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You can never stop free men

freyasman

Senator
From the link;
"The guerrilla 3D-gun file development group Deterrence Dispensed released to the public yesterday the much-anticipated FGC-9 project. The FGC-9 is described in the official release documentation as “the most effective and easiest to build homemade semi-automatic firearm design for people with limited access to gunsmithing knowledge and tools.”

The FGC-9 release is important because it represents a fulfillment of the promise of 3D printed guns: they can’t be stopped. In 2013, the Liberator was proof of concept. In 2020, the FGC-9 is proof of carbine.

The FGC-9 enables everyday people all around the world to build a 9mm semi-automatic firearm, from start to finish, using a 3D printer and commonly available, unregulated materials. It’s specifically designed to be accessible to folks with minimal gun building experience, and avoids using parts commonly or easily restricted by law in the US and Europe. Anyone can build it, and no one can stop it.

In case there was any doubt about the political ideology here, you should know that the ‘FGC’ in the ‘FGC-9’ stands for “[Unwelcome language removed] gun control”.
 

freyasman

Senator
More;
"Cody Wilson, a former law student, has made clear that he believes the American legal system offers protections to free speech and the right to keep and bear arms, and that his endeavors are not only legal but specifically protected. Computer code (and thus 3d printing files) are expressive; they’re free speech. The fact that this free speech can be turned into a gun is also protected. His fight is about principal, not necessarily practicality. He wants his efforts to be vindicated by the system. To be expressly permitted. To be beyond legal reproach.

The government obviously has a major interest in controlling the ability of citizens to possess firearms. 3D printing prevents this, and the government at the federal and state level has fought fiercely against it ever since Cody Wilson first fired the Liberator on YouTube.

Wilson has stated that he views his fight against the government as a struggle against “massive forces — anonymous forces — of discipline and control”, and that he sees liberty as “under siege”.

But Defense Distributed’s challenges in court are expensive and time consuming. Their success is never guaranteed, and their future is always threatened by the power of the State. The administrative state can use its powers of bureaucracy to bog down and smother this otherwise legal pursuit of arming the American citizen. And it’s hard to innovate when you’re stuck in court.

The government’s opposition to 3D printed guns has been an effective warning to others who would seek to adopt a similar business model as Defense Distributed. And to this day, Defense Distributed stands practically alone in their niche, and continues to face ongoing litigation.

The government’s unlimited access to money and lawyers is certainly a strong deterrence to others who may consider a pursuit similar to Cody Wilson’s. It’s been made clear that attempting to operate a legally-recognized company which enables citizens to produce unserialized, untraceable firearms will not go unopposed.

But what the government fails to consider is this: it’s not always about the money.

What if the group in question is motivated purely by ideology? Motivated by the genetic memory of the struggle for independence? By a history of rebellion? By a shared distrust of power? By crypto-anarchists and cypherpunks?

In that case, the heavy-handed legal tactics of the government are not effective at all. In fact, they only fuel the fire of an antifragile network of anarchists, autists, weirdos, libertarians, veterans, crypto hodlers, techies, and shooters — all hell-bent on completely eliminating the viability of any form of gun control.

Enter: Deterrence Dispensed
When the government kills a free market, a black market emerges.

And while the government may have heard Cody Wilson say the ‘genie can’t be put back in the bottle’ in 2013, it’s clear they didn’t listen.

As blue state attorneys general were wasting time and money losing to Cody Wilson in the U.S. Federal Court system, an entirely separate group was gaining in size and capability: Deterrence Dispensed.

Win by Refusing to Play
Borne of the government’s suspension of DEFCAD, Deterrence Dispensed took a different approach to releasing 3D gun files to the public than Wilson’s licensed and incorporated Defense Distributed. Rather than go through the struggle of a protracted legal battle with the federal government and various state governments, they’d simply avoid the hassle of being governable entirely.

The government’s aggressive approach in their attack on Cody Wilson’s Defense Distributed unwittingly accelerated the development and production value of the guns produced by the developers at Deterrence Dispensed.

Operating as a decentralized network of mostly anonymous and pseudonymous gun designers, Deterrence Dispensed has built an impressive library of downloadable 3D printed gun files of their own. They’ve pushed out Glocks, AR-15’s, full-auto conversions, Rugers, Smith & Wessons, Tec-9’s, AK-47’s, and more.

By making use of encrypted email systems, virtual private networks, blockchain technology, dark web .onion domains, cryptocurrency, encrypted chat apps, and a plain old fashioned “we don’t care if it’s illegal” approach, Deterrence Dispensed has a distinct advantage over Defense Distributed: they don’t have a name, an address, or a license. The group itself is nowhere and everywhere all at once.

Having been kicked off of most major social media platforms, Deterrence Dispensed is currently at home on Keybase, an encrypted chat and file sharing system. There are almost 7,000 people in the public chat at the time of this writing. The public group is open to anyone who would like to join.

The Promise of 3d Printed Guns Is Fulfilled
The release of the FGC-9 represents a maturation of 3D printed gun technology. It’s not a novelty. It’s no fad. It isn’t even a one-off idea.

The Liberator is a seed that has grown into an oak.

Governments across the world have tried to stop the spread of access to the 3D print files that fuel the evolution and development of these firearms. But the agents of the state that work against the minds of free men cannot keep pace. The slow-moving bureaucracies and out of touch statesmen that helm these systems of control have been entirely outrun and outmaneuvered by the agility and nimbleness of a distributed network of freedom-minded garage-tinkerers and cypherpunks.

JStark1809’s FGC-9 release is proof that “undisciplined freemen are superior to veteran slaves”.
 

Dawg

President
Supporting Member
Been working my ass off...... EDO whisperer, fvcktard wrangler, and loco luchador.
Some deep shit fixing to come down

 

freyasman

Senator
Some deep shit fixing to come down

Never let a crisis go to waste.
 
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