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  • so gun laws and gun control have been in the news a lot lately

  • can't imagine why... it would help to know what the existing laws about

  • owning and using guns are and what they require you to do

  • if you wanna have a gun

  • or several handy so let's dig in shall we

  • the very first law that touches your guns at least until

  • the gun touching act of 2014 passes

  • is the requirement of gun registration every gun manufacturer importer and

  • dealer has to register every gun they either make import or sell

  • and ensure that gun has a unique serial number whenever a gun is sold the dealer

  • has to record the purchaser's name and the gun's serial number

  • they also have to include whether it was purchased for use by

  • an agent of a state or local government

  • but the information collected when the gun was registered can't be used as

  • evidence in a criminal case

  • unless it was given falsely it's illegal to buy or sell unregistered gun

  • this is in part because every time a gun is made imported or sold

  • you have to pay a tax

  • the tax is $200 which is the same as it was in 1934

  • all gun manufacturers importers and dealers must also be licensed and the

  • license fee ranges from $100 to $500

  • the law specifically states the registration includes guns

  • disguised as other objects

  • and to make sure the people are following the rules the ATF inspects

  • licensed gun dealers every 12 months

  • as well as after any crimes involving that dealer's guns

  • breaking the registration or licensing rules will mean your guns get seized and

  • you could pay up to $250,000

  • in fines as an individual

  • or $500,000 if you're an organization a dealer is someone who

  • makes a business selling guns

  • not someone who sells them occasionally or on the side there's a vigorous debate

  • over whether these amateur sellers should also get a license and file paperwork

  • no one knows for sure how many guns are sold this way

  • with estimates ranging from 25%-40% of total sales

  • some kinds of guns are banned from being sold in the U.S. at all

  • machine guns are banned this means any gun they can shoot more than once in a

  • row without having to pull the trigger again

  • silencers are also banned though both can still be made for export

  • there are no restrictions on antique firearms which means

  • anything made in 1898

  • or before if you can't still readily buy ammo for it there's also the assault

  • weapons ban which ran from 1994 to 2004 and is being discussed again

  • it banned 18 types of semiautomatic guns, which means a gun that lets you

  • shoot multiple times just by pulling the trigger again,

  • that had specific military features like a telescoping stock

  • a pistol grip on rifles a bayonet mount

  • a grenade launcher or a flash suppressor the assault weapons ban also applied to

  • any ammo clips that let you put more than 10 bullets in the gun at a time

  • one problem was that it didn't apply to anything made before 1994 so there were

  • a lot of semiautomatic weapons still floating around for those 10 years

  • another problem was that most types of guns are semiautomatics so the line between

  • what was and what wasn't banned was hard to understand and rather blurry

  • the other major federal gun laws the Brady Bill

  • which applies to background checks while minors--the age is 21 for handguns

  • and 18 for everything else--

  • felons drug addicts and anyone legally decided mentally defective have all been

  • barred from owning guns since 1968

  • there wasn't any good way enforcing this the Brady Bill enacted a system of

  • background checks in 1994

  • first they were required to be done by law enforcement officers and

  • then when that was ruled unconstitutional

  • an instant online system was instituted though

  • many law enforcement officers still

  • voluntarily do background checks it also widens the gun ban to legal immigrants

  • dishonorably discharged soldiers people under restraining orders

  • people under indictment for a crime where the punishment exceeds 1 year

  • and people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence the background check

  • can take up to 3 days

  • Congress also offers grants to states to

  • improve their electronic background check systems

  • now the state level laws vary widely some states recognize the permits

  • of other states and some don't

  • states aren't required to spend their own resources and forcing federal gun laws

  • though some do

  • generally states will have rules about gun registration and licenses

  • waiting periods rules on how many guns you can own

  • and rules about where you can have guns as well as how you can carry them

  • for example some states limit the number of guns you can buy any one time

  • particularly handguns some states require you to log a certain number of

  • shooting hours or even to take a test before you get a gun license

  • some states banned weapons in certain public places

  • and some states make it really hard or impossible either carry a gun with you

  • everywhere you go

  • called open carry or to carry a gun around secret

  • call concealed carry most states are less restrictive than the federal

  • government but some are much more so

  • you may have heard about the Heller case that went to the Supreme Court

  • DC had banned handguns altogether and required a trigger lock

  • on any guns in the house

  • the Supreme Court struck both of those restrictions down

  • the really important part was the court held that the Second Amendment does

  • guarantee an individual right to bear arms

  • and there you have it

so gun laws and gun control have been in the news a lot lately

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B1 中級 美國腔

6分鐘內瞭解槍支法律 (Understand Gun Laws in 6 Minutes)

  • 78 8
    Amy.Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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