It is also my understanding that although the Garands are in terrible shape, they do have a significant number of carbines.
Many of those carbines are of the M2 variety. They are also in terrible shape.
It is also my understanding that although the Garands are in terrible shape, they do have a significant number of carbines.
Wasn't that what was done to the Norinco firearms when Bush Sr closed off importation of firearms from China? Maybe I'm remembering that one wrongly...No US president has ever banned the importation of guns using an executive order
It's somewhat more complicated. See here:armoredman said:Wasn't that what was done to the Norinco firearms when Bush Sr closed off importation of firearms from China? Maybe I'm remembering that one wrongly...
...In 1993, the import of most Norinco firearms and ammunition into the United States were blocked under new trade rules when China's Most Favored Nation status was renewed. The prohibition did not apply to sporting shotguns or shotgun ammunition however. The year subsequent to that, U.S. Customs agents conducted a sting against Atlanta based importers of Norinco firearms. According to an affidavit signed by two of the undercover agents involved in the investigation dubbed "Operation Dragon Fire", representatives from Norinco offered to sell urban gangs shoulder-held missile launchers capable of downing a large commercial airliner.[2]
In August 2003, the Bush Administration imposed sanctions on Norinco for allegedly selling missile-related goods to Iran.[2] These sanctions led to a prohibition on imports into the US of the remaining types of firearms and ammunition not covered by the 1993 ban...
I believe the "next" president can rescind executive orders of the previous pres, possibly of earlier ones too, but I'm not sure of this last. I think that there might be a time factor involved though.
No US president has ever banned the importation of guns using an executive order, because there is no need to do that.
I suppose that's true in the sense that no particular class of firearms has ever been banned from import by executive order. HOWEVER, Clinton did ban the importation of all firearms and ammunition from China via an executive order that has never been rescinded.Problem is: No guns were ever banned by an executive order.
HOWEVER, Clinton did ban the importation of all firearms and ammunition from China via an executive order that has never been rescinded.
"Also in 1994, President Clinton, by Executive Order, banned importation of firearms and ammunition from Red China, then a major exporter of AK-47-type semi-automatic rifles."
I've read EO 12938 and I'll readily admit that the language is not at all easy to decipher, but the effect was certainly easy to see.
Let's try a different tack--if you reject the commonly given explanation,
then how do you explain the total absence of Chinese arms & ammunition on the U.S. market?
Maybe not now, but that was what everyone, including Clinton was saying at the time.Commonly given explanation!!!! Hardly.
The wiki article Frank quoted is in error. Clearly if the weapons were banned in 1993 as the wiki claims, then clearly it wouldn't make any sense to be able to find numerous articles from 1994 quoting Clinton and others saying that he was planning to ban them.Frank Ettin covered it above.
I told you that I've read it and that I can't decipher it. But there's clearly no question at all as to what it actually did, nor what Clinton intended it to do. And there certainly wasn't at the time. It wasn't like he made a big secret of it. Anyone in doubt can read the period articles--they make it all crystal clear.EO 12938 pertains to weapons of mass destruction. Yep, those semi-auto milsurp rifles are powerful but they ain't WMD.
Make no mistake about it. This administration knew very well these Garands and carbines would not be on the streets, but instead hang over the fireplace, a symbol of our democracy, and they took that symbol away.
Guys? You know we're talking about executive actions and not executive orders, right? The distinction is being lost in much of the media, but it's important.
To be honest, not really. I've had firsthand experience with some of the remainder of the Korean Garands, and they're not worth having. In most cases, the rifles aren't even safe to shoot.
It's a chicken/egg question. William Bennett, who was drug czar at the time, pressured President Bush to do something about semiautomatic rifles following the Stockton shooting. Directly after, the ATF issued a report [pdf] in which they interpreted 925(d) as such:On orders from the then Bush administration, they "discovered" the error of their ways, reclassifying the same semiautomatic rifles as not being suitable for or adaptable to sporting purposes.
Moreover, there is legislative history which indicates that Congress intended the standard to allow the importation of traditional sporting rifles, while excluding military-type rifles. The Senate Report on the Gun Control Act observed that the importation standards “. . . are designed and intended to provide for the importation of quality made, sporting firearms, including . . . rifles such as those manufactured and imported by Browning and other such manufacturers and importers of firearms.”
An explanation of the effect of this section by one of the sponsors of the bill specifically stated that military firearms would not meet the “sporting purposes” test for importation. The mere fact that a military firearm may be used in a sporting event does not make it importable as a sporting firearm.
Speaking personally, and at the risk of perhaps doing some good people an injustice, I never thought that the agency in question, whatever it's name of the moment, was worth the matches it would take to set it on fire, but that's just my opinion.
If it wasn't via an executive order, what method did he use? I'll admit that I'm not an expert on presidential powers so I don't have an answer for this and I'd like to change that.Yes: Some media conveniently call nearly every decision the president makes an "executive order".
William Clinton said:In view of the continuing human rights abuses, I am extending the sanctions imposed by the United States as a result of the events in Tiananmen Square, and I am also banning the import of munitions, principally guns and ammunition from China.
Clearly he did enact the import ban, and whatever method he used, it obviously worked very effectively and is still working effectively 20 years later.
I see no reason that the current president would have any difficulty doing something similar.
So, assuming that Clinton's import ban wasn't done via EO, would it still be reversible by a subsequent president as an EO would be?