That would make him the criminal if National Registration is the new law and they aren't registered. And should you use one in an honest to goodness self defense situation, he would be potentially criminally and civilly liable.The Annoyed Man wrote:It is still part of your estate, which you paid for and accumulated, and you ought to have the legal right to pass it along to your heirs, just like with a car or a house. If her law passes, I could sell all of my guns to my son for $1 before it takes effect, and then borrow them back.Oldgringo wrote:If you're dead doesn't ownership become somewhat of a moot question?jdhz28 wrote:You could set up a trust, it doesn't have to belong to a corporation. Upon your death the other trustees and beneficiaries will take over the firearms, the down side to that is they aren't yours, they belong to the trust.
I'm very concerned about the push that is coming for the requirement to pay for liability insurance on all weapons. It becomes a defacto form of registration. Liberals don't care about dead children...as long as there is somebody getting paid. They hate it when the perp kills himself...there is no justice in that. Therefore, wealth is transferred when the insurance pays off the victims family.