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Posted

I'm all for getting rid of the NFA all together, but I'm ok with semi-auto, I now have to pay for my own ammo and semi-auto is expensive enough for me.

Now if they allow silencers, I may get some, but not so much for hunting, but range work to keep the noise down for the neighbors.

  • Like 1
Posted
59 minutes ago, Omega said:

I'm all for getting rid of the NFA all together, but I'm ok with semi-auto, I now have to pay for my own ammo and semi-auto is expensive enough for me.

Now if they allow silencers, I may get some, but not so much for hunting, but range work to keep the noise down for the neighbors.

This! I would shoot twice as much if I wasn’t worried about a particular couple neighbors right to quiet enjoyment. 

Posted

Not sure just how to feel about this. While I'd love to see a repeal of the NFA, Glock switches in the hands of gang bangers is becoming a real problem in Memphis. 

Oh well, if I could somehow afford a real machine gun, I couldn't  afford to feed it. 🙄

  • Like 4
Posted

I agree, the NFA and GCA are unconstitutional and need to go. We see from that progression the anti's are not happy with a little, they want it all. 

@Grayfox54 yes I understand the thugs are getting bolder and better armed. that just goes to prove that gun control laws don't work. We have to find a better way to deal with that problem. Maybe go back in time and legalize weed so the cartels didn't grow so strong. Or stop prohibition from being passed so the mob didn't profit from liquor.
those two bans didn't work and gave the criminals a lot of profits. Had we kept these two thing legal, controlled, and taxed we would not have spent billions on enforcing bans and gained billions in tax dollars. I have no clue how many jobs are in the liquor and liquor control/inspection industries but we can see how much the criminals have profited.

I have dies for .45 and I'm sure I could buy more die sets for any other full auto I might be able to get. I'm sure that machine guns are not that expensive, they are just a finite commodity in the USA so the price goes up.

  • Like 2
Posted

We should be able to buy any firearm being produced, we shouldn't have to over pay for a 40 year old firearm.  If you want the same rifles our military are getting you should be able to go to buy a full auto sig.  I don't expect this to happen but it should.

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Posted
21 minutes ago, Jpoc700 said:

We should be able to buy any firearm being produced, we shouldn't have to over pay for a 40 year old firearm.  If you want the same rifles our military are getting you should be able to go to buy a full auto sig.  I don't expect this to happen but it should.

That is the way the 2nd is put to paper!

  • Like 4
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted (edited)
On 8/23/2024 at 10:13 PM, Scotty said:

This! I would shoot twice as much if I wasn’t worried about a particular couple neighbors right to quiet enjoyment. 

So how does this work and is it a real thing?  Their right to quiet enjoyment supersedes your right to literally practice with your 2nd amendment rights?  Here is a true story and life lesson I learned from my dad.  Less than 10 years ago, I was at my dads place (15acres) with a bunch of friends shooting skeet and targets.  Sounded like war was going off with all the shooting, which I know none of his neighbors were used to.  One of the neighbors called the sheriffs on us and said we shot a hole through their house, which was a lie because we weren't even shooting in their direction, and it was strictly because of the noise.  My dad asked the sheriff if he saw the hole and to take him to go see it to call them on their bluff.  The sheriff then said no need to do that but instead told us to keep it down, but my dad asked why if we're doing everything legally in the middle of the day.  They didn't have an answer for it and said have a nice day and drove away.  After they left, I asked my dad if we should stop shooting and he said if we did his neighbors won the forever battle and we would never get to shoot again because they would just continue to call the sheriffs every time we tried to shoot.  He said to keep shooting to let his neighbors know that their lie to the sheriff and phone call did nothing to stop our right to continue to shoot responsibly and legally.  My thought on this, is that it is a tricky situation and you don't want to piss of your neighbors, but if you purposely don't shoot because of their quiet enjoyment, then they'll just expect more quiet and eventually call sheriffs like they did on us.  If you continue to shoot more often and legally do it then they will either deal with it and get used to it or the sheriffs will stop coming out their every time the neighbor calls them on you for shooting.  To this day, the sheriffs still have never came back to my dads house after that incident.  Just my 2 cents and past experience.

Edited by CastNblast04
  • Like 2
  • 4 weeks later...
Posted
On 9/13/2024 at 9:29 AM, CastNblast04 said:

So how does this work and is it a real thing?  Their right to quiet enjoyment supersedes your right to literally practice with your 2nd amendment rights?  Here is a true story and life lesson I learned from my dad.  Less than 10 years ago, I was at my dads place (15acres) with a bunch of friends shooting skeet and targets.  Sounded like war was going off with all the shooting, which I know none of his neighbors were used to.  One of the neighbors called the sheriffs on us and said we shot a hole through their house, which was a lie because we weren't even shooting in their direction, and it was strictly because of the noise.  My dad asked the sheriff if he saw the hole and to take him to go see it to call them on their bluff.  The sheriff then said no need to do that but instead told us to keep it down, but my dad asked why if we're doing everything legally in the middle of the day.  They didn't have an answer for it and said have a nice day and drove away.  After they left, I asked my dad if we should stop shooting and he said if we did his neighbors won the forever battle and we would never get to shoot again because they would just continue to call the sheriffs every time we tried to shoot.  He said to keep shooting to let his neighbors know that their lie to the sheriff and phone call did nothing to stop our right to continue to shoot responsibly and legally.  My thought on this, is that it is a tricky situation and you don't want to piss of your neighbors, but if you purposely don't shoot because of their quiet enjoyment, then they'll just expect more quiet and eventually call sheriffs like they did on us.  If you continue to shoot more often and legally do it then they will either deal with it and get used to it or the sheriffs will stop coming out their every time the neighbor calls them on you for shooting.  To this day, the sheriffs still have never came back to my dads house after that incident.  Just my 2 cents and past experience.

I totally get where you’re coming from. Luckily my neighbors are acres away, and like minded. Once one of us starts shooting on the weekend there’s usually a 15-30 minute lag before the Cumberland ridge starts to echo in various directions.
 

I have an elderly neighbor that I pal around/handyman/garden for and shoot with every once in a while. He goes down for naps a lot, if I have an open window on a weekend off and I’m shooting some large caliber I’ll give him a shout to make sure he’s not napping. Not every time, but if I have an open 6-hour window I give him a quick buzz. If I've got the itch, or trying out a new gun and just want to run a quick 6-10 mags early evening, I won’t call.  
 

He’s also had some younger kids over and called me once while I was plinking and asked if I could refrain as they’re not used to hearing gunshots. Could argue that I should just let them get used to the fact that guns used responsibly aren’t scary, but at the same time I’m not gonna ruin their right to quiet enjoyment during a picnic just because I want to shoot off a dozen mags of higher caliber. 
 

Saw a new neighbor move in, introduced myself and gave my info saying if they needed help with anything around the house or if anything happens to give me a call. Mentioned that I shoot once every week or so and put it rather matter of factly. She responded with “yeah, my daughter heard and didn’t like the loud noises”. I replied with “well her uncle next door shoots too, I hear him sighting in his rifle before every deer season, and her uncle shoots a lot of handguns so I’m glad she’s used to it” and left it at that. But at the same time, if the kid has a birthday party I’m not going to invite a few friends over and have us all ringing steel midday. 
 

So while I understand that it’s a right and I’m doing nothing wrong, I still want to respect someone’s right to quiet enjoyment.  Not the biggest inconvenience for me to be neighborly when I could in theory shoot most evenings before dusk after work. 
 

 

  • Like 3
Posted

I think that is a balanced approach to the issue. Enjoy our freedoms but we don't have to be in people's face about it either. 

Unfortunately where I live the houses are simply spaced too close to do any shooting. Not a good idea to be in the yard shooting when your yard is only 1/2 acre. 🙁 Makes cutting the grass easier though. 

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