Gun Legislation

(Topics: Society & Culture | Firearms and Gun Control | Back to Home)

We have to have laws about guns. We of course one we all know from 1791, the Second Amendment, which guarantees the right to bear arms [1]. But there are plenty more rules from those days which show that early Americans were interested in appropriate regulation as well. These include:

Today we have a wide swath of gun regulations, mostly stemming from the 1934 National Firearms Act. But the vast majority of government actions (and inaction) on these weapons is done not by law, but by bureaucracy. It is the internal rules and procedures of groups like the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms that end up having the most day-to-day influence. This is called rulemaking, and it's just about everywhere in the Federal government [6].

This is also where much of the problem is. Instead of debating regulations around firearms in a public forum where lawmakers are accountable to constituents, rules are made by bureaucrats and officers instead of by elected.

But we do need laws. And instead of trying to describe them all at once, the laws should be written based on the issues we are trying to address. With guns there are five:

Big problems must be solved one step a time. And with firearms, understanding what is included in the problem is where to begin.


[1] “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

[2] 1763-1775 N.J. Laws 346, An Act for the Preservation of Deer and Other Game, and to Prevent Trespassing with Guns, ch. 539, § 10

[3] 1786 Va. Acts 35. (Ch. 49, An Act Forbidding and Punishing Affrays).

[4] 1794 Pa. Laws 764, An Act Providing For The Inspection Of Gunpowder chap. 337

[5] 1795 N.H. Laws 525, An Act in Addition to an Act, Entitled, “An Act for Regulating the Militia within this State."

[6] https://www.atf.gov/rules-and-regulations