শনিবার, ৬ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Gun control on steroids! Insurance, registry and taxes

Obamacare was approved by the Supreme Court when Chief Justice John Roberts decided to consider it a ?tax,? even though the Obama administration said it wasn?t. So why not have a new ?insurance mandate? to control guns?

That apparently is the thinking of a team of Democrats in Congress who made that very proposal just as the U.N. adopted a sweeping international ?arms treaty?; more outright bans and taxes were proposed; states took it on themselves to say who can buy guns or ammunition; and one government came up with an ?ammunition eligibility certificate.?

The Daily Caller reported that the insurance mandate was proposed by Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., and others, who said Americans should be ordered to buy a liability insurance policy for guns.

No insurance? No problem; just pay a $10,000 fine, she suggests.

?It shall be unlawful for a person who owns a firearm purchased on or after the effective date of this subsection not to be covered by a qualified liability insurance policy,? the bill text reads.

And it would be a federal crime for someone to sell a firearm to another person who doesn?t have that insurance.

President Obama and Democrats in Congress have been using the horror of the Newtown, Conn., school shooting last winter to push for bans and restrictions on guns, gun ownership and ammunition.

In Connecticut, state Senate President Donald Williams Jr., a Democrat, said his state?s plan, which bans 100 types of guns, is the strongest ever.

?That is a message that should resound in 49 other states and in Washington, D.C. And the message is: We can get it done here and they should get it done in their respective states and nationally in Congress,? he said.

Democrats control both houses of the Connecticut General Assembly.

The Connecticut bill also bans some ammunition magazines, requires registration of other magazines, creates a registry and calls for an ?ammunition eligibility certificate.

In California, state Assemblywoman Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley, wants ammunition regulated, taxed and limited.

Sen. Kevin deLeon, another Democrat, from Los Angeles, has suggested demanding a background check and a $50 annual fee for permission to buy ammunition.

Also proposed: A 10 percent tax on ammunition, a requirement to report of ammunition sales to the state Justice Department so it could create a record of all purchases and an additional 5-cent tax on each round sold.

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