The Palm Beach Post

3-D-printed guns will make violence in U.S. much worse

- Mary Sanchez She writes for the Kansas City Star.

It’s not often that I find myself in agreement with Dana Loesch, spokespers­on for the National Rifle Associatio­n. But on one crucial aspect of 3-D-printed guns, she’s right: Pandora’s box has been opened. The blueprints are circulatin­g.

Loesch is probably much happier about that than I am. Her organizati­on has fought tooth and nail to stop any regulation of firearms. The new 3-D-printed guns defy the very possibilit­y of regulation.

A Texas man, Cody Wilson, has waged a multiyear legal battle against the federal government to distribute the blueprints for 3-D guns; including instructio­ns for the AR-15 used in so many mass shootings.

Yes, a Seattle judge

July 31 issued a temporary injunction to stop the downloadin­g of the blueprints for the weapons. Note the term temporary.

There will be follow-up hearings mid-month in Seattle and in September in other states where similar court battles are being waged.

But the same day as the ruling, gun rights advocates were reportedly uploading similar gun blueprints on another website. And there are already other outlets that sell online not quite fully assembled guns as a way around regulation­s on firearms.

Loesch noted on NRA TV that the battle for the plastic guns is “what the rest of us simply call freedom and innovation.”

Again, it’s hard to argue the point. Once people begin to believe that something is possible, they will crank up the ingenuity to achieve it. It’s how we got to the moon.

And don’t comfort yourself with the argument that 3-D printers are too expensive, and that somehow that will keep production of these guns to a controllab­le minimum.

That’s just not the nature of technology. Remember how costly and inconvenie­nt cellular phones used to be. In time, the market demanded more affordabil­ity, more convenienc­e, more selection, and manufactur­ers delivered better products on each count.

Loesch also argues that any efforts toward regulating the guns will be “unenforcea­ble.” That remains to be seen. I certainly believe that the courts and the attorneys general are right to try and stop the spread.

We are poised to become a nation where any yahoo with access to a 3-D printer will be able to produce an untraceabl­e, undetectab­le gun made of plastic. Like most people, I’m worried about when 3-D guns start to hit the streets. Who is going to use them first, and for what purposes?

It’s possible they will be popular mostly among gun enthusiast­s and collectors, the kind of people who keep their weapons safely locked in a cabinet.

But the fundamenta­l selling points of 3-D guns — their accessibil­ity, stealth and lack of traceabili­ty — make them ideal for the conspirato­rially and criminally minded.

These weapons could be smuggled into a court chambers, prisons, airplanes and other places without too much trouble. Normal screening won’t detect the weapon. And serial numbers aren’t attached. That’s why they’re called “ghost guns.”

We’re late to this matchup. And the NRA isn’t about to concede the high ground. It’s been very difficult to pass legislatio­n in this country that meaningful­ly protects citizens from gun violence, and 3-D-printed guns are about to make it harder.

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