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You are either disoriented or willfully making comments that make no sense. For starters I quoted myself on the area you either missed or don't want to answer.
So in case you missed it, your thoughts on restricting all young adults until they are 21 for most everything, like the examples I gave?
As to your CCW, while you might have one in FL, it hardly entitles you to to buy across state lines, much less nationwide just because you have a FL CCW. More importantly, and I say this in an effort to help you,
BEWARE
Your FL CCW does NOT allow you to carry nationwide. Some states that do not allow any type of carry will arrest you in a heart beat, such as NJ.
Even for states that allow carry, you must comply with their laws, even if it is one of the states that has reciprocity with FL.
For example, a state that allows open carry with a permit that recognizes your FL CCW, will still require to you open carry, but not concealed.
Needless to say many people who do not travel or that do not travel with firearms need not worry. However if you do, there is a hodgepodge of laws, restrictions, etc. that make it nearly impossible to remember unless you look it up for your intended destination.
Here is a website that purports to clear things up, but the waters are still muddied from most peoples perspectives.
I'm well aware of what can be purchased in gun shops. When I worked as a gunsmith, the owner would buy boxes of handguns that had been confiscated by the police department and run through a punch press to disable them, to strip for parts for repairs. The screws and springs and such were still worth something, and for a hundred dollar investment you could strip a thousand bucks worth of parts, easily. I spent a lot of lunch hours going through the boxes, and about once a year I found enough parts from three or four "disabled" pistols to be able to fit them and create a working sidearm. The serial numbers didn't match, but neither did the numbers on a lot of the military surplus guns that people bought to keep in their trucks. If the general public can buy enough parts to assemble a working firearm, parts need to be treated exactly like fully operational firearms for legal purposes.
Tell us all about these firearms with matching (or mis matching) serial numbers. Hint - it is a non-issue with sporting arms in the US.
The key part, the receiver, is treated exactly like a complete firearm. There is no “loophole” about this.
You must have the receiver of ANY firearm (the part that has the serial number) go through an FFL, with background check, and Federal Form 4473. So you may be able to buy some of the parts, but not the most critical one that makes it functional. He would have had to ILLEGALLY fabricate the receiver, and that will get you jail time as it is a Felony.
Not if it goes person to person within the same state.
You must have the receiver of ANY firearm (the part that has the serial number) go through an FFL, with background check, and Federal Form 4473. So you may be able to buy some of the parts, but not the most critical one that makes it functional. He would have had to ILLEGALLY fabricate the receiver, and that will get you jail time as it is a Felony.
What law prevents an Individual from making a firearm receiver?
Okay, so the other option is to wait until he goes on a killing spree so he can be locked up for life?
You can’t lock someone up because you don’t like what he is doing. You can lock him up because he has broken the law.
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