Pinnacle wrote:I think that the OP (Tromix) is trying to say that this guy is running a serious risk of getting his door kicked in and all that comes with that. I have seen the ATF in action like this - not pretty.
While I certainly respect your opinion, and there is nothing wrong with it... You have to be careful of who you do business with especially with regulated commodities - constitutional or not it is the law of the land. I think that is the point of the post...
I have to agree with that.
There's a well-known saying "Overemphasize Safety" and I don't think you can't overemphasize legality either.
DISCLAIMER: I am now a lawyer and the below is not legal advice.
One must remember that we have an American LEGAL System and NOT an American JUSTICE System because what is legal is not always just, and what is just isn't always legal. What is right morally, ethically, personally, may or may not be right LEGALLY. So too is it true that this is an old argument about the Spirit of the Law (the intent in which a law is written) and the Letter of the Law (what the law says verbatim). Of course other things affect law such as case law which can sometimes sent a precedence, or if the judge, DA, jury member, etc is having a bad day.... so what's my point? Do not get on the wrong side of the law if at all possible. If in doubt, do NOT do it - whatever "it" is.
Ignorance of the law is no excuse.
Arrogance against the law is just asking for a legal you-know-what kicking.
I'm sure that many of us a agree on what would be common sense, etc, but then we run into the is-ought dilemma of "This is how it OUGHT to be, but this is how it IS." As much as we like to think that we are innocent until proven guilty, the American media and public isn't on board with that.
I say err on the side of paranoia.
Just my 0.02 worth.