Free: Contests & Raffles.
Top cops from these states filed an amicus brief (link below) in support of California, which recently passed a law that requires background checks for all ammunition purchases. That’s right, every time you want to buy a box of ammunition to do some target practice, California redcoats want you to wait for their permission. Of course, limiting access to arms and ammunition necessarily puts people at risk, but the purpose of the law isn’t to make things any safer, it’s to inhibit the ability or willingness of people to buy ammunition. To put it simply, ammo control is gun control, full stop.Unable to apply critical thinking skills, or at least lacking a basic understanding of microeconomics, the AGs for these states want a system in place that restricts the supply of ammunition, which means people will either find black market sources or off-the-books methods to acquire what they want. Just because you constrain a supply doesn’t mean you diminish demand. People will cross the border to buy ammo in other states or they’ll slap together a reloading bench like they should have done years ago. https://michellawyers.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/2020-06-19-Amicus-Brief-of-IL-CT-DW-DC-HI-MD-MS-MI-NJ-NM-NY-OR-PN-RI-VA-WA-ISO-Defendant-Appellant.pdfAmmunition control is dead, but Attorneys General from the following states didn’t get the memo: Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Hawaii MarylandMassachusetts MichiganNew Jersey New Mexico New York Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island VirginiaWashington
My one question to all of them is how is it working out for Chicago? Have had to have an ammo card for years there....