i was always of the state of mind that information capable of empowering acts of violence and murder should not be illegal. prime example would be the infamous "anarchist's cookbook"
but here we have an automatic weapon of potential mass-murder, created by a 3d printer, from a file which could easily be shared online:
so does this cross the line? was the line crossed long ago? should this be permitted to preserve our right to information?
im too baffled at this point to form an opinion but i'd like to read your thoughts on the matter.
__________________ "Your Lord knows very well what is in your heart. Your soul suffices this day as a reckoner against you. I need no witnesses. You do not listen to your soul, but listen instead to your anger and your rage."
So far as I'm aware, the gun nor the bullets from that video are from a 3d printer. Just the magazine casing. The lower receiver can also be 3d printed on an AR-15. Although there is a 3d printed gun out there the manufacturer has added metal components to adhere to certain laws such as the undetectable firearms laws. It's one ugly bastard of a gun though.
It's an interesting question, but if you are American, it is entirely moot at this point.
The access to 3D printing technology is a far greater barrier than are gun laws. For the foreseeable future, it will still be cheaper and easier to buy those weapons from stores or on the black market than to print your own.
EDIT: there is also the fact that people have been making their own guns for decades
The section they are printing is among the most...force intensive. It is a great section to be having success with. If I am to understand the project correctly, they chose the lower-receiver because it would be the second most likely piece to break. I think that only the barrel would be more intense.
At $200-$300 a month rental for a 3D gun printer, it is pretty dang cheap to print off plastic guns. I don't think they'd last long. But, that's more than enough to print off some handguns and smuggle them past metal detectors.
For a gun like that, you'd need to keep the "nail" separate with something like your keys or belt (with a slidey open thing where the belt buckle is (easily concealable)).
Disassemble the plastic gun before you put it in your carry on bag. Seems trivial.
The problem is the bullets. Those would still be detectable. But, you can do bullshit like put them in your thick metal pen*/rabbit's foot like they did on that one movie...er something.
Just proof of concept.
*Just thought of something better: a big metal vibrator. They security peeps would probably be too embarrassed to really give it a solid look or use the chemical sniffer.
I would honestly like to do some test runs for DHS. No way I would even come close to attempting any of this unless I was being paid by DHS or TSA to do so.
Which is one of the things I tell to the libtards when they think gun control laws would really be effective against gun nuts.
the guys who are behind the gun printing have had nothing but issues finding people to rent them the equipment. From the production end (and from the sharing end, most sites wont host gun-printing files), this is still not viable for the average individual.
Gun printing isn't going to become a major issue, at least in America where gun laws are so lax, until individuals are able to own that means of production, and afaik, low end 3d printers are still 10,000+
also, mr. moneybags, 200-300 a month is huge for most people, and far more expensive than the maintenance of most guns.
well, to be fair, its not "gun nuts" that libtards are worried about, though I will admit, they rarely understand this point either.
That's because the dude tried to be as open about his intentions from the beginning and he even publicized himself. If a person was wanting to be shady about it, they could certainly get away with it.
Liberals and libtards are not the same thing. A libtard thinks that a gun nut (a person that likes to collect and shoot lots of guns including the unnecessarily powerful ones) is a major threat and they want to take the nut's guns away. A liberal will say that intelligent and meted controls are necessary to prevent guns from falling into hands of people that will do harm accidentally or intentionally...and an educated conservative will say the same.
but, in America, it is still easier for that person to hit up a gun show rather than go to the trouble of printing it out, is what I'm saying.
That probably isn't the case for a nation like Canada, but then we get into what part of the gun violence seen in America comes from lax regulation versus cultural issues. One of the things I like to point out in that debate is that the vast majority of guns used in American mass shootings were obtained legally, and in fact, could be obtained legally in Canada. With the exception of the AR 15 (which jammed almost immediately in this case), all of the guns used in the Aurora shooting are available in Canada, and the shotgun (arguably the most deadly) is considered a long-gun and unregistered here.
When we get into the issue of gun printing, I think we have to start talking about how culture impacts gun violence moreso than regulations do. I don't think regulation is ineffective, it is just certainly not the panecea that gun control advocates want to paint it as. Same with background checks for mental illness... ****, get me ranting on that sometime. it is probably the worst idea for anything ive ever heard...
exactly
the thing is, gun violence (suicide and accidents excepted) is rarely caused by "gun nuts". Libtards, and a lot of liberals, get uptight at even the idea of someone owning military grade weapons and rarely make the requisite distinctions between different types of gun owners and different types of criminals.
For instance, the number of liberals who will quote gun death statistics as a way to advocate an assault weapons ban (Cory Booker, for instance), when the gun implicated in the vast majority of those deaths is a hand gun. These people have little to no understanding about the motivation of violence, irrespective of guns.
Yeah, but how will that shady gun-show buyer sneak that gun onto a plane?
Which is crazy. A shotgun, when used by someone that knows what they are doing, is very deadly...and easier to kill with because you don't have to aim as accurately.
Dude, rant. I really really want to read from a person actually educated in psychology why certain types of mental illness history would be a bad idea for gun control (other than the obvious argument that a person can get a gun if they want a gun...and gun licensing is a joke).
That doesn't stop them from making the same old and tired arguments, however.
lol, that argument.
But that's pretty much the problem on any type of major political arguments out there: ignorance. The people, while entitled by constitutional rights, cannot make informed decisions regarding many of this topics because they lack the fundamental prerequisite: being informed.
though i think most can agree that considering the rate of advancement in technology coupled with lowering cost for manufacturing, we are pretty much locked on course toward this inevitability.
__________________ "Your Lord knows very well what is in your heart. Your soul suffices this day as a reckoner against you. I need no witnesses. You do not listen to your soul, but listen instead to your anger and your rage."
also, quibbling over today's manufacturing costs is completely asinine. in 30 years 4 color inkjet printing went from unattainable to littering landfills and being sold for $5 at yard sales.
__________________ "Your Lord knows very well what is in your heart. Your soul suffices this day as a reckoner against you. I need no witnesses. You do not listen to your soul, but listen instead to your anger and your rage."
actually, the point is, unless you are talking about the inevitability of such technology, this isn't going to be an issue for gun control for another 30-40 years.
Today, it is much easier to buy a rifle through loop-holes in gun shows or things like that than it is to print a gun, and frankly, the same type of people who want to print guns are probably already smithing them. "Gun nuts" and collectors are very rarely implicated in gun crime.
1) there is no connection between mental illness and violence. As in, and people have done these studies, mental illness is not a significant predictor of violence. You can't say, a priori, that any individual with mental illness is more likely to cause violence than any other individual.
2) Such a system would require a government far larger than would a gun registry. Depression has something like 25-30% prevalence in the population, anxiety something similar, bi-polar something like 15-25%... etc. A lot of those are co-morbid, or overlap, but the fact is, a registry of mental illness, in which the state keeps such personal tabs on individuals that they are restricted from gun ownership, would be so huge and costly, that in terms of sheer pragmatism, you might as well just register every gun (a position I don't actually support anyways)
3) without massive government intervention into mental health, there is no way this system will work. Save every single person in the population being administered to a battery of clinical psychological testing by professional psychologists, who will be on this list? at one extreme, those who can't afford psychological treatment will not be on the list because they can't afford the testing or treatment, at the other extreme, we have high school counselors being able to put people on that list. It is nonsense.
i couldnt disagree more. the technology is already avalable to consumers. still expensive for the casual hobbyist, but 30-40 years? by your assessment of advancement we should still be using vaccume tubes in our garage-sized computers and printing in dot-matrix.
__________________ "Your Lord knows very well what is in your heart. Your soul suffices this day as a reckoner against you. I need no witnesses. You do not listen to your soul, but listen instead to your anger and your rage."
i understood your point perfecty and disagreed. it happens.
today it is easier to buy the gun. in 5-10 years i believe it will be 3d printers. in 20-30 years i believe 3d printers will be sold at yard sales for $5 and litter landfills. /MY point
__________________ "Your Lord knows very well what is in your heart. Your soul suffices this day as a reckoner against you. I need no witnesses. You do not listen to your soul, but listen instead to your anger and your rage."
its a false equivalency. guns are often made in prison out of match stick heads and magazine paper, with staples as the projectile. the ability to create a weapon to fire lethal projectiles is hardly in the same league as printing out a 1000 round per min assault rifle.
__________________ "Your Lord knows very well what is in your heart. Your soul suffices this day as a reckoner against you. I need no witnesses. You do not listen to your soul, but listen instead to your anger and your rage."
One of the most amazing stories of ingenuity and insanity comes from the Filipino War of the turn of the century, where Mindanaon rebels created guns to fight the Americans with whittled stocks and barrels made from coiled wire. They'd load them through the muzzle like an old musket, and there'd be a small hole in the breech through which they'd ignite the charge. The way they did this was--because they were always smoking--they'd stick the tips of their cigarettes into the hole. This meant that if their gun misfired/the barrel exploded, they'd get a faceful of burning powder and hot metal wire.
They also made another kind of gun: a handcannon that was essentially just made from scrap metal and odd pieces of wood and was fired by striking a percussion cap with a hammer.
The point is, people who want guns will have guns, so if we want to control guns we need to find a way of making people not want guns.
__________________
“Where the longleaf pines are whispering
to him who loved them so.
Where the faint murmurs now dwindling
echo o’er tide and shore."
-A Grave Epitaph in Santa Rosa County, Florida; I wish I could remember the man's name.
Sure, I agree with you, but my point is more that, the people who are interested in guns and may be interested in this type of technology are rarely the type of people who commit the vast majority of murders (criminal organizations who have little trouble getting fire arms anyways) or massacres (people who often, in foresight, pose no reason to restrict gun sales to anyways).
The actual threat of this technology, I think, is moot. In a nation like America, you have nothing stopping people who want to commit massacres from getting guns anyways, and places like Canada, with heavy restrictions, can't keep assault weapons out of criminal hands. It is interesting that Orwell's concept of where power lies given the ability to produce munitions and such might be swinging more toward citizens, but that ultimately still leaves the state far ahead given things like tanks and artillery.
At the end of the day, I think it might exacerbate some issues, but the panic behind printed guns is irrational.