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The next maniac now knows how to take out dozens of human beings in ten minutes and, thanks to the media, also knows what to buy to make it a successful attack.
And the necessary equipment is apparently flying off the shelves.
I feel very cynical right now because it occurs to me that this article is pointing to a future investment opportunity. Instead of buying guns right now, smart investors should just buy shares in gun manufacturers and hold them until the next well publicised massacre. Then sell as they rise in value.
And the necessary equipment is apparently flying off the shelves.
Las Vegas shooting: Bump stocks, used by shooter Stephen Paddock, are selling out in American gun stores
Updated 19 minutes ago
Thu 5 Oct 2017, 11:29pm
For more than a year, the Georgia Gun Store in Gainesville had no requests for a bump stock — an accessory that transforms a semi-automatic rifle into a weapon capable of firing hundreds of rounds a minute.
But following Sunday's mass shooting in Las Vegas, the shop fielded several calls from customers asking about the product.
The store's owner, Kellie Weeks, said several distributors were out of stock when she called them seeking supplies.
"Anybody that wants to get them is probably just worried that they're going to be banned," Ms Weeks said.
Authorities say the shooter, Stephen Paddock, had 12 rifles outfitted with bump stocks among the arsenal of weapons in his hotel room, and audio of the attack suggested he used weapons with rapid-fire capabilities.
"They do sell a little bit, but it's very minimal," said CJ Calesa, an employee at Birmingham Pistol Wholesale in Trustville, Alabama. "We usually sell 10 or so a year."
What is a bump stock?
A bump stock basically replaces a gun's shoulder rest with a "support step" that covers the trigger opening.
By holding the pistol grip with one hand and pushing forward on the barrel with the other, the shooter's finger comes in contact with the trigger.
The recoil causes the gun to buck back and forth, "bumping" the trigger and firing rounds much faster than if the shooter were to manually pull the trigger each time.
The stock effectively turns a semi-automatic weapon into a fully automatic one that can unleash continuous rounds until the magazines are empty with a single trigger pull.
Calesa said the store began receiving calls from customers about bump stocks on Tuesday. Slide Fire, a leading bump stock manufacturer, has sold out.
Customers can sign up to be notified when more bump stocks become available.
"We have decided to temporarily suspend taking new orders in order to provide the best service with those already placed," the website reads.
On Wednesday, comments on the Facebook page for Slide Fire were split between critics who blamed the company for the massacre and customers who said they planned to buy more bump stocks. Several other online retailers also list the item as being out of stock.
Stocks in companies that make guns also rose sharply on news of the Las Vegas shooting
More here: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-05/man-shooting-ar15-with-bump-stock/9020714
I feel very cynical right now because it occurs to me that this article is pointing to a future investment opportunity. Instead of buying guns right now, smart investors should just buy shares in gun manufacturers and hold them until the next well publicised massacre. Then sell as they rise in value.