>completely closed supply >getting rarer by the year >absolutely zero chance that machine guns will be legalized in the future >be "that guy with the fucking machine gun" at the range
Is a registered M16 machine gun a good investment? They can still be found
I do believe that somewhere in the regulation they slipped in a seriously exploitable loophole though. Any other anons checked this out? I can't quite figure it out but I think it has something to do with the changes to definitions of "single function" and "automatically".
Ayden Bell
Good thing I lost all mine in a boating accident hehe
Mason Edwards
Why bother going to federal pound town for 10 years over a stupid piece of plastic? You could make it legit with just some sheet metal and a pair of pliers/snips. It would be just as risky and make you just as much of a dumbass.
Ethan Morgan
>buy a registered machinegun >President Trump declares NFA a violation of the 2A during his second term JUST
Ryan Peterson
You're fucking retarded if you think people are going to willingly hand these over.
SHALL
Charles Myers
because people that own AR15s are mentally unstable retards. i have guns myself and see zero need to own a semi auto rifle that holds 30 rounds. if you can't hit your target with one shot then 30 more ain't gonna help you. but then again thats the whole point of assault rifles. to lay down supressive fire during engagements. i don't even know why they bother putting sights on them. just spray and pray
Samuel Scott
Invest in an actual nice CNC machine and some other equipment and open a black market gun factory
James Richardson
cool larp shill post, queer. did the boomer scat posting not scare you off?
Logan Ward
Jow Forums here. yes, they are a good investment historically. so are HK auto sears, 10/22 auto sears, and other items. Some good reads out there about a guy who made a boatload of 10/22 sears prior to '86 and has been selling off ten a year for outrageous prices ($10k each as of late; no idea how many are out there).
Joseph Jenkins
The jews are terrified of guns that can be used against government forces.. obviously that means all automatic rifles will have to go, but as we have seen in Europe they also want to take the semi-autos as well before going for a total ban because muh safety. They will probably stage a few more of those shooting hoaxes in the jewnited states and then they'll ban everything.
Alexander Green
8/10 bait
Sebastian Carter
>t.jew
Grayson Campbell
I have seen cucks in my own europoor nation say the exact same thing so he could very well be an actual faggot.
Sebastian White
I'm all for noncompliance, but the bump stock isn't the hill to die on. If I owned one I'd regretfully get rid of it. Would rather not end up a chance felon over something I couldn't even use.
If not bait, what's it like to be a programmed sheep of a person? In the US the Second Amendment wasn't designed for recreationally shooting targets.
Daniel Moore
>what's it like to be a programmed sheep of a person? irony
Dude, don't bother. Full auto is honestly a meme unless you're shooting something linked. Mag dumps are like tranny porn. It feels good while you're doing it but after you just feel empty and unsatisfied.
>be "that guy with the fucking machine gun" at the range
Ya until some crusty ass RSO who a reservist back in '74 (and just missed 'Nam) yells at you because you didn't wait two seconds in between shots. Plus its expensive.
>getting rarer by the year
No they aren't. Unless some shit country like oz decides to crush a bunch of antiques again because they're fucking idiots.
>completely closed supply
Not if you know the right people. And not muh black markets but you can still get these if you have the right papers. Honestly though you're probably Blackwater or TC tier at that point.
The bump stock is a sacrificial lamb, which honestly is fine. Its better than having a full blown AWB again.
Nathaniel Cooper
You can always tell the quality of bate by the number of replies. Well done.
Lincoln Johnson
>Is a registered M16 machine gun a good investment? They can still be found
Luis Evans
No because in the US they are an artificial local market.
Fine antique arms and armour is a global market that has shown amazing gains
truly >>completely closed supply>getting rarer by the year
also exempt from arbitrary firearms laws even in the eu
fine antique matchlocks, flintlocks, rare 19th century guns and pre mass production swords etc, since 1968 these categories have vastly out performed stocks, bonds, pms, property and every other asset.
but I would not go for the weird us artificial full auto market is just a easy changeable legal construct with no global market unlike fine rare antique arms and armour