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S.42: How a Freedom Becomes a Felony

The U.S. Congress is now on the cusp of passing a horribly unconstitutional law. It is designated H.R. 8 in the House [1] and S.42 in the Senate [2]. These bills would criminalize the American tradition of private party sales, trades, and gifts of firearms. It would become a felony crime to transfer any post-1898 firearm without first visiting a Federal Firearms License (FFL) holder to fill out an ATF Form 4473, paying a transfer fee, and having that FFL phone the FBI to conduct a background check on the transferee. Without a “Yes you may” response from the ‘Mother May I?” Nanny State, it will be illegal to buy a gun, even from your next door neighbor.

EupHemistic Buzz Phrases

The mainstream media has been ceaselessly parroting the Brady Campaign [3] buzz phrases: “Universal background checks”, “Common sense gun laws” and “Closing the gun show loophole”. They don’t dare accurately refer to this bill as a “private party gun sales ban.” Instead, by using their soft sounding buzz phrases, they have horribly duped the American populace. Polls now show that 90% of our countrymen support the legislatio [4]n. Of course, as with all polls, it all depends on the polling universe selected, and how a poll question if worded. The result of asking: “Do you support Universal Background Checks?” is substantially different than if they had asked: “Do you support banning the private sale of guns inside your state?”

H.R. 8 / S.42 would have wide-reaching effects and most likely some unintended consequences. If nothing else it will essentially destroy gun shows, as we now know them. In essence, every gun show in every state will be reduced to the level of a New Jersey gun show. To wit: You can look at guns, but can’t buy them, unless the seller visits a willing licensed dealer, hands the dealer the gun, you then pay a fee (unspecified and unlimited in the law) for the privilege of the transfer, you fill out sworn Federal paperwork, you provide current government-issued identification, and you pass a phoned-in background check call to the FBI. Then, and only then, can you take the gun home. Skipping any step of this process would be a felony.

Very Few ExEMPTions

Based on my reading of the bill and associated federal statutes, the only exemptions from the private transfer ban would be:

The legislative juggernaut orchestrated by Representative Nancy Pelosi and Senator Chuck Schumer is now rolling along at high speed. H.R. 8 is being rushed through committee, for a short debate and a vote on the House floor. On February 13th, it passed out of the House Judiciary Committee today on a vote of 23 to 15. Now, a simple majority of 218 votes is needed for passage. Alarmingly, the bill already has 231 co-sponsors, including five Republicans. Thus, passage in the House is almost certain. But the Senate version can be stopped if sufficient pressure is applied by constituents.

As I’ve mentioned before in SurvivalBlog, there are many flaws in H.R. 8 / S.42.   First and foremost is of course that it is a gross violation of the 2nd Amendment. Our right to keep and bear arms also implies the right to acquire them without hindrance. Something as simple as a glitch in the telephone system or in the FBI’s computer database could deprive us of a fundamental right. Next, the pending bills are an unconstitutional expansion of congressional power specified in teh Commerce Clause of Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution. Therein, congress is granted oversight of interstate commerce. But the sale of firearms between two private parties living in the confines of the same state is clearly intrastate commerce. (Not interstate!)  This simply is not within federal jurisdiction.

H.R. 8 / S.42 would create a modification of existing Federal gun laws, codified in Title 18, U.S. Code. The authority for all of Title 18 USC is based on the Commerce Clause in Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution. Thus, passing this law, congress would certainly be exceeding their authority. And therefore, by extension, they would be creating a law that is null and void, ab initio [5]. An unconstitutionally bad law is not really a law.  “Lex Mala, Lex Nulla!”

A Bitter Irony

Many unconstitutional laws are eventually struck down by the courts, but until they are, we have to live with them, under the shadow of their penalties. In this case the penalty is a federal felony conviction with prison terms of up to 10 years [6], lifetime loss of voting rights, and lifetime loss of all firearms rights. The bitter irony of this legislation is that by exercising a right that predates even the Constitution itself, you could face the penalty of complete loss of your right to own any gun.

The new law also has implications for 4th Amendment and 5th Amendment rights. Taking what was formerly a private transaction and making it a privilege that is catalogued in permanent FFL paperwork is a violation of our 4th Amendment right to privacy. And forcing all gun buyers to answer a long series of Yes or No questions and then signing their name, under penalty of perjury, compromises our 5th Amendment right to be free from self-incrimination.

Even though these bills give lip service to not forming a gun registration database, the net effect in the long term will be de facto registration,  Why? Because completed Form 4473s must be kept on file permanently by licensed dealers. And when any dealer eventually goes out of business, by law, all of their records are sent to a permanent  repository at the ATF’s Out Of Business Records Center [7]. And those records are gradually being OCR scanned and hence are traceable.

The New Law, in Real Life

The changes in Federal law that H.R. 8 / S.42 will create will have some unanticipated drama for what are presently almost universally recognized as purely innocent acts and “the way things have always been” in our country. Here are some examples of how life will be after the new federal law goes into effect:

Do any of those sound plausible or even vaguely like your own experiences?  The way that S.42 is written, the foregoing would all be federal felony crimes.

Deep Schumer

Please contact both of your U.S. Senators and remind them that they took an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution. Voting for passage of this bill would be spitting in the face of our Founding Fathers. If this bill passes, our precious American Liberty will be in Deep Schumer. Oh, and if it does pass, I predict that the national legislators will give the final vote tally thunderous applause [8].

After possible passage in the Senate, our only hope will be a Presidential veto. At that stage, we will need to absolutely jam the White House switchboard with calls, voicemails, FAXes, and e-mails, 24 hours a day.

Plan B

Although I’m doing my very best to fight passage of the private gun sales ban bills, I’m a realist. I recognize that Congress goes off the deep end with gun restrictions once in a while. They clearly did so in 1934, 1968, 1986, and 1994. Will 2019 be next? Perhaps. Plan A is stopping enactment. Plan B is mitigating its effects.

If this bad bill does become law, then be ready:  We will probably have only 180 days before it goes fully into effect. This will create a six month window of opportunity for those of us living in any of the 41 still free States (with private party sales) to gather up as many un-papered guns as possible, for our families. So start drafting your shopping list, now. Build that list with your children, grandchildren, and even great-grandchilden in mind. Start checking gun show calendars for your state. During the purchasing window of opportunity, stock up on as many up-papered black rifles as you can afford. Stack them deep. And once the window closes, then shift to buying pre-1899 cartridge guns [9] that are in common (still factory made) chamberings. Those are bound to go up in price dramatically, once people realize that these will be our last bastion of firearms purchasing privacy. – JWR

 

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Comments Disabled To "S.42: How a Freedom Becomes a Felony"

#1 Comment By Hugh Farnham On February 17, 2019 @ 12:24 pm

Next up: laser sights.

Ultimately, the 2nd Amendment is working as designed to this point. There are approximately 300 million guns in private hands in the US, and around 15 billion rounds of ammunition.

If the compliance rates for the newest gun control diktats are in the single digits, like New York and New Jersey, there is obviously public sentiment to defeat or disregard any new bill like this one.

Second Amendment Supremacy

[10]

#2 Comment By Hugh Farnham On February 17, 2019 @ 10:43 pm

During WWII the US produced 47 billion rounds for our use and 47 other nations for essentially a two-front war.

15 billion rounds in American private hands compares well strategically.

Interesting:

“Killing a man on the field of battle requires firing a mass of lead almost equal to his weight; wounding him requires somewhat less.”

– Unknown

[11]

#3 Comment By MARK KACZ On February 18, 2019 @ 11:00 am

Stop the commie dems and so called progressives which are one in the same!

#4 Comment By D.D. On February 17, 2019 @ 1:54 pm

JWR,

Over at Zerohedge this morning:

“Man Jailed After Police Find 3D Printed Gun And US Lawmaker Kill List”

[12]

Let the false flags begin…

I just went to YouTube and searched “HR 8” and “S 42”. With the exceptions of your Reluctant Prepper interview and a piece by The Gun Collective, there is nothing but crickets from the so-called “gun community” on these bills. If there is anything out there, they dare not call it by name for fear of demonetization. I assume that even those with millions of subscribers are too busy with “9mm vs .40”, “knockdown power of the .45”, or some other nonsense to alert their viewers of what’s coming.
I admire your enthusiasm on this subject but I’m afraid we’re spraying water on a house that’s already burnt to the ground.
Pray that the Senate holds firm so that these bills will go to the dustbin of history where they belong.

#5 Comment By joe tentpeg On February 17, 2019 @ 2:04 pm

Here in NM sheriffs are pushing back using the Left’s tactic of ‘sanctuary’ for illegals.

Quay County sheriff has just declared his county a ‘sanctuary county for the 2nd Amendment.’ So he will not enforce any new gun laws signed by our new marxist governor.

Chaves County commissioners will meet this Thursday to declare the same for their county.

The way forward?

Use the constitutional authority of the sheriff to nullify unconstitutional laws.

#6 Comment By Brooksy On February 17, 2019 @ 2:11 pm

The most insane thing about this new proposed law is IT WILL HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO EFFECT ON GUN VIOLENCE.

#7 Comment By rimfire On February 17, 2019 @ 6:10 pm

Where did you get the idea they were trying to effect gun violence?

#8 Comment By Brooksy On February 18, 2019 @ 2:16 pm

That is the politicians claim not mine. I’m well aware of what they’re doing.

#9 Comment By Bluesman On February 17, 2019 @ 7:00 pm

Brooksy,
The gun grab is a power/control grab and nothing else.Once upon a time in this country there was a group called the “Boy Scouts” and their motto was to “BE PREPARED” . Their motto makes good sense.

#10 Comment By Randy On February 17, 2019 @ 2:54 pm

More knee-jerk reaction from the Dem’s, RINO’s. As usual they want to penalize the law-biding citizens for what a very small minority is doing. Are they really that afraid of the citizens of this country and are willing to do anything to stay in power? It seems so.

#11 Comment By CC On February 17, 2019 @ 4:39 pm

Question more than a comment.

Nothing about manufacturing ones own firearms, as in completing 80% lowers? I guess there are not that many in the big scheme but a prohibition on this could easily be slipped in.

What really worries me is things they throw in these things almost as afterthoughts sometimes. You know adding things like restrictions on gun parts or modifying firearms. In localities hostile to guns something as simple as adding a scope could make one in violation from an ambitious prosecutor.

#12 Comment By Ohio Guy On February 17, 2019 @ 6:56 pm

For life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, I would gladly become a “felon”. It’s just a word. Like these ridiculous laws, just words. When the rubber meets the road, there you will find me. (Hopefully alive but if not, that’s ok too.)

#13 Comment By Bill On February 17, 2019 @ 8:00 pm

It is important to know that long ago that SCt clearly stated that rights are not subject to gov regulation, even with permission of the people. Today all things are regulated. This can only happen if all rights have long ago been converted to mere privileges.

Point 2: No place in the fed constitution is the fed gov granted the power to come into the states and impose its general lawmaking powers upon the state-only citizens of the states. This happened many decades ago. For it to happen, the fed gov had come come under communist control and then impose military occupation upon the states and their true pre-14th citizens. For it to be successfully accomplished, the communists had to first take over the whole legal system.

A uniform act that defies the constitutions can only happen by over throwing the constitutions.

#14 Comment By Vagus On February 19, 2019 @ 4:20 am

14th?

#15 Comment By HP On February 17, 2019 @ 10:30 pm

Seems like a law like this, if ratified, would end up getting gutted in the courts. But what would happen in the meantime? Would they use non-compiance to enact further police state gestapo measures? The possibility that Trump would even consider signing a bill like this should be a wake-up call.

I agree with the idea that we should all be stacking deep.

#16 Comment By Don in Oregon On February 18, 2019 @ 1:28 am

In Oregon, private party sales have been banned since 2015. (The majority of the population lives in the cities so unfortunately the libs run everything.)

The result is a black market of people who are willing to sell privately anyway. Either there is no bill of sale, or it’s dated prior to 2015.

This probably happens more often through local classified ads than through internet sites.

I haven’t done this myself, of course, but I’ve heard about it.

#17 Comment By SwampCrackerYankee On February 18, 2019 @ 2:30 am

My two Connecticut senators, Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, are co-sponsors of Dianne Feinstein’s S. 42 bill. You’ll forgive me if I don’t write or call them. That would be pointless. However, I have written President Trump twice asking him to veto any of these bills that come across his desk. In Connecticut, after the Sandy Hook massacre, our state legislature and governor passed the “assault weapon” ban that Dianne Feinstein has planned for the rest of you in the US. Private gun sales are now a thing of the past in CT, and if those of you who still live in free states are not NOW seriously contacting your senators, you will see the US become CT. Many think bills like this are too preposterous to become law until they do. Believe me, you wouldn’t want to live behind enemy lines like we do in CT.

#18 Comment By tz On February 18, 2019 @ 2:30 am

This is why I reject “Freezoxee”.

Freezoxee has “common sense censorship” of the 1st amendment.

If the parallel rules happen for your 2nd amendment rights – “Gun Free Zone”, you would raise a warning and boycott the business in a microsecond.

You don’t like what people say – legally – on Gab? Fine. But realize many people hate guns. And want a GunFreeZoxee zone.

At some point you have to be radical for freedom and oppose “common sense” controls that abridge your rights.

#19 Comment By Montana Guy On February 18, 2019 @ 5:26 pm

tz, FreeZoxee is walking a very thin line in this old man’s book. FreeZoxee management has told me that my belief in the principle of non-aggression is not welcomed there. I will not be bullied and told them to ban me if they must. We’ll see if they mature into a free speech site or just another censored, agenda-driven, hate-filled (against ALL Muslims) war-mongering site.

I’ve suggested they read the likes of George Washington’s Farwell Address (arguably the greatest speech ever made of American soil), Eisenhower’s farewell warning, Dr. Ron Paul’s ‘Golden Rule’ speech, Smedley Butler’s warning, Constitutional Party Presidential candidate Pastor Chuck Baldwin’s sermons? Does Jesus Christ ring a bell?

#20 Comment By Comingstorm On February 18, 2019 @ 1:01 pm

Sorry, keep coming back to the same thing…”when guns are outlawed, outlaws will still have guns”. What are they gonna do then?

#21 Comment By TominAlaska On February 18, 2019 @ 4:08 pm

All gun laws are unconstitutional. We know that. It is more a matter of enforcement. My son is a law enforcement officer and he tells me that the rank and file officers in his state have no intention of enforcing new gun laws.

However, nationwide, many law enforcement officers will ‘do their jobs’. Their paychecks and retirements depend on it.

Government employees are paid a lot of money unlike the days when “civil service” was the norm. Money is the basis of control. The commies are smart. They infiltrate and buy the support of “useful idiots” (also known as socialists)
and usually gain the support of well fed, warm, comfortable, lazy and greedy citizens that want even more.

The republic will fall or this nonsense can stop right soon. Really, it is a choice.

#22 Comment By Montana Guy On February 18, 2019 @ 5:00 pm

Talk is cheap. What did Patriots do when the Republicans’ NDAA gutted our Bill of Rights? Jack! Not one shot was fired. That was 8 years ago.

Patriots may have hundreds of millions of guns and tons of ammo but do we have anything we will fight for?

#23 Comment By Snotty Boy On February 18, 2019 @ 6:05 pm

No. Most (not all) “murican” gunowners are spineless, weak-kneed, law-abiding Fudds. They will not risk their lives, their families, their houses, or jobs, or cars, or anything thing else that keeps them pacified, in exchange for standing up for their liberty.

What they don’t realize is that they are going to lose it all anyway when they die, whether that happens in a contest for liberty or when they are 90 years old and in a nursing home.

#24 Comment By Montana Guy On February 18, 2019 @ 7:09 pm

Yes Snotty Boy. Thomas Paine’s words In ‘Common Sense’ would ring as true today as they did in 1776. He warned of a lack of masculinity, a short-sighted and selfish attitude that disregards its effects on future generations. Paine spoke to people being content with conditions that “will last my time”. Today Paine’s words would fall on deaf ears.

#25 Comment By Rick On February 18, 2019 @ 9:06 pm

Mr. Rawles: Can you tell us if Senate passage of this bill will require 60 votes or a simple majority?
Thanks

#26 Comment By James Wesley Rawles On February 18, 2019 @ 9:28 pm

Most Senate votes require 60 votes. I’m not certain whether or not the vote will come up for a 51-member majority vote, as a reconciliation measure.

#27 Comment By will parks On February 19, 2019 @ 3:04 am

Washington and Oregon are going to fall! Try to do something by contacting your law maker!