|
ATF
Tries to Revoke "Montana Made"
State Sovereignty Laws
We
all predicted this would happen.
In a move typical for that fear-mongering organization with
an ever-swelling acronym, the BATFE has written gun
dealers in the states of Montana and Tennessee to let them
know the BATFE will be disregarding the states' sovereign
gun laws.
The "Montana Made" law, just like Tennessee's
Firearms Freedom Act, is very simple.
Much of the claimed federal authority to regulate firearm
sales and transfers stems from a liberal interpretation of
every American tyrant's favorite subterfuge, the
"interstate commerce" clause. In essence,
this is what gives the BATFE its nasty teeth.
With this in mind, Montana correctly understood that
any weapon made in Montana by
Montana residents and sold in Montana to
Montana residents is Montana's business and Montana's
business alone.
Montana thus sought to take charge of its firearms industry
with the application of a simple truism:
Any gun made in Montana by
Montana residents and sold in Montana to
Montana residents is intrastate
commerce, not "interstate
commerce," and thus does not full under the purview of
the federal government.
Potentially, the state would be able to say goodbye to NICS
checks; Brady background checks; NFA taxes, bans and NFA
databases -- and most importantly, federal "assault
weapons" bans, which Montana and Tennessee rightly
anticipated.
In effect, the "Montana Made" law would have
permitted Montana gun companies to manufacture any kind of
weapon banned by federal law -- including so-called
"assault weapons" -- and sell them to fellow
Montana residents.
Moreover, in this scenario, no one -- neither the
manufacturer nor the dealer nor the buyer -- would have to
kowtow to the BATFE by paying them a $200 tax and
surrendering one's privacy to their notoriously inaccurate
and oft-abused National Firearms Registry.
It was a new day for freedom -- and other states besides
Tennessee were thinking of following suit: Alaska,
Colorado, Oklahoma and Texas.
Well, the BATFE -- never one to have its power downplayed
(or acronym belittled)-- has written letters to both Montana
and Tennessee gun dealers letting them know that they
proceed at their own risk.
We can only guess what new horrors those words portend --
probably more dead housewives and children as disgruntled
ATF thugs shoot-to-kill anyone suspected of perhaps
owning a firearm not properly taxed and regulated by
Washington, D.C., power brokers.
What else would be new.
A few of our members expressed interest in contacting the
BATFE to vent some righteous anger -- the same thing we
did when the Department of Defense said they were going to
ban all once-fired military brass for resale.
Remember how the DoD reneged on that commitment after
just a few days due to the widespread backlash from gun
owners and law enforcement?
Well, this is a bit different. Writing the ATF and
providing them with your information is akin to giving
thieves your home address and the hours you won't be home.
We're going to take a different, less dangerous approach.
We've been talking to state officials from both Montana and
Tennessee today to try to figure out the best way we can
help these state laws succeed.
Please stay tuned to updates on this supremely important
issue in our future emails.
For now, click
here to read Luke's
commentary on his blog and leave a comment as this
development unfolds.
But before I leave you, would you consider a donation to
the National Association for Gun Rights as we continue to
fight for the right to keep and bear arms? Please click
here to contribute.
In Liberty,

Dudley Brown
Executive Director
National Association for Gun Rights
P.S.
The National Association for Gun Rights can always use
your help as we are completely dependent on our members'
generosity. Please click
here to donate.
To help the National Association for Gun Rights grow, please
forward
this to a friend.
To view this email as a web page, please click this link: view
online.
Help
fight gun control. Donate to the National Association for
Gun Rights!

|