The right of law-abiding citizens to own firearms is an individual right guaranteed by the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, Blunt wrote. The constitutional right of a citizen to own a firearm has nothing to do with race or ethnicity. It is disconcerting that the U.S. government is gathering this type of data on citizens when there is no connection between purchasing a firearm and an individuals race or ethnicity. Any measure that may interfere with a citizens ability to exercise his or her constitutional right to purchase a firearm needs to be questioned.
According to a recent report in The Washington Times, With little fanfare, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) in 2012 amended its Form 4473 the transactional record the government requires gun purchasers and sellers to fill out when buying a firearm to identify buyers as either Hispanic, Latino or not. Then a buyer must check his or her race: Indian, Asian, black, Pacific Islander or white...The ATF declined to comment on why race and ethnicity information are needed in the first place or what they are used for.
According to previous reports, the ATF claimed, Question 10 was revised due to an Office of Management and Budget requirement that every form issued by the federal government that collects race and ethnicity information must use separate questions wherever feasible for reporting race and ethnicity.
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