nksmfamjp
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2004
- Messages
- 3,346
It is easy to go down this road, but it would likely cast a wide net, eliminating many reasonably safe and reasonably ethical hunters.It's common in Europe to be required to take a proficiency test to qualify in shooting before you're given a permit or license. It makes perfect sense; this could be handled by local police, sheriff or even through local gun clubs. It would remove the bottom 10%, the ones that show up at camp with a new, never fired rifle that's only been bore sighted. Shooting past 300 yards takes practice and knowledge of your ballistics; hell these shooters have no idea how to compensate for wind drift.
I know that the $200 suppressor tax stamp keeps me from being suppressed when hunting…and some other things, but the $200 + paperwork is part of that.