A key gun law analyst who has published books on the issue of the Second Amendment and its rights and responsibilities for decades says the Feinstein gun ban bill is just exactly that, a gun ban bill.

Not, essentially, a plan to limit certain guns. Not a limit on the size of magazines. Not a plan for restrictions on those with certifiable mental instabilities, a ban on criminals' access or a plan to encourage gun safety.

Alan Korwin is a nationally recognized expert resource on the issue of gun laws, and runs Bloomfield Press, which is the largest publisher and distributor of gun-law books in the country.

He said if the plan by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., is made law, "any semiautomatic firearm with uses a magazine – handgun, rifle or shotgun – equipped with a 'pistol grip,' would be banned."

He explained, "That sounds like a limitation, but it is not. A pistol grip (on page 2) is defined (on page 13) as 'a grip, a thumb-hole stock, or any other characteristic that can function as a grip.'"

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He said, "In other words, the gun list does not matter. It is a smokescreen designed to distract people from the true meaning of the bill. And it has done a magnificent job. It worked! Any semi-automatic firearm that exists, with anything on it you can grip, is banned. (There is a grandfather clause for old stuff.)



Read the proposed bill here.

"The list is meaningless tripe. It is camouflage for the real purpose of the bill. When the president said he is not going to take away your guns, well, Feinstein's bill puts the lie to that. Magazine size does not matter. Brand name does not matter. It doesn't matter if it's black. If you can grip it, it's banned under this bill."

The bill, in fact, states, "'Pistol grip' means … any … characteristic that can function as a grip."

That definition follows on the bill's specific reference that a "pistol grip" is a banned component.

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Korwin wrote his first book, "The Arizona Gun Owner's Guide," in 1989, and it now is in its 25th edition. He subsequently wrote or helped with nine more books on gun laws for several individual states, as well as federal guides to national laws and Supreme Court gun cases.

He maintains on his website a free directory to every gun law in the nation.

He told WND that the list of guns that Feinstein would ban is meaningless.

The definition, Korwin said, "invalidates her entire list of guns, and I've written 10 books on this topic, I know what I'm saying."

He said while there is a grandfather clause for "old stuff," the reality is that, "Any semi-automatic firearm that exists, with anything on it you can grip, is banned."

"Pro-rights and anti-rights attention has been focused on the tremendous list of guns that would be banned under Feinstein's bill, which takes up a significant portion of the 122 pages of this proposal," he said in his analysis. "Here's the problem none of the 'news' reports have spotted.

"The list of guns doesn't matter. Magazine size doesn't matter. If the semi-auto firearm has anything to grip it by, it is banned. It's very clever actually," he said.

He also noted there are a number of significant omissions.

In Feinstein's plan, "nothing addresses criminals – everything is aimed at innocent people who haven't done anything wrong. … It is all 'wrong because we say so,' the worst kind of government abuse – crime by decree," he said. "The critics appear to be right. This is not about gun control, it is purely about control. The bill simply removes the right to own property Americans currently own."

He said there also is "nothing" that addresses people "who are nuts, borderline nuts, formerly nuts or no longer nuts and still perpetually banned from their rights."

He noted there also is no mention of psychotropic drugs that "may cause psychotic episodes, suicidal tendencies, manic behavior, sudden death and various social and psychological disturbances" in the bill. A significant number of perpetrators in most of the mass shootings in recent years have been linked to some sort of drug activity.

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And, he said, there is "nothing in her 122-page bill [that] deals with gun safety. No training, no marksmanship, nothing for teachers, no self-defense awareness, no public education, nothing for schools, everything the president has asked for to increase child safety is missing in her long list of guns she would remove from the hands of the innocent," he said.

The bottom line is that her proposal is something Congress should fear, he said.

"Every aspect of this bill appears to be an infringement on the Bill Of Rights, with no legitimate justification. Congress cannot pass infringements by majority vote. That is forbidden, although the word 'infringement' itself is universally missing in 'news' reports, in case you haven't noticed," he said.

"Congress can't just enact whatever they want by majority rule. If they could, we would not have government of limited delegated powers, the hallmark of freedom and The American Way. It must just be a typo, on page two, continuing for 121 pages."

Feinstein has claimed she wants banned "sale, transfer, importation, or manufacturing of 120 specifically named firearms, certain other semiautomatic rifles, handguns, shotguns that can accept a detachable magazine and have one or more military characteristics; and semiautomatic rifles and handguns with a fixed magazine that can accept more than 10 rounds."

Feinstein's inconsistency on gun control was captured on video:

At a U.S. Senate hearing on terrorism after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, she told "a little anecdote" of how she carried concealed to protect herself after two assassination attempts by the New World Liberation Front, the NWLF.

She explained: "I know the sense of helplessness that people feel. I know the urge to arm yourself because that's what I did. I was trained in firearms. I walked to the hospital when my husband was sick. I carried a concealed weapon and I made the determination if somebody was going to try and take me out, I was going to take them with me."

Michael Hammond, legislative counsel for Gun Owners of America, asked in an interview with WND, "Do we need any more proof that she is a hypocrite?"

Hammond said Feinstein "has no problem getting Congress to buy armed guards for Capitol Hill."

"Does she consider herself more precious and more valuable than our children?" he asked.

Feinstein reportedly no longer has her concealed carry permit.

She championed her private firearm ownership the same year she called for banning "all" firearm ownership.

In an interview with "60 Minutes" in 1995 she said, "If I could have gotten 51 votes in the Senate of the United States, for an outright ban, picking up every one of them. Mr. and Mrs. America, turn 'em all in, I would have done it."

See her comments in the "60 Minutes" interview: