- Messages
- 9,121
- Reactions
- 16,646
Mister Bisley, are you female ?...then I have to look at the menu for 20 minutes
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Mister Bisley, are you female ?...then I have to look at the menu for 20 minutes
I was not happy and will be damned if I ever go there again.
Think about this guys... requiring BGC for private transfers is an illegal law, and it should have been stricken but no one's had the spine to go at it properly. I've maintained since BloomingIdiotBurg was sending his money to stump for this thing that FFL's are not REQUIRED to run BGC for any gun they are not selling out of their own inventory. It is extra paperwork, and somewhat of a liability. and they don't have to. I tried to get folks to listen and petition their gun shops to refuse to do them. Nevada's Attourney General has done that.... said no Nevada shop MUST run them. then FBI said they won't spend the money to run private BGC for face to face sales from Nevada FFL's. That's what SHOULD have happened here. If NO FFL would run them, what would the state do? Nothing they can do. That law was illegal in that it REQUIRED a federal level official (the FFL) to perform an action he is not REQUIRED to perform. Among half a dozen other things.
I wish every FFL in Wasnington and Oregon would do what Nevada's FFL's have done... simply say MAKE ME!!!! Ya CAIN'T.
We'd have those stupid laws nullified.
Icon go on like this.
Is it me or has this thread run it's course?
A LOT, and I do mean a lot of small business fail every year. When one does the owners will always blame something. One thing that never gets blamed is the face in the mirror. With the net as it is now failing gets a lot easier. Give yourself a bad name and it spreads VERY fast. It is the owners choice to run his shop any way they want. I am VERY pro people putting the word out on them both good and bad. When one fails by their poor choice I feel nothing for them.
a firearm in an FFLs inventory is already there, its history known, so no liability. Further, he can trust his own previous inspections and number verification. And, the time incumbrance for the BGC is folded into his profit margin on the merchandise. I'm in business myself (not firearms, I considered it and dedided no thanks) and I count every form of cost of good sold.. including the time I have invested from first receiving the new goods to dumping them down the chute at the local Post Office, or waiting in line at UPS Store to get it scanned in and get the receipt. Any businessman who fails to account for every snippet of time, expense, etc, will fail.How is this different than an in-store transfer, besides a larger profit margin?