TellyKNeasuss
Illuminator
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2006
- Messages
- 3,783
As I like to point out, the 2nd Amendment says nothing about guns or firearms at all. It uses the word "arms". We all recognize that Congress has the authority to prohibit individual ownership of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. The individual right to own guns that the court recognizes is not an unlimited one. It can be weighed against safety concerns.
I agree that the amendment doesn't prohibit Congress from restricting how much ammo a person can buy (or without a waiting period for some quantities), but not because the 2nd Amendment doesn't cover ammunition (surely it does)--rather because the right laid out in the 2nd Amendment is not an unlimited right (same as with First Amendment rights).
If the SCOTUS was to be consistent with their "logic" in DC v Heller, they would rule that a person has the right to own whatever the amount of ammunition that is commonly owned by gun owners. But I agree with those who say that limiting the amount of ammunition wouldn't be terribly effective, since most mass murderers don't shoot a really impressive number of rounds. I wouldn't be surprised if the killer in Aurora fired off around 200 rounds and that he shot more rounds than any of the other mass shooters. There have been no reports that the Aurora killer reloaded either the AR15 or the Glocks, which would have limited him to, what, 180 rounds from those 3 weapons.