Political satirist Steven Crowder set out to get to the bottom of the “gun show loophole” discussed by President Obama in a town hall pitch for gun control earlier this month.

In a 10-minute hidden camera investigation posted to YouTube, Chowder hilariously debunks the supposed availability of “automatic” weapons, as well as the President’s assertion that Indiana’s gun shows are feeding Chicago’s rampant gun violence.

The “Louder with Crowder” episode flashes clips of the president, 2016 presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton, celebrities and other “experts” denouncing the availability of “automatic” weapons, then transposes the claims with reality.

“I’m looking for something automatic,” Crowder tells the proprietor of Gunslingers Gun Shop.

“None of them are automatic,” the man replied.

“You mean I can’t buy a fully automatic?” Crowder countered.

“No one can, really, unless they have like a super crazy license,” the man said. “None of them we can sell here in the store here are fully automatic whatsoever.”

Crowder asked another shop.

“Oh, no, I don’t have a Class III license,” the owner said.

The gun dealers, at their shops and at the gun shows, prodded Crowder with questions about his intentions, and made it clear he wouldn’t walk away with a weapon without a federal background check.

“I’m going to get that home today?” Crowder asked one dealer.

“There’s no way to do that,” the man shot back.

“It’s a gun show, there’s always a way to do that,” Crowder challenged.

“There’s no way to do that,” the clearly frustrated seller countered.

Some shop owners were obviously suspicious.

“So are you familiar on the laws with these firearms?” one man asked, thumbing a wall of semi-automatic rifles.

“Are you aware that for a fully automatic gun you need a Class III license?” he asked. “It’s very highly regulated, right?”

“It’s a huge crime to modify these into fully automatic weapons,” the owner continued. “Is that your intent, to make this into a fully automatic weapon?”

Crowder then mocks the political left’s focus on “automatic” weapons.

“To be fair, they may have accidentally interchanged fully automatic with semi-automatic, because little known fact, the closest these legislators who create your gun laws have ever actually come to purchasing a firearm is often when they stop by Dicks Sporting Goods to pick up their parabolics for Aspen,” he said as the video cuts to a clip from “Dumb and Dumber.”

“Fully automatic, semi automatic, assault rifle, these are hard terms, even for billionaire mayors to know,” he said leading into a clip of former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg mischaracterizing an “assault” rifle.

Convinced the availability of machine guns is a lie, Crowder turns to the infamous “gun show loophole” and attempts to purchase a firearm without a background check. Clips of democrats and political pundits talking about how “exceedingly easy” it is to get a gun at a gun show precedes Crowder’s hidden camera footage of an actual gun show in Indiana.

In one clip from Obama’s gun control town hall on CNN, the president claims “30-40 percent of those guns are coming from Indiana across the border where are much laxer laws.”

“They can go to a gun show in Indiana, where right now they don’t have to do a background check, load up a van, and open up that van and well them to kids and gangs in Chicago,” the president said.

“Not only did I try to weasel through the gun show loophole, but … I specifically went to the one in Crown Point, Indiana that Barack Obama went out of his way to vilify,” Crowder said.

Every single dealer Crowder approached required a background check.

“I was told by the president I could go here,” Crowder told one vendor.

“You believe him?” the man said.

Crowder attempted to goad several into selling a weapon under the table.

“That’s a felony and 20 years, and I’m not going to mess with it,” one dealer said.

“I brought cash,” Crowder told another seller.

“You think I’m going to go to jail over that?” the guy replied. “No way. So don’t even go down that road. What you are asking is for someone to commit a felony. And by asking that, you’re committing a felony as well.”

Crowder concluded: “In places like Indiana, you can do a private bill of sale. For example, a father wants to pass a shotgun down to his son, he can do that. But you cannot sell a gun privately in Indiana to someone from Illinois.

“Not only that, even registered dealers at the gun shows would not touch anyone from Illinois with a 10-foot pole …”