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Hi Fernando,
Thought you might find this short
article of interest, and if you could share any info about gun grabbing
tactics you experienced while in Argentina. Thank you for what you do.
I have your book
and have read it several times over. So much so it’s falling apart. It
is a reference for me. I have read several other survival/preparedness
books, but definitely find yours the most useful. I visited your youtube channel yesterday. I like it.Joe in Missouri
Thanks Joe, glad you found my book useful.
Seems there’s a double standard going on. How come David Gregory
gets away with having those same AR magazines but this guy gets
arrested? I guess that if you break the law openly on national TV, then
its ok as long as you have an anti-gun agenda, but if you have those
exact same AR magazines while minding your own business then you get
arrested.
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Guns to be “destroyed” by RENAR in Argentina |
The gun grabbing tactics used in Argentina are similar in many ways
to those used in USA. Namely a very strong anti-gun media campaign, on
all levels. In Argentina the slogan shoved down people’s throat was “if
you have a gun, you have a problem”. It was pretty effective too,
catchy. My wife used to make fun of me whenever we saw it on TV, “You
heard that? We have a lot of problems!” We already had mandatory gun
registration (try to avoid having that in USA!) and people were harassed
regarding how many guns they had and the conditions they were stored
in. The anti-gun campaign was strongly supported by so called NGOs that
sympathized with the government and were funded by them.
Buybacks took place on several occasions, and these presented a series of problems.
1)Completely useless guns, sometimes just broken air guns, were being
“bought back”. Criminals would take advantage of this to finance a new
gun!
2)Criminals caught with a firearm could say they were taking the gun
to be bought back and destroyed. This loophole basically allowed people
that were not registered to walk around with a gun, while lawful gun
owners weren’t allowed to use that same excuse if caught carrying
illegaly!
3) In many cases, guns that had been used in crimes had been turned
in by the criminals themselves. They got the evidence against them
destroyed and 100usd in their pocket for their effort.
4)Some of the nicer guns turned in seemed to have a peculiar
condition by which they disappeared, respawning a few days later in a
nearby gunstore’s shelf with a price tag attached to it.
5)A couple years after the buyback, thousands of guns that for some
reason hadn’t been destroyed as they were supposed to were “lost” or
“stolen”. They are just unaccounted for, in many cases ironically making
their way from law abiding citizens that believed the “you have a gun,
you have a problem” campaign, straight into the hands of the criminals
that will use those same guns against the people that gave them up. On
January 9th, 2013, 200 of the best weapons obtained through
buybacks have been misplaced from the shops in which they were supposed
to be destroyed. This includes high end pistols and a few machine guns
(SMGs) that have now made their way to the hands of criminals thanks to
the buyback program.
http://www.saladeprensa.net/inf/desaparecieron-200-armas-del-renar-pistolas-y-ametralladoras/
Even without taking into account the “lost” guns, the buyback is
mostly considered to be a failure, this report clearly shows that other
than reducing the number of accidents, it helps criminals rather than
stops them.
http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~raphael/IGERT/Workshop/PEVAF_September_27_2010.pdf
In the last years the controls for getting a firearm license and
renewing it had increased considerably. The psychological test was
increasingly difficult and without an explanation a lot of people were
failing it, in some cases people I knew pretty well and clearly didn’t
have any condition that should stop them from owning guns.
FerFAL
2013-03-12 13:08:44
Source: http://ferfal.blogspot.com/2013/02/gun-control-tactics-used-in-argentina.html