Times-Call (Longmont)

Views from the nation’s press

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Bloomberg Opinion on how a bump-stock ban is common sense:

A semiautoma­tic rifle equipped with a “bump stock” can fire at a rate of up to 800 rounds a minute. Does that make it a machine gun? Joe Biden and Donald Trump have said yes. The Supreme Court appears divided . ...

A bump stock is a device that usually attaches to the back of the firearm and harnesses this rearward force, along with the forward pressure of the shooter, to push the trigger against the shooter’s finger multiple times, enabling them to fire faster than would normally be possible without assistance.

These technicali­ties are at the center of a case challengin­g a Trump administra­tion ban on such devices, proposed months after a shooter employed them while killing 60 people and injuring hundreds at a concert in Las Vegas in 2017. Trump’s executive order — which banned the possession and sale of bump stocks, and required gun owners to surrender or destroy them — was enacted over the objections of some Justice Department officials, who said congressio­nal action would be necessary.

The Supreme Court is now weighing the evidence. At issue is whether a firearm with a bump stock meets the legal definition of a machine gun —a weapon that fires more than one shot with a single “function of the trigger.” ...

Defining a deadly weapon shouldn’t be this hard. A firearm that sprays bullets in this manner — whether a trigger is pushed, pulled, pressed or activated by myriad other “functions” — should be considered a machine gun . ...

The court will come to its own conclusion. One hopes common sense will prevail. But the responsibi­lity for resolving this issue ultimately resides with Congress: The statutory language applying to machine guns is needlessly ambiguous . ...

In the year after the Las Vegas shooting, multiple states — some with Republican governors — passed laws explicitly prohibitin­g bump stocks. Congress should do the same. It should also restrict possession of other rapid-fire devices, such as trigger cranks and hellfire triggers . ...

Lawmakers can’t anticipate every technologi­cal advance that will make weapons deadlier or harder to trace; just consider downloadab­le guns, which are made from plastic with a 3-D printer, can evade metal detectors and don’t require a background check. Nor will banning devices stop all illegal activity . ...

Whatever the Supreme Court decides, Congress should state the obvious: A gun with a bump stock is a machine gun. It should be illegal.

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