The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

We can’t manage guns, ‘ghost’ or not

- Gail Collins She writes for the New York Times.

Mark this on your April calendar: President Joe Biden does something about ghost guns.

OK, just sort of. But let’s be thankful for a start.

First, a little ghost gun background. They’re very easy to obtain and pretty darned popular — perhaps because they often have no serial numbers. They’re regulated in only 10 states.

Those of us who worry about gun proliferat­ion used to obsess about “the iron pipeline,” aka I-95, along which weapons were ferried from Southern states to Northern destinatio­ns where they could be sold for a very tidy profit.

Today if you want an off-therecords gun, you go online, of course. You order a ghost, which arrives at your home in pieces, ready to be assembled. You can even order a 3D printer to make one from scratch.

“This is as big a threat as anything I’ve ever seen,” said John Feinblatt, head of Everytown for Gun Safety. “They’re a dream come true for a prohibited person — a felon. Or an armed extremist.”

Meanwhile, shootings keep coming.

It’s a tough time for gun safety in general. The Supreme Court decided to take a look at New York regulation­s that set a pretty high bar on the right to, say, carry a revolver in your pocket when you go out for a walk. Nobody knows what’s going to happen. “The Supreme Court keeps me up at night. For all kinds of reasons,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t told me.

Lawmakers from Connecticu­t tend to be very concerned about this kind of issue, an obsession that goes back to 2012, when a 20-year-old stole his mother’s gun and then killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, 20 of them children.

The Newtown shooting shocked the world, and many of us — simpletons that we were — presumed it would be the start of a whole new American attitude toward guns.

Certainly didn’t imagine that this month we’d be watching activists, many of them survivors of the Parkland high school shooting in 2018, place 1,100 body bags on the National Mall. Each bag stood for about 150 lives lost to guns since Parkland — including homicides, accidental gun deaths and suicides. Organizers said there was no way to include one for each victim since that would have meant 170,000 body bags.

And how’s Biden, who clearly sees himself as a champion of gun safety regulation, doing? “It depends on what your expectatio­ns were,” Blumenthal said, carefully. While many anti-gun activists say they’ve been disappoint­ed, Blumenthal still has a lot of hope. “He’s more passionate and determined than any president in my memory,” the senator said.

Definitely more than the guy who came before.

Biden’s been consistent, if not always successful. His first attempt to name a director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives imploded when the Second Amendment lobby managed to torpedo the nomination of gun control activist David Chipman last year.

But Biden, who’s still without a permanent ATF director, did direct the Department of Justice to help stop ghost gun proliferat­ion. That was a year ago.

Well, here we are. Waiting for word.

Biden also requested a ton of money for the ATF in his budget — presuming the budget gets passed and there’s a new director who’ll know how to spend it.

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