3D Printing of Guns at Home Making Gun Grabbers Nervous
by Bob Adelmann
The
New American
When
the New York Times wrote of the improved technology
of 3D printing this writer responded with a
frivolous blog about it, scoring the concerns of anti-gun people
about how the technology will allow everyone who wants one to have
a gun without government oversight or knowledge. One of those in
the anti-gun camp is Josh Horwitz, executive director of the Coalition
to Stop Gun Violence, who said that 3D printing is “going to be
a big concern. We don’t know how that’s going to come about and
don’t know what technology.”
That technology
is evolving before his very eyes. The
RepRap Project aims to produce free and open source software
for 3D printers, including software that allows the printer to produce
its own parts. Two years ago RepRap allowed printers to create tiny
plastic parts for small motors as well as circuit boards for computers.
Today it allows hobbyists to build household items like fully-functional
clocks, flashlights, iPad cases, watchbands … and receivers for
rifles.
And it is this
virtual explosion in technology that is making other gun controllers
increasingly nervous, including Mark Gibbs, a contributor at Forbes,
who
wrote,
I’m in favor
of tighter gun control and a ban on weapons that are unnecessarily
powerful but I’m afraid that technology will soon make any legislation
that limits the availability of any kinds of guns ineffective.
With the decrease
in prices for 3D printers, and the improvement in the software to
drive them, the capability to print weapons at home is coming into
the reach of the average citizen. Gibbs warned,
Using either
free or low cost computer aided drafting software you can create
digital 3D models of pretty much anything you can think of and,
with hardly any fuss, your 3D printer will render them as physical
objects.
And when that
happens, there will be more guns, not fewer, and the government
won’t know where they are or how to track them:
What’s particularly
worrisome is that the capability to print metal and ceramic parts
will appear in low end printers in the next few years making it
feasible to print an entire gun and that will be when gun control
becomes a totally different problem.
Gibbs is already
behind the times. In December, Dan Verton noted
on hstoday.com that “the time is fast approaching when anybody
with a few thousand dollars … can design and manufacture their own
guns.” He corrected himself, adding, “Actually, that time has already
arrived.”
Read
the rest of the article
February
5, 2013
Copyright
© 2013 The New American
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