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In reply to the discussion: sensible gun control [View all]XRubicon
(2,241 posts)It used a tax to virtually ban machine guns.
"The impetus for the National Firearms Act of 1934 was the gangland crime of the Prohibition era, such as the St. Valentines Day Massacre of 1929, and the attempted assassination of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933.[1][2]:824[3][4] Like the current National Firearms Act (NFA), the 1934 Act required NFA firearms to be registered and taxed. The $200 tax was quite prohibitive at the time (equivalent to $3,538 in 2015). With a few exceptions, the tax amount is unchanged.[3][4]
Originally, pistols and revolvers were to be regulated as strictly as machine guns; towards that end, cutting down a rifle or shotgun to circumvent the handgun restrictions by making a concealable weapon was taxed as strictly as a machine gun.[5]"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Firearms_Act
Try again, I'm sure you can head back to the club house and get some more tired NRA talking point.