Anti-gun Democrats, Media Collaborators, Concoct Phony “Scandal” to Ban Ammunition

Opinion

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Here we go again. Every so often, some “brilliant” firearm prohibitionist comes up with the “insight” that if gun bans are unconstitutional, ammunition should be targeted instead.

This is akin to the old tactic of cracking down on ink and paper supplies as a means of curtailing First Amendment expression and is just as unconstitutional. We saw an attempt by the government to ban one of the most popular types of ammunition for America’s most popular rifle during the Obama/Biden administration, when ATF suddenly (and inaccurately) reclassified M855 rounds as “armor piercing.” That overreaching move not only failed to go the distance, it was followed by the resignation of the ATF’s then director, B. Todd Jones. Now, as Gun Control, Inc. continues to recycle the failed executive gun control schemes of the past, another attempt is underway to ban supposed “military grade” ammunition from public sale.

It goes without saying that there are certain types of technology that have both military and civilian applications. Thus, some companies serve both the military and civilian markets with the same or similar items. This includes Lake City Army Ammunition Plant in Independence Missouri, currently operated by Olin Winchester, a private company. Lake City makes rifle cartridges for both the military and civilian markets, including in the highly popular 5.56×45 mm designation used in military firearms such as the M4 and in civilian firearms such as the AR-15.

This arrangement allows for economies of scale that benefit taxpayers, U.S. fighting forces, and Americans exercising their Second Amendment Rights. By serving both military and civilian markets, Lake City can maintain the machinery, infrastructure, staffing, and supply chain purchasing power to produce consistent, high-quality ammunition at affordable prices. It also allows the plant to “surge” its capacity when necessary to meet military needs during times of high demand, such as when U.S. forces are engaged in combat operations.

Moreover, while Lake City can sell certain types of its output on the civilian market, these sales are still subject to the same laws and regulations that govern ammunition sales from any other source. Lake City cannot, for example, sell armor-piercing ammunition in the private market because such sales are restricted under specific provisions of federal law. Certain types of ammunition might also be considered an explosive or destructive device under federal law, and restrictions and requirements that pertain to those categories would of course govern those rounds, no matter where or by whom they were produced.

It’s also worth noting that the U.S. government itself makes certain types of surplus military equipment available to the private markets in the U.S., either directly or through intermediaries. These include actual firearms once belonging to military armories – including semiautomatic firearms like the M1 Garand rifle, the M1 carbine, and the M1911 pistol – and once-fired military cartridge cases (including those produced by Lake City), which can be reloaded into usable rounds. Military equipment is ultimately funded by U.S. taxpayers, and if it is otherwise legal for civilian use and no longer needed by the services for the common defense, it makes sense it be made available to the public, rather than destroyed or stored at taxpayer expense.

Indeed, all this has gone on for many decades openly and without many complaints, even by anti-gunners.

The latest flap over Lake City selling ammunition to the public is the perfect example of how firearm prohibitionists across the public and private spheres coordinate in pushing a contrived narrative to generate fear and outrage and, so they hope, use it to crack down on Second Amendment rights. These interconnected activists, all pressing for the same agenda, pretend to act independently but are really part of a coordinated effort.

First, there were rumblings back in June 2022 that the government’s leading ammunition contractor might shut off the supply of its products to the civilian market. That plan, perhaps because of looming midterm elections, did not come to fruition at the time.

Then, a supposed “investigation” by the New York Times last November reported that Lake City has “pumped billions of rounds of military-grade ammunition into the commercial market.” That article claimed some of these rounds had been used in certain notorious and highly-publicized crimes. It even quoted the writings of one mass shooter who supposedly sought out Lake City ammunition to use in his attack. The article’s takeaway is that the U.S. government, and by extension the U.S. taxpayer, are “subsidizing” “military-grade” ammunition for sale to the general public that is being diverted to criminal use.

Of course, even taking the Times article at face value, it could also be read to say that billions of Lake City rounds are being bought and used by the general public in completely legitimate and constitutionally-protected ways. The Times does not claim, nor can it, that the rounds that Lake City makes available to the public are inherently more deadly or liable to be misused in crime than any other brand of ammunition of the same caliber. Again, taking the Times at its word, the rounds have been linked to 12 recent mass shootings. But if the Times is to be believed (and it shouldn’t be), hundreds of such crimes occur a year without any connection to Lake City ammunition whatsoever.

The Times apparent object in singling out Lake City is simply that the rounds are prolific, which means they influence the availability and price of 5.56×45 mm ammunition generally. And they have a tie to the government, which means highlighting and exaggerating misuse might give the anti-gun Biden White House an excuse for a crackdown.

But the Times reporting should not be taken at face value. First is the issue of how the Times is supposedly substantiating which brand of ammunition is used in which particular crimes. Firearms in the U.S., for example, bear mandatory identification marks and serial numbers that reliably allow them to be traced back to a particular manufacturer or importer, and even to a particular initial retail purchaser. Thus, when a claim is made about a certain type or brand of firearm being used in a certain crime, there is usually an ATF trace of a recovered gun that can back up (or disprove) that claim.

Ammunition, by contrast, is not required to be serialized, nor can the manufacturing and distribution data for individual rounds be determined with the same precision.

The Times report appears to rely mostly on the recovery of rounds or spent brass with what reporters or law enforcement officials believe to be Lake City headstamps on the back of cartridge cases. But assuming these non-experts in ammunition identification are right even about that, the headstamp says nothing about how the rounds or brass were actually manufactured or distributed. For example, maybe the rounds were reloaded into Lake City brass by a private company or person, perhaps even from brass discarded at a public shooting range. Maybe the round or the brass came directly from military stockpiles, including by unauthorized diversion. Simply put, there is no universally accepted or used method of tracking which brands of ammunition are used in crime. Meanwhile, agenda-driven reporters pushing a narrative are free to use whatever supposed evidence or hearsay they want to make these claims.

The Times “investigation,” however, had its intended effect, generating other “news” stories amplifying and expanding upon the narrative, as well as outrage from gun control advocates and anti-gun politicians (some of whom have had access to this information for years).

The most recent effort was spearheaded by none other than New York Attorney General Letitia James, who specializes in shamelessly wielding her official authority against political opponents of her own Democrat party. James is the nominal author of a letter written on Jan. 9, 2024, and signed by 19 other anti-gun Democrat state attorneys general, demanding that the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention:

“investigate the contracting and manufacturing practices that led to so many billions of military-grade rounds being sold into our communities, and to issue a public report with recommendations about how to end the diversion of military ammunition into civilian hands.” But the letter goes further, betraying the true agenda and purpose of the entire effort: “In the long term, we ask the White House to ensure that future production contracts prohibit the sale of military weapons and ammunition to civilians.”

It’s typical that the letter confuses the issue by conflating “weapons and ammunition,” even though no weapons (other than ammunition) produced under military contracts were implicated in the Times’s reporting. It also uses the scary-sounding buzzword “military-grade” to falsely suggest there is some important functional difference between Lake City rounds and other 5.56.45 mm rounds available on the civilian market. In fact, “military-grade” in this context simply means it meets specific technical specifications for materials, tolerances, consistency, quality control, and oversight, not that it is uniquely suited to military use, nor more deadly than other brands of the same round. As previously stated, Lake City can only offer rounds for sale to the public that are otherwise legal for commercial distribution. If anything, international accords that limit the use of certain ammunition designs in warfare arguably make true “military-grade” ammunition of a given caliber less likely to cause especially grievous wounds or suffering.

Restricting the sale of Lake City ammunition to the general public would severely curtail the availability of rounds for America’s most popular rifle, the AR-15, and drive up prices.

Reports indicate that Lake City Ammunition accounts for 30% of the commercial supply of 5.56×45 mm rounds in the U.S. Banning access to those rounds would not stop determined criminals who were willing to die or go to jail to perpetuate a heinous, high-profile crime. But it would make it much more difficult for law-abiding Americans to exercise their Second Amendment rights and to maintain competency with their legally-owned guns.

Of course, that last outcome is the entire point of the whole effort.

Read Related: Attorney Generals Ask Biden to Ban Lake City from Selling Ammo to Civilians


About NRA-ILA:

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the “lobbying” arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess, and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Visit: www.nra.org

National Rifle Association Institute For Legislative Action (NRA-ILA)

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Ledesma

The hysteria in the 1980’s was “cop killer bullets”. The kind of bullets that “blow up inside people”.

DIYinSTL

Initially, “cop killer bullets” were the “Teflon coated” coated KTW bullets that could penetrate ‘bullet proof’ vests. In typical ignorance and bias of the press, they accentuated the Teflon coating and ignored the fact that the bullets were made from hard brass for improved penetration over the common lead bullets of the time. The Teflon coating was only to reduce barrel wear which was very high with uncoated hard brass. It wasn’t until the early 90’s when Winchester came out with the Black Talon branded ammunition that had a molybdenum disulfide coated bullet did the “cop killer” term suddenly apply… Read more »

Bigfootbob

I didn’t know that, thanks for the tutorial.

Shotsmith

Cop killer bullet:

Media definition: any well designed bullet, capable of stopping an attacker, that the anti-gunners want to take out of civilian hands by adding mythical capabilities and scaring the hell out of ignorant non gunners.

Actual definition: any bullet that kills a cop.

Same goes for “assault weapons.” If you attack me with a knife, that knife is an assault weapon.

Tionico

so if they are effective against coppers they are equally effective against carjackers, bank jackers, rioters, rapists, housebreakers. In other words, they are capable of doing the job at hand, which is why WE THE PEOPLE must have access to them.

Eedji traitors are getting desparate for any foothold they can imagine or manufacture to disarm us.

Not gonna happen.

SGT_Wombat

The bullets were steel, coating them in Teflon allowed them to be fired through a firearm without destroying the barrel. Black Talon had the “hooks” that caused more damage to flesh, it had nothing to do with penetration of vests.

DIYinSTL

Nope, brass (with some testing of copper jacketed steel core bullets). And Paul Kopsch (the “K” in KTW) has said that the Teflon coating actually reduced penetration of the ballistic cloth used in the vests of the time. And the Black Talon was no different in performance than any other hollow point ammunition.
https://www.guns.com/news/2011/10/26/the-myth-of-the-cop-killer-bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teflon-coated_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Talon

tsandl

They blow up inside people, but they’ll also punch straight through the blade of an armored bulldozer, especially when you shoot them out of one of those all porcelain Glock 7’s. I know—I saw a documentary or something. I’m just grateful they can now bring those poor cops back by installing the remnants of their brains into suits of robotic armor.

Last edited 9 months ago by tsandl
California Uber Alles

The surgery only worked once for a coop, and once for a criminal. There were many failed attempts in between those units.

Last edited 9 months ago by California Uber Alles
PMinFl

Yes but the coop was really chicken$hit.

PMinFl

Oh yeah ! I remember a TV show about this exact situation…”The Six Million Dollar Man”.

Cappy

My cousin’s neighbor’s brother saw the same documentary. It also covered the plastic guns that can sneak through TSA scanners.

Last edited 9 months ago by Cappy
Mike

I love how they believe that “military grade” is done mark of high quality. Military contracts are generally lowest bidder and the quality suffers from it. I’ll take any weapon I’ve built over their “military grade” stuff.

Norm

Lowest “qualified” bidder.

Arizona

Exactly, and further more, anything suited for military action is per Miller specifically protected under the 2nd. Arms and ammo catering to militia and military are inherently protected. The gov can’t ban military ammo, and current prohibitions on armor piercing and others are unconstitutional.

HiIQ

The whole democrat party wants an end to the private ownership of guns. As long as they are in power, they wont give up.

Montana454Casull

” military grade ammo” is a less effective killer than my handloaded Barnes or Accubonds . These people are clueless and just fear mongering.

Norm

Don’t give them any ideas!

Montana454Casull

They already have the idea , they are just taking the ammo they have the authority too first , then the more legal stuff last . Hoping they take the more lethal stuff in a vital would be a better solution .

Bigfootbob

Who penned this article? I’ve noticed every time an article from NRA-ILA is posted here they are anonymous. Why is that and better yet, WHAT IS THE NRA GONNA DO ABOUT THIS LATEST INFRINGEMENT ATTEMPT?

This would be a good FIRST battle in regaining the trust your hierarchy has squandered during the last 30 years.

Last edited 9 months ago by Bigfootbob
Mike

The NRA will do nothing, as usual.

DarthKur

What I’m truly sick of is the distinction between military and civilian items. Citizens have a Constitutional right to be armed. There’s no distinction to what kinds. We have a right to have anything and everything the military has. Not doing so defeats the very purpose of the Second Amendment.

Pa John

Enemedia. Pronounced enemy–dee–ah. It’s just who these leftist propagandists are. Enemy propaganda – constantly and often heavily influenced by enemies of the U.S. Constitution both foreign and domestic, from communist China to organized crime, to self-supposed “liberal elites” seeking to force their authoritarianism upon us all. Enemedia. It is what it is. A quote from todays Allen West email: “Authoritarians are the ones demanding that you shut up, eat bugs, and buy their approved vehicles and appliances.” Enemedia. If you are on a PC, highlight the word “Enemedia” with your mouse, then right-click it and select “Add to dictionary” so… Read more »

Raconteur

Assault weapons, cop-killer bullets, and now – Military Grade! Just more propaganda for the ignorant gun prohibitionists.

Look up the Mil-Spec of the 5.56mm ammo and in particular:  MIL-DTL-9963. The allowable variations in the ammunition are quite risible and will leave hand reloaders wondering why anyone would want to buy it, other than plinking or machine-gunning.

Tionico

Yup. Friend of mine heard about looming ammo shortages and restricions, came into some money (sold a car, I think…) and spend ten grand on ammunition. Then another three on reloading equipment and supplies. bought up every primer on the market in our smallish town.

SGT_Wombat

What this will do is increase the price of ammunition for the MILITARY! Lake City can keep people employed by making ammo for civilians. If they can’t sell to civilians then they will have to idle the production lines, layoff/furlough employees. When we go to war HOPWFULLY they can rehire the people they need to make ammo.

Coelacanth

I remember when Glocks were first imported, the hysteria was about them going right through metal detectors with no problem.

swmft

the first ones have almost no metal, ceramic barrel , but those never got past prototype and testing some made it to dea for evaluation only fired low power rounds so not taken seriously , the air marshals may still have some but doubtful remember they came out at the same time deutsch diesel built the ceramic air cooled truck motors ,overheat it once and done

Logician

Look, it’s the completely corrupted legal system that foments and allows all of this tyranny that everybody is complaining about here! The legal system is a private organization, and what is even more important is that it’s a criminal organization, committing crimes every single day!! And that is the reason why we need to be striking there with our axes instead of trying to just prune off a few branches that keep on growing back! No one yet has been able to counter with real facts anything that I have ever posted here, the most that I see, is a… Read more »

Logician

They will not EVER learn, because they are insane and cannot shake their insane ideas out of their head!! You would have an easier time of trying to get a hungry bear to eat only berries and grubs instead of a tasty sheep or deer!

Darkman

As allowed.

Boz

Wrong word. NO ONE aIIows me jack!

Should read – As is my RIGHT!