Originally Posted by idahobob
Not a fan of bump stocks or some of the Supreme Court's extreme gun rulings, but this sort of make sense when you look at the definition in the law of a Machine Gun. "A firearm that fires more than one shot with a single pull of the trigger".
Bump stocks do not make a firearm fire multiple shots with a single pull of the trigger. The trigger still has to be pulled/tripped for each round, they just make them easier to manipulate-te that way. If a bump stock renders a firearm an automatic, then even double action revolver and semi-auto handgun would be classified as such as double taping under recoil is not uncommon.