May 20, 2003

Guns > Assault Weapons Will Be Legal Next Year, and I'm Stoked

"A politician normally prospers under democracy in proportion ... as he excels in the invention of imaginary perils and imaginary defenses against them." --H. L. Mencken, 1918

AR-15The sunset of the 1994 Assault Weapons Ban is getting me excited. I'll be able to buy an assault rifle of my very own!

I'm libertarian on social issues, which makes me liberal on many social issues, but gun control is one area where I've never agreed with liberals. Depending entirely on the police for protection from crime has always struck me as being a poor plan, and the crime-deterring effects of gun control have always been questionable. If a criminal is willing to break one law (against robbery, homicide, etc.) there's no reason he won't break a gun law.

The Assault Weapons Law was a trendy law, designed to make it appear that Congress was doing something about a series of high profile but non-representative crimes that were in the news in the early nineties. This was similar to attempted bans in the early eighties on "cop-killer" Teflon-coated bullets that had never actually killed any cops.

Even with Democrats controlling the House the assault weapons bill barely passed on a 216-214 vote. When the Republicans regained seats in '96, Bill Clinton blamed it in large part on political fallout from the ban.

KalishnokovsThe law outlawed "scary weapons" that met a bureaucratic set of guidelines on largely cosmetic factors, such as pistol grips, flash suppressors, and folding stocks. There was no correlation between the guidelines and reality. Specifically, the ban used a point system that prohibited any weapon with more than two of 1) detachable magazine 2) pistol grip 3) threaded barrel/flash hider 4) collapsible stock 5) bayonet lug 6) grenade launcher. Since most guns of military heritage have a detachable magazine and a pistol grip, they already had two points that couldn't be avoided. It was if - instead of making it an offense to break the speed limit - Congress made it an offense to own a car that had more than two of 1) a steering wheel 2) a transmission 3) a spoiler 4) mag wheels 5) a hood scoop 6) a chrome-tipped exhaust.

The one practical effect of the ban was to outlaw magazines with a capacity of more than 10 rounds. Many high capacity magazines were already in circulation, and the ban did nothing to remove them from the streets. Having to constantly reload is one of the annoyances of sport shooting. Being able to buy a big clip is getting me pumped up about my birthday in October, 2004. I can finally get an AR-15 or Uzi with a legit clip.

Anything that could properly be called an assault rifle has selective fire: it can be fired one shot at a time, or in multi-shot bursts (either fully automatic or in fixed bursts). Oddly enough, the assault weapons ban only affected semi-automatic weapons, which fire one shot per pull of the trigger.

UziWithout a renewal, the ban will expire on September 14, 2004. With Republican control of Congress and no Congressional elections between now and then, the ban's demise is almost certain. Still, it never hurts to sign the petition to let it expire.

UPDATE The NRA has released a video response (requires RealPlayer) to CNN's misleading segment on the ban. CNN asks a gun expert to demonstrate the difference between a currently-legal rifle and a similar rifle that will be legal after the ban expires. There should be no difference, since the guns fire the same ammunition. But in demonstrating the guns' firepower, the gun expert fires the banned gun at cinder blocks, smashing them. He then fires the legal gun at a different target, while the camera rolls on the cinder blocks, which of course aren't damaged because they weren't being shot at!

The second half of the CNN segment shows the banned gun firing in fully automatic mode (like a machine gun). The ban has no effect on fully automatic weapons, so in fact that gun's status won't change at all, and it shouldn't have been used for comparison . The inclusion of a fully automatic rifle is either an intentional red herring, or symptomatic of the ignorance of the reporter and his supposed gun expert. Either way, it doesn't reflect well on CNN.

MORE UPDATES Clayton Cramer has phone numbers for contacting Congress. Cramer has another post discussing the cynical politics on both sides of the aisle: Democrats who know that most Americans don't want gun control but need to give lip service to their anti-gun constituency, Republicans whose constituency is mostly pro-gun but who don't want to turn off urban voters, and a president who is saying he'll sign the bill if it comes across his desk but who tells his fellow Republicans to make sure it doesn't cross his desk.

Which One Should I Buy?

Posted by lesjones



Comments

Fucker. Those things are illegal for a reason. REMEMBER STOCKTON!

Posted by: Paddy at April 26, 2004

I'd normally just delete idiotic posts that call me names, but not this time. Want to talk about Stockton? OK, read about the Stockton shooting and the media's negative campaigning against so-called assault rifles.

P.S. Dickhead.

Posted by: Les Jones at April 26, 2004

HI les.....oh I am praying (and making calls) that this thing dies...Iwant some real original AK's....ive seen Ar;s up close and just cant understand why the hell Stoner designed them with a gas tube that brings the dirty gasses right into the action!!!???
anyway....Any clear thinking person knows that guns cause crime like wet streets cause rain...Anyone can carry concealed up here in Vermont w/ no license or permit...and we gots da lowest crime rate in the country...DUHHHHH..bob

Posted by: Bob at June 26, 2004

Bob: you're right, the AR gas system is odd. I guess that's why no one else uses it.

A lot of people like Stoner's later design, the AR-180. It uses a conventional gas piston design, and the magazines are interchangeable with the AR-15 magazines, which is nice.

I've even considered the Kel-Tec Sport Utility Rifle, which takes AR-15 mags. It's half the cost of an AR, much lighter, and it folds for easy storage. Gun Tests magazine is supposed to review it in their next issue.

Posted by: Les Jones at June 26, 2004

Let the Assault Weapons Ban pluss Bill and Hillary Clinton pass away into time.

Posted by: Michael Presley at July 02, 2004

Bonjour

Posted by: Jenna at November 09, 2004

Let the thing pass, we dont want a god damn restriction on any weapons we have.

but more formally:

The People of the United States of America should be able to own whatever forms of weapons they would like, including assualt rifles, sniper rifles, and any other forms or types of weapons. It is our constitutional right to bear arms, the constitution does not state that the U.S. government may place a ban on arms of any sort. As a person that shoots firearms for sport, recreation, and hunting perposes, I also feel that there should not be a ban on any type of weapon in any area, such as the no deer hunting with a rifle law in Maryland. In conclusion, I feel that the United States government should not be aloud to manage, in any way, what forms of weapons we may buy.
me, Andrew Coulby

If more people carried guns, there would be less crime on the streets!

me again

Posted by: Andrew Coulby at August 06, 2005

Hey,

There's a difference between an "assault weapon" and an "assault rifle" FYI.

I know this article is old and I hope you've gotten your terminology correct by now. =)

Posted by: Jeff Shi at March 24, 2007

My Ideal country would be where everyone would carry an AK-47 or a G36 or an M16 on there back, because, honestly, can you imagine a criminal trying to rob someone who has that kinda weaponry? Even if the robber has one of their own, chances are they are gonna BOTH get hurt and likely won't try! The Police and the Military do a great job, but they can't always defend everyone, we need to be able to defend ourselves! Plus I must own these assault rifles, because they are so beautiful! The AR-15 may have a wierd gas system, but I think it looks quite awesome and beautiful. Also to me it is kindof an American symbol, the M16. That, the Flag, and the Eagle. Oh and who want's to reload every 10 shots? Every 30 is bad enough.

Posted by: Dark Detail at June 10, 2007

Don't get BushMaster, they quit working with Rainbow Six (or however it would be said); so Rainbow Six Vegas does not have the M4 or M16, etc. :| Oh well. Go for the Uzi (of course it's for cqc [close quarter combat] though, eh :| ).

Posted by: Al at August 08, 2007

god.. im sorry. but u guys are sick. i mean whats the point of owning a weapon? Weapons are made for killing purposes only, theres absolutly no reason to buy a weapon. you mentioned earlier that you wanna defend against robberys or sth, but as soon as you use ur weapon, you're much more likely to get killed. Let the police handle that and you guys would have much less problems. The legalization of guns is just a relic from the colonization time, where no really infrastrutcure (police) was established. but now, you dont need them anymore...

I mean i like guns too in some way (i.e. computer games) but i never wanna touch such a thing. Just think about what they are made for...

(hope you dont delete this post)
greetings from germany

Posted by: Lutz at November 25, 2007
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