sonjay
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I find that hard to believe because in my experience, people who want gun control want just that - gun control/regulation. Not to ban all guns. You mentioned New Zealand earlier. They've got very strict gun control but they haven't banned most guns. I get that you don't like the idea of controlling people's use/ownership of guns, but it is not the same as banning all guns.
See:
Every day, something good happens at the state or community level that makes getting guns a little harderand keeps families a little safer. That it might happen a little faster is a rational hope, and a proper holiday wish.
It's been made clear in the U.S. that a total firearm ban is not going to happen. Ever. So the gun-banners turn to making it harder and more expensive to be a gun owner.
People cry rivers over any requirement that people have to show ID to register to vote. Because showing a photo ID is soooooo difficult and complex and expensive that too many people would be disenfranchised. But those same people think it's perfectly okay to require background checks, waiting periods, fingerprints, fees, classes, etc., etc., etc.
Emily Gets Her Gun:
http://www.washingtontimes.com/blog/guns/2011/oct/5/miller-emily-gets-her-gun/
It took Emily Miller weeks, cost hundreds of dollars (in addition to the purchase price of the gun), required multiple trips to the police station and other bureaucratic offices, and multiple trips outside of D.C. to buy a gun legally in D.C. Yes -- D.C.'s gun-purchase law required that she make multiple trips outside of D.C. in order to legally buy a gun in D.C. from the one single FFL dealer allowed to conduct business in D.C. (And no, she wasn't permitted to buy a gun outside of D.C. and bring it into D.C. That would have been highly illegal.)
Gun control laws are mostly aimed at eliminating gun ownership by making gun ownership so expensive and difficult that people just don't have the time or money to go through the process. It's seen by many gun-control advocates as way to achieve a de facto gun ban.