Quote:
Originally Posted by gnadfly
It looks like you've "thought this thru." Would you care to cite the legal precedent where the Feds disallow remotely controlled triggering of a firearm? I wouldn't consider a booby trap the same thing as remotely controlled triggering. I remember during the internet startup days that a exotic ranch set up a remotely controlled gun via the internet and that was koboshed. However, I believe it was at the state level. I've already posted a youtube video in this forum of a someone who has weaponized a drone.
"Logically" thinking things thru sometimes has nothing to do with the legality of something.
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Not sure what your question is. A federal legal precedent for what?
For starters, in all likelihood, laws banning drones that can shoot bullets most likely will initially come from state laws, not the federal laws - although the federal government will probably soon follow.
So, some company that wants to put a sniper rifle in a drone will challenge a state law banning such things and lose - for the reasons I cited above. There won't be a 2nd Amendment right to arm a drone and fly it around.
The Second Amendment isn't a right to ANY type of weapon. You cannot own an anti-aircraft missile. Or a Claymore mine. Or a 105 mm howitzer.
Or a Predator drone with a Hellfire missile capability. And an armed personal drone is just a scaled down version of that.