Free: Contests & Raffles.
If you were a BG, which would be more likely to deter you and make you move on, someone confronting you with a sharp stick...or a plastic gun?
QuoteIf you were a BG, which would be more likely to deter you and make you move on, someone confronting you with a sharp stick...or a plastic gun? Plastic gun probably. No BG wants to get sprayed with water.
However, the all-plastic handgun, easily made on a 3D printer, now changes everything. Why? Because this innovation will be the proof that banning legitimately owned firearms can accomplish nothing. Even removing all "approved firearms" from the public would have no impact, because anybody with access to the Internet and a $1,000 3D printer can now make his own handgun.What do you think?
Quote from: pd on May 06, 2013, 02:18:12 PMHowever, the all-plastic handgun, easily made on a 3D printer, now changes everything. Why? Because this innovation will be the proof that banning legitimately owned firearms can accomplish nothing. Even removing all "approved firearms" from the public would have no impact, because anybody with access to the Internet and a $1,000 3D printer can now make his own handgun.What do you think?Anyone with access to simple metalworking tools has been able to make their own guns in their garage since forever. It's not even illegal. And those are a hell of a lot better than what a 3D plastic cutting machine can do. 3D printing might change a lot of things, but the status of gun availability is super far down that list.
I don't have a problem with a plastic gun being banned. Allowing production sounds like a set-up for security problems wherever they screen for firearms.
It is a hard call to make. However, the purpose of this gun would be what exactly? You have a gun which, for all intents, looks like a toy - problem number one. Next, it's owner has the ability to overcome screening devices - problem two. The parts obviously can't handle more than one or two uses, so this is not a gun you're going to train with and hand down in your family generation after generation, possibly use for self protection or hunting or target shooting - problem three.This is a copier-made zip gun, basically. Do you think that zip guns should be legal, too, Coyote? They aren't now and I don't see a single person in our gun crowd fighting for the right to own one.