I disagree with background checks for private party sales, but I can understand why they appeal to some people . . . especially with how it was widely misrepresented that "anyone" could buy full-auto weapons "at a gun show" or "off the internet" with no background check . . . all of which we know to be FALSE. As the "Universal Background Check" law was presented to the people via the media, it certainly seemed reasonable . . . although most criminals either steal their guns or buy them from other criminals, not via sources like armslist, and most armslist sellers would flat out refuse to sell to someone who obviously looked like a thug or gangbanger.
The main issue I have with the UBC isn't so much that the law would require private party sales to go through a FFL or possible registration, but all the SMALL PRINT hidden in the law, which amounts to a dozen vague and arbitrary "secret laws" that the average person -- and probably many Senators -- don't even know about. Like equating "sale" with "transfer", meaning if you swap shotguns with a neighbor, gift your fiance a gun from your collection, or even store a gun at a relative's house for more than 72 hours, an official background check must be conducted at an FFL or all parties involved are guilty of a felony offense. Felony? Doesn't the law say it's only a misdemeanor? It does, but the SMALL PRINT adds a "prohibited person" clause, thereby making the misdemeanor indistinguishable from a felony as pertains to firearm ownership under federal law . . . so if you are arrested for the misdemeanor crime of loaning a rifle to a coworker during a week long hunting trip, thereby losing your right to possess firearms, and a probation officer searches your home to see if you are in compliance and finds a single .22 LR cartridge forgotten in the back of a closet, you could be subject to a mandatory minimum sentence of 2 years in federal prison, no parole.
And that is why I'm opposed to UBC. It is all the small print and draconian penalties for things that should not even be prosecuted as crimes in the first place.



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