in this package. You can see the picture down here maybe. This is the gun. It’s not hard to put together. A little drill — hand drill at home. It doesn’t take very long. Anyone can order it in the mail. Anyone. And, folks, a felon, a terrorist, a domestic abuser can go from a gun kit to a gun in as little as 30 minutes.

That's a gross exaggeration. Completing an "80% kit" is easy to mess up. It requires some basic tool skills, a steady hand, and patience even with a jig to align everything.

Buyers aren’t required to pass background checks. Because guns have no serial numbers — these guns — when they show up at a crime scene, they can’t be traced. Harder to find and prove who used them. Meaning you can’t connect the gun to the shooter and hold them accountable.

They don't have serial numbers because they have not been completed. When sold, they are not functional firearms. Home-built firearms have been legal since the dawn of the country. Under current law, even after nearly a century of gun control legislation, they have never been made illegal because they are entirely in compliance with legislation as written.

Last year alone, law enforcement reported approximately 20,000 suspected ghost guns to be — to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. That’s a tenfold increase in these ghost guns from 2016. Tenfold in five years. These guns are weapons of choice for many criminals. We’re going to do everything we can to deprive them of that choice and, when we find them, put them in jail for a long, long time.

"Suspected?" I suspect he's inflating the numbers by including guns with filed-off serial numbers. Stealing guns is a lot easier than building guns, after all.

Today, the United States Department of Justice is making it is illegal for a business to manufacture one of these kits without a serial number. Illegal. Illegal for a licensed dealer to sell them without a background check.

Legislation by regulation is antithetical to the principles of delegated authority and separation of powers. This is blatant overreach by executive fiat, and precisely the kind of abuse the Constitution was supposed to prevent.

And if somebody sells a ghost gun to a federally licensed dealer — for example, a pawn shop — that dealer must make the firearm and mark it with a serial number before reselling it.

It is already illegal to transfer a homemade firearm by any means other than inheritance. It's almost like he doesn't even know what the existing laws are.

First, we’re going after rogue gun dealers. The last time we had data on this was more than 20 years ago. Five percent of gun dealers sold 90 percent of illegal guns found at crime scenes. Five percent sold 90 percent.

Wait, so it's not about ghost guns all of a sudden? Also, do you know who else has been responsible for distributing guns to criminals?

[skipping a lot of tangential blather]

We need Congress to pass universal background checks. Universal background checks. And I know it’s controversial, but I got it done once: Ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines.

Yes, he did, and it had no impact on crime beyond making innocent people into "criminals." As I wrote before, "[C]rime in general, and murder specifically, did decline after the ban was imposed, but this was a continuation of a downturn that began a couple years prior."

I was getting criticized when I first passed this law when I was a senator. And guess what? I was down in southern Delaware — they do a lot of hunting and fishing down there — and I was walking up one of the creek beds. And a guy standing said, “You want to take my gun?” I said, “I don’t want to take your gun.” He said, “Well, you’re telling me I can’t have more than X number of bullets in a — in a — in my gun.” And I said, “What — do you think the deer you’re hunting wear Kevlar vests? What the hell you need 20 bullets for? You must be a hell of a terrible shot.” No, I’m serious. Think about it. Think about the mass shootings. As many as a hundred rounds. It’s a weapon of war. It has nothing to do with recreation.

No, an AR15 is not a weapon of war. Actual machine guns are already effectively impossible for most people to legally acquire. But the second amendment is not about hunting, it is about the right of the people to own and carry weapons of war to defend themselves against foreign or domestic tyrants. Deer don't wear kevlar vests, but pigs do, if you catch my drift. Besides, there are many competitive shooting sports using modern rifles. He is being completely dishonest here, creating a strawman argument and ignoring the plain language of the Bill of Rights.

Eliminate gun manufacturers’ immunity from liability. They’re the only outfit — they’re the only outfit in the country that is immune. Imagine had the tobacco industry been immune to prost- — to being sued. Come on. [...] Look, this is incredibly rare because gun manufacturers have more immunity from liability than any other American industry, so they have never had to take responsibility for the death and destruction their products cause.

First, has anyone heard of the vaccine industry? They are immune from liability for complications and side-effects by law, and the government has a taxpayer-funded system for restitution. This has been a concern since long before COVID-19.

Second, if a firearm company makes a defective product, they can be liable. The issue at hand is whether they are liable for crimes committed with their products. Do we sue Dell and Intel for hackers, or General Motors and Anheuser-Busch for drunk driving accidents? No, and blaming a rifle manufacturer for crimes committed with their rifles is equally absurd. The recent Remington settlement was not even a court decision, just an insurance company throwing in the towel after years of legal expenses stacking up.

And, by the way — it’s going to sound bizarre — I support the Second Amendment. You have a right. But from the very beginning, the Second Amendment didn’t say you can own any gun you want, big as you want. You couldn’t buy a cannon when, in fact, the Second Amendment passed. And certain people from the very beginning weren’t allowed to purchase guns. It’s nothing new. It’s just rational.

No, he does not support the second amendment. It says the right to own and carry weapons shall not be infringed. People did in fact own cannons. The Constitution inclides provision for letters of marque, a document which authorizes ship owners to engage in piracy and naval combat with their personal fleets as warships. The people barred from owning guns were literal slaves. His statement is historically and constitutionally false.

I'll quit here for now. That's the gist of it before he hands off to the jackass he wants to run the wholly unconstitutional ATF agency to enforce these extralegislative "laws." I'll hand off any further commentary to Brandon Herrera.

Relevant old posts:
Thoughts on Guns, Safety, and Freedom - Including Five Gun Control Rules I Support!
Constitutions Cannot Restrain Tyrants
Gun Control, Crime Rates, and Liberty
Gun Rights and False Narratives


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My understanding of executive orders is that they are intended to be used to facilitate operational changes in the executive branch, and for nothing else. Here, however, Biden is directing another entity of the executive branch to make a regulation with the force of law. This is unconstitutional.

WINNER-WINNER!!

EO is to provide direction for the application of existing laws, is another way to put it.

AND, those of us who know this have a duty to disobey unconstitutional regulations.

Only slaves obey orders without questioning them.

Thank you for finding better words. The president has no authority to pass anything with the force of law on all of us. Governors and state health commissioners, however, do, at least in the US. The function of the executive branch, all of it, is to enforce laws that the congress has passed. None of them have the constitutional authority to make laws. I cannot believe how many of us think all of these mandates, created by entities of the executive branch, are perfectly reasonable.

Keep in mind that Biden is not the only president to have used executive orders to put through regulations. This has become the favorite tool of the president. Trump signed a number of executive orders during his term, and several of the presidents before him also used the executive order as a tool.

yeah, they've been known to use EO's from time to time :)

If the Constitution means anything whatsoever, any regulation with the force of law must come from Congress directly. If we are represented, our representatives must vote so they can be held accountable by the public. However, ever since Woodrow Wilson, the "deep state" of bureaucrats writing layers of regulations under the purported authority of vague law has ballooned.

Between the Federal Reserve Act, international interventionism (and the draft to facilitate it), and the creation of the administrative state, I say Wilson was the worst president ever. FDR was a close second, and Biden is a distant third... so far.

Biden is not really high on the list of awful yet, but the midterms aren't even here. He has time.

Oh, and have some !PIZZA

When have congress people ever been held accountable for the shit that they do?

This is so weird. It used to be easy to find this act on congress.gov, but now all I can find online is discussions of it. Anyway, I believe this was passed in December of 2001, another casualty to freedom brought to us by the false flag of 9/11 and our traitorous congress. So everything they are doing might not be constitutional, but it is legal.

Preamble:

image.png

https://www.jhsph.edu/research/centers-and-institutes/center-for-law-and-the-publics-health/model_laws/MSEHPA.pdf

I wish I could remember which government official phrased it best when he said "the illegal we do immediately, the unconstitutional takes a little longer."

It's almost like he doesn't even know what the existing laws are.

I would say that he doesn't even know a lot more than this.

To me this is all just grand-standing on his part and that these things would get struck down in court or reversed very quickly. Not to mention that states can write their own laws to counteract any of this if they wanted to. As time passes I kind of find that I don't really understand what the federal government's role in anything other than war actually is.

People love their monopolies when they have a veneer of democracy though, and politicians are damned good at selling fear to the ignorant.

And certain people from the very beginning weren’t allowed to purchase guns.

And by "certain people" he means blacks, minorities and native Americans!!

Bingo.

Also, !PIZZA

Jacob, fine content. I wish it was unnecessary but we do need this.

Once I started prepping in earnest (around 2009) I knew I must add security
at some point in the future. FFWD to late 2012, I had a brace of Hi Point Pistols :rofl:
and my first AR15, fully paid for, but awaiting parts to complete the build. Then...

SANDY HOOK...

Long story short, I had to scramble a bit to get myself "prepared" at that time, and
I decided that I'd never be playing from behind ever again. I kinda went a bit over
the top, but no regrets. If I had bought bitcoin for just a small portion of the gun fund,
I could easily be a multi-millionaire right now.

😅😅😅

People like to make fun of Hi-Points. The ergonomics, the weight, the bulk, the flimsy mags... but they do work, and if the mags are good, they run. And they are affordable. Not everyone has an HK budget! I sure don't.

Ain't that the truth though!

Yes they do run.
All of mine were fine. 👍

The vegetable in the empty suit has a handful of agendas that he cycles between as each is either watered down to the point of political (but definitely not fiscal) insignificance or completely nullified by the other branches of government. Biden began his campaign (and the last one, and the one before that, and so-on ever since he started running for president in 1875) on gun control, now it looks like he's come full-circle yet again. Here's what I predict will happen: the ATF will attempt to legislate through regulation, get shut down by the courts, Biden will blame Trump for stacking the courts with a bunch of "far-right extremist judges," and then cycle round to his next agenda, be it taxing the rich, raising the minimum wage, putting cathode ray tubes in schools, or some other nonsense.

I'd like to believe there will be remedy in the system after a few people get screwed over in the mean time, but the bump stock ban set a precedent that has not yet been reversed.

So why hasn't Brandon been impeached yet?

This speech alone, should be enough to see the man swing.

But, what this really is, is a test balloon, to see if enough people are willing to take less rights.
Continual, constant testing.

It doesn't matter what law, or what executive order, or what the sheriff says
If the people do not willingly accept it, where there are only a few outliers/"criminals"
then there is nothing they can do about it.

What we should be more scared about is that there is a contingent of people that believe outlawing guns will make them safe. Even if all the evidence is completely against this, they still hold onto this.... and BLAME THE GUN for all crimes.

It's the religion of the State. No matter how awful the people in government may be, they must be obeyed because they are the government.

!PIZZA

Welcome to America, where the constitution doesn't matter anymore because everyone's forgotten what it actually says.

Deer don't wear kevlar vests, but pigs do, if you catch my drift

applause

People get uncomfortable with that kind of rhetoric, but the redcoats were the 1770s equivalent to police today, and armed resistance to government overreach was the intent behind explicitly protecting the right to keep and bear arms.

It's almost like we've come full circle or something.


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