Daily Archives: January 21, 2014

2 posts

The Wages of Microstamping

If a manufacturer wants to sell a handgun in California, there’s a process. Samples have to be submitted to the state Department of Justice for testing and approval. Certain state-specific limits and safety devices are required. Even then, only that particular model and iteration is permitted. The manufacturer must periodically resubmit guns for the same process, or they fall off the list.

In 2007, Governor Schwarzenegger signed off on a bill that added microstamping to the list of required safety features. At the time, there was no workable method, so the bill stated that the process would be required whenever it became viable.

That happened last year. From this point forward, any handgun sold in California must have those little engravings on the firing pin and breech face. Who pays for it? The manufacturer. AB 1471 precludes the state from having to reimburse them.

Several smaller manufacturers have registered their displeasure with the whole shebang, but the big news has come over the last couple of weeks.

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Ghost Guns

It’s no secret that California Senator Kevin de Leon hates guns. His voting record shows ample proof of that. His latest crusade is against so-called “ghost guns.”

What is a “ghost gun?” Apparently, it’s a convenient catchall phrase (like “assault weapon”) that includes polymer receivers and guns without serial numbers. I’d ask Kevin himself, but he seems to be a bit fuzzy on technology. A shorter version of the video is here, but the gist of it is this statement, which is taken verbatim:

This is a ghost gun. This right here has the ability 30-caliber clip to disperse with 30 bullets within half a second. 30 magazine clip, half a second.

Right. So, um, that clears it right up. It’s a weapon chambered in 7.62 with a cyclic rate four times faster than the M16. I’m honestly unaware of any such thing.

Please, nobody ask him what a barrel shroud is.

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