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Today, I challenge the toy industry to stop producing any guns that look like or could be modified to look like real guns. This would be a meaningful contribution to the safety of American children."
The number of privately made firearms, or ghost guns, recovered from crime and accident scenes nationwide has exploded into an epidemic in recent years, up nearly 17-fold between 2017 and 2023 ...
The imitation on top, real gun below, 2007. Toy guns can cause harm like many objects not under proper supervision. Unlike most other toys though, much of the danger of these toys is related to mistaking a toy gun for a real gun or vice versa. For example: a robber or other criminals might threaten people with a toy gun.
If you want to buy a .177 caliber pellet gun that looks just like a real GLOCK 17 Gen5 semi-automatic pistol, it’ll cost you $138 on Amazon. A gun just like that cost 13-year-old Nyah Mway his life.
The "firing block" (where supposed to have the firing pins for real guns) is in fact a stamped steel block which hits the cartridge rim area when hit by hammer. This system drives the entire cartridge case with cap into the detonator in the barrel to fire the internal cap. This system of course is very different from the design of the real guns.
European officials have noted that producing a 3D-printed gun would be illegal under their gun control laws, [26] and that criminals have access to other sources of weapons, but noted that as the technology improved the risks of an effect would increase. [27] [28] Downloads of the plans from the UK, Germany, Spain, and Brazil were heavy. [29] [30]
Cody Wilson discussing 3D printed guns at Liberty Forum in Nashua, New Hampshire in February 2014 Wilson is generally opposed to intellectual property rights. [ 44 ] He indicated his primary goal is the subversion of state structures and he hopes that his contributions may help to dismantle the existing system of capitalist property relations.
“3D-printed firearms undermine all of our gun safety laws — they’re a dream come true for criminals who want to avoid detection and a nightmare for law enforcement,” said Nick Suplina ...