Socialist Rifle Association

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Legal 10/22 takedown SBR with 110 round drum and binary trigger.

Please excuse the mess around it.

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Mystery solved (midwest.social)
submitted 4 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 
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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

In a move that officials touted as the most significant increase in American gun regulation in decades, the Justice Department has finalized rules to close a loophole that allowed people to sell firearms online, at gun shows and at other informal venues without conducting background checks on those who purchase them.

Vice President Harris and U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland celebrated the rules and said they would keep firearms out of the hands of potentially violent people who are not legally allowed to own guns.

The rules — which are expected to take effect in 30 days — codify changes outlined in the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which was signed into law by President Biden in June 2022 and expanded which gun sellers were legally required to conduct background checks on buyers.

“Every person in our nation has a right to live free from the horror of gun violence. I do believe that,” Harris said on a call with reporters. “We know how to prevent these tragedies, and it is a false choice to say you are either in favor of the Second Amendment or you want to take everyone’s guns away.”

As part of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, officials tasked the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which is responsible for regulating the sales and licensing of firearms in the United States, with developing rules that would make clear to gun owners how officials will implement and enforce the new gun laws.

The rules clarify who is required to conduct background checks and aims to close what is known as the “gun show loophole” — which refers to the reality that gun-show sellers and online vendors are subject to much looser federal regulations than vendors who sell at bricks-and-mortar stores.

Under long-standing federal law, people who operate gun shops — or whose main livelihood involves selling firearms — must register with the government to obtain a Federal Firearms License. This license requires them to search a federal database before selling a gun to ensure that the purchaser is not barred from owning one. The license also requires gun vendors to record the sale of each firearm, making it easier for federal officials to trace the gun if it is used in a crime.

But people who claim that selling firearms is not their main source of income — such as people who sell guns at shows or in other more informal settings — have been exempt from such licensing rules. The 2022 law aimed to change that by saying that many more categories of people selling guns to earn money must register for a license and, as a result, record gun purchases and conduct the background checks that come with having that license.

The rules require anyone who sells a firearm through mail order or at flea markets, gun shows or online to register for a license and conduct the necessary background checks.

There are some exceptions, including for hobbyists who are selling firearms from their collection and people who sell firearms they inherited.

Many of Biden’s gun-control efforts have been challenged by conservative groups in court. These regulations are likely to face that same opposition, though White House and Justice Department officials said they are confident the rules align with the law and will withstand any legal challenges.

“Under this regulation, it will not matter if guns are sold on the internet, at a gun show or at a brick-and-mortar store: If you sell guns predominantly to earn a profit, you must be licensed, and you must conduct background checks,” Garland said. “This regulation is a historic step in the Justice Department’s fight against gun violence. It will save lives.”

The ATF issued the proposed version of the rules in August and opened them up to public comment for 90 days. Officials said they received nearly 400,000 comments, two-thirds of which were clearly in favor of the rules. A quarter of the comments were decidedly against the proposal, the officials said, and other comments did not take a clear stance on the rules.

The final version of the rules did not contain substantial changes.

It is difficult to determine how many unlicensed dealers are selling firearms, but officials said they expect the new rules to apply to about 23,000 dealers. They said about 22 percent of Americans have obtained their guns without a background check — a figure that includes private transfers of ownership.

The ATF released a gun trafficking report last week that determined that the country’s illegal firearm network is growing and said approximately 60 percent of users of trafficked firearms in cases that officials examined were convicted felons.

Not sure what they're talking about unlicensed online sellers. Every online gun shop I've purchased from has an FFL and ships my gun to an FFL where I do the background check.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2263203

The article:


I love driving. I know driving is kind of evil. But I love it. I love my stupid little car—a 2015 Volkswagen Golf TDI. It’s diesel. It gets 45 miles per gallon. It’s a 6-speed stick shift. It was cheap (due to Volkswagen recalling every diesel they sold after being caught doing really evil stuff to cheat the emissions standards of the U.S., and then needing to offload all those cars) and it goes fast and is tiny and I love zipping around country corners and pretending I’m a racecar driver (while remaining at a reasonable speed, of course; I would never break the law). Vroom vroom.

But over the last few years, driving has become a much more miserable experience for me. I hope not to negate my own responsibility here, but, I think, it’s not that I’ve changed, it’s that everything else has: every car around me is suddenly humongous, all of their headlights seem designed to blind me and cause me to crash into a telephone poll, and, worst of all, the people behind the wheel of these humongous and bright cars seem to actively want to kill me, and, presumably, everyone else on the road too.

People seem to agree that drivers have gotten worse in the last few years, that headlights have gotten too bright, and that cars have gotten too big and dangerous. And yet, many, many people keep buying these huge, dumb cars, despite the fact that they cost way too much money. The average car price is now $47,000. That is, frankly, insane.

Perhaps the pandemic made people worse at driving and more prone to antisocial behavior; perhaps some people are affected by Long Covid and cannot think as clearly as they barrel down the road. Perhaps people are more stressed and depressed and taking that out on everyone.

All those things are probably true. But I think they’re also all related—they sit under the umbrella of a culture designed to atomize us into machines indifferent to (or even actively seeking pleasure in) death and destruction. Cars and driving are not the cause of this problem; rather they are the most effective tool to enact a purposeful societal violence. Which is what, in many ways, they’ve always been. We’ve simply made those tools much more effective at doing their jobs recently. If we have any hope of challenging our ever-more-insane car culture, we first must correctly identify the problem.

As the United States has grown ever-more reliant on cars, there’s been a growing counter-movement. Young people seem to want cars less these days; they prefer living in cities with public transit. Organizations that promote things like adding bike lanes and redesigning streets to make them less car-centric have sprouted up in nearly every midsize and large American city. And while these movements are commendable, they’re not very successful: America’s streets are more dangerous for pedestrians now than they’ve been in 40 years. The number of pedestrians killed by cars has increased by 77 percent (!!!) just since 2010.

How can it be that fewer people value cars and driving at the same time that our culture becomes more car-centric and less pedestrian friendly? It’s probably because we’ve mis-identified the source of the issue at hand. Saying cars are the root of America’s social rot is like saying missiles are the cause of war. Violence is the point of war, not an unintended consequence; and missiles are the tool through which that violence is carried out. And violence is the point of our transportation system in the United States; and cars are the tool through which that violence is carried out.

We often hear the story that the interstate highway system was constructed without regard for urban communities, especially Black communities—that the suburbs and their attendant roads were made for white people and that the destruction of cities and the wealth and culture they contained was an unnecessary and evil consequence of that creation. But that’s not really what happened. Our car culture was built by our government with the explicit intent to isolate people from one another; the objective was to destroy community.

As I wrote in my book How to Kill a City, the suburbs were envisioned as a way to break solidarity. In the 1940s, there were growing movements (gay, feminist, cross-racial, anti-capitalist, pro-union, etc.) in American cities. The suburbs helped solve that problem with a carrot and stick.

White people got the carrot (surprise surprise)—they were gifted very cheap land and mortgages and cars and the wealth that those things created in exchange for their politics and communities and identities. “No man who owns his house and lot can be a communist,” William J. Levitt, the creator of the prototypical suburb Levittown said. “He has too much to do.”

And People of Color got the stick—their communities and wealth and the brewing radicalism within those communities were all destroyed by the highways rammed through them. Which, again, was not an unintended consequence, but the exact point. Joseph Mccarthy (of the McCarthy era and many other bad things), actually got his start as a shithead by linking urbanism and multifamily housing to communism, and encouraging the destruction of all of those things to prevent the destruction of capitalism.

(As an aside, gentrification functions in a largely similar way to suburbanization in terms of reifying individualist politics and culture: once cities were hollowed out, white people were encouraged to move back into them, but now with suburbanized values, thus further entrenching the geography of individualism (for more on all this, read my book, as well as Sarah Schulman’s The Gentrification of the Mind).

But the question remains: if suburbanization and highways and cars were always tools to reinforce this system of individualism and stratification, then why has driving suddenly gotten so much worse? (And by most accounts it really has: 54 percent of Americans think driving is more miserable now than before the pandemic).

Well, if we can consider the car of the mid-1900s one of the most effective tools/weapons of industrial post-war capitalism, we might now consider the modern car an updated technology for our new-ish era of capitalism. Today it's not so much the physical landscape that needs destroying, but the remaining social bonds that tie us together and the institutions that once fostered those bonds (schools, workplaces, unions, government agencies, etc.).

This is an era of constant competition—steady, full-time work replaced by the gig economy in which we are all fighting each other as independent entities for the same slice of the pie. And that competition can only occur through hyper-individualism. Cars (along with several other powerful technologies, such as, I’d argue, the DSM 😛) are the perfect tool to accomplish this task.

In a really great essay on cars and neoliberalism, Patrick McCarthur, building on the work of psychologist Zygmunt Bauman, argues that our age of capitalism is a “hunter’s utopia” in which a population’s collective ideals of progress are replaced by individualist ideals of survival. Any and all progress is now measured by how good we are at surviving the system in which we are now trapped (and then we call this state of survival mode “freedom”).

“...everyone must continue to hunt to survive, even if they are not really hunters,” McCarthur writes. “Thus, in a neoliberal framework, people have the freedom to be anyone, but the social system carries the assumption that everyone must have the same relative requirements and expectations.”

We’re all free to hunt as we please, but we all must hunt, and we’re all in competition for the same boar, or deer, or whatever (IDK I’ve never hunted). Which creates a kind of arms race—if we must fight each other to survive, we will begin an obsessive search for the perfect tools and strategies to outperform one another (this is starting to sound a lot like The Hunger Games).

And so it’s no surprise that cars have gotten bigger and more dangerous; it’s no coincidence that these bright-ass headlights are made without any regard for other people—because our age of capitalism requires us to be in a constant battle with each other. Who cares if your car kills kids and blinds drivers? That’s the point. Better I survive than you.

All the way back in the year 2000, when SUVs were first becoming popular, automakers essentially admitted this: they told the New York Times that people were no longer wanting to be “other-oriented”and thus no longer wanted to buy cars associated with others (think: families and minivans), and instead were becoming “self-oriented”—less social, and more fearful of crime and society itself. Big, dangerous cars like SUVs became the preferred tools of a completely self-focused era.

In a more recent Times article, citing an AAA survey, the paper pondered how a large percentage of drivers these days could admit to enacting aggressive and illegal behavior behind the wheel (speeding, running red lights, tailgating), while simultaneously disapproving of those behaviors in others. Given the context of the hunter’s utopia we live in, the answer becomes clear—people will do anything to make their driving more aggressive and effective at enacting violence, but don’t like the idea that others could too, not because there’s a moral problem with that, but because it threatens their dominance in the hunt.

In 2017, I was one of many people nearly killed by James Alex Fields as he rammed his Dodge Challenger into a crowd of protesters in Charlottesville. In addition to giving me terrible PTSD, it also gave me a hatred of Dodge Challengers. It’s no coincidence Fields drove this very American, very muscle-y car. It’s no coincidence that it, along with the Dodge Charger, are the cars most closely associated with the U.S. Military. And it’s no coincidence that fascists, ever the bleeding edge of capitalism, are increasingly using cars as weapons against protestors: cars have become tools of war, and fascists were the first to capitalize on this fact.

But now we’ve all been drafted into the battle, and we’ve all been forced to fight.

My car will be above 100k miles soon, and I’ll likely have to get a new one in the next year or so. Part of me wants another fun, zippy, small car, one that allows me to feel the road, the outside world. But, I don’t know. I might go with something safer and more practical—something that allows me to effectively compete.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2210352

White supremacy lost in Oklahoma tonight.


Honestly, this was a good thing and shows that people are waking up to the creeping fascist threat.

As communists, we must try to be a guiding force and helping hand in the fightback against fascism.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2181655

Helping someone I know.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2135396

The PatSoc got an award and is apparently moving up.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2106410

Bleh. He was literally a communist:

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Glunderbussy (midwest.social)
submitted 8 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 
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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/2049042

Up yours, broke moralist, ig.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1976670

Check it out. Also:


“George Bush doesn’t care about Black people.” These were the words of famed rapper Kanye West during the 2005 nationally televised telethon benefit for victims of Hurricane Katrina. In this notorious quote, Kanye expressed a popular conception of the Bush administration for a whole generation of people. How is it then, that less than 15 years later the same Kanye West — son of a Black Panther who had previously made commentary on racism in the U.S. — would go on a national tour professing his love for Hitler? Even more recently, beloved star in the Black community, Nicki Minaj, cozied up to Ben Shapiro after rapper Megan Thee Stallion blasted her for misogynoir. Both of these instances illustrate the right’s newfound investment in popular culture in response to young people, people of color and the LGBTQ community’s increasing acceptance of socialism.


Kanye was the son of a Black Panther?! Holy shit...

Anyway:

It's only a few paragraphs long and is for a pre-convention discussion (since CPUSA is in discussion period for our democratic process).

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1971306

Damn, this was a record for me.

It was a rally and march for Palestine at the city nearby.

@[email protected] might know about it, but I don't think they're here now (I'm just tagging in case they are).

Ask me about it if you want, but right now I'm "venting" about something positive; I'm really proud of myself for keeping up the pressure regarding Gaza and helping to do that.

Definitely join an org or activist group if you can.

That's all. Cheers!

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1968230

Pretty expected, to be honest.

Especially now that Joe Sims is in and not John Bachtell.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1941627

Just found out about this an hour ago.

Holy shit, this is good, and it's Marxist writers' group too.

We need more stuff like this.

@[email protected] Thought you might be interested in this, old friend (since you're the only other person I know right now besides myself that knew BayArea415, at least online).

But anyway, on another note, I'm glad that the PatSoc infiltration attempts were sorted out, otherwise the content would just be a repeat of Haz's trash ideas lol

Glad they're experimenting with a writing and literature group; very early in its initial phase, from what I know.

It's a pity that one of the people didn't get a chance to finish his own fictional work and had to stop at the beginning before it got to the crux or point of it all.

Anyway, enjoy, y'all.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1904493

Good discussion and a long one too. Nearly an hour. I felt Ben was a good guest too. And of course, there's Justine Medina as well.

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cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/1863958

The book is this one:

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