Posted on 01/30/2013 12:12:47 PM PST by Kaslin
Last week, Sen. Dianne Feinstein introduced a new, supposedly improved version of the federal "assault weapon" ban that expired in 2004. But like that earlier law, which the California Democrat also sponsored, Feinstein's bill prohibits the manufacture and sale of guns based on characteristics that have little or nothing to do with the danger they pose.
Although arbitrary distinctions are a defining characteristic of "assault weapon" bans, recent polls indicate that most Americans support them. New survey data suggest one possible explanation: Most Americans don't know what "assault weapons" are.
Feinstein's bill would ban "157 dangerous military-style assault weapons" by name, along with other guns that meet certain criteria. A rifle is considered an "assault weapon," for example, if it has a detachable magazine and one or more of these "military characteristics": a pistol grip or forward grip, a grenade launcher or rocket launcher, a barrel shroud, a threaded barrel, or a folding, telescoping or detachable stock.
The New York Times reported that Feinstein's bill would "ban certain characteristics of guns that make them more lethal." But how exactly do these features -- a threaded barrel, say, or a grenade or rocket launcher without grenades or rockets (both of which are banned for civilian use) -- make a gun "more lethal"? The distinguishing characteristics of "assault weapons" are mainly cosmetic and have little or no functional significance in the context of mass shootings or ordinary gun crimes.
CNN made an even bigger mistake, claiming the bill is aimed at "rifles capable of firing multiple rounds automatically." In reality, the bill has nothing to do with machine guns such as those used by the military, which fire continuously (or "automatically") when you pull the trigger and are already tightly restricted by federal law; it deals only with semiautomatics, which fire once per trigger pull.
Perhaps we should not be too hard on CNN, since President Obama, who supports a new ban on "assault weapons," also seems to think they are machine guns, referring to them as "AK-47s" and "automatic weapons." Contrary to the impression left by such descriptions, "assault weapons" are not distinguished by their rate of fire, the number of rounds they hold or the caliber of their ammunition.
A Reason-Rupe Public Opinion Survey conducted this month suggests such misconceptions are common. After asking the 1,000 respondents if they thought people should be "prohibited from owning assault weapons," the survey (which is sponsored by my employer, the Reason Foundation) asked half of the sample to "describe an assault weapon." The answers are illuminating.
About two-thirds of the respondents described "assault weapons" as guns that fire rapidly, guns that can fire a large number of rounds without reloading, guns with a lot of "power" or guns used by the military. More than a quarter described them as "machine guns," "automatics," or the equivalent (e.g., "multiple rounds with just one pull of the trigger").
Overall support for banning "assault weapons" was only 44 percent -- considerably lower than the 60 percent or so in recent Gallup and ABC News polls. But there was majority support -- 53 percent and 59 percent, respectively -- among people whose descriptions of "assault weapons" emphasized rate of fire (including those who mistakenly described them as machine guns) or ammunition capacity.
One respondent said an "assault weapon" is a "weapon that is similar to the one that caused the tragedy in Newtown," referring to last month's massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School. That horrifying event, of course, was the pretext for Feinstein's bill, although the Bushmaster rifle Adam Lanza used to murder 20 children and six adults was not covered by the old federal "assault weapon" ban or by a similar law in Connecticut.
Feinstein has addressed that omission by adding Lanza's rifle to her list of prohibited weapons, which may seem emotionally satisfying. But since would-be mass murderers have plenty of equally effective alternatives, it is logically equivalent to banning the car Lanza drove to the school.
Any device that can be used by the American people to adequately defend themselves from the armies, agents, and auxiliaries of tyrannical Federal, State, or local government.
An assault weapon is anything that “looks scary” or holds “too many bullets”. Essentially, any gun.
“Assault weapon” is another example of how liberals twist the English language to mislead people. Just like they changed “Global warming” to “Climate change” so they can further the hoax when it is freezing out, so they also created this term for guns when examples of self-defense are brought up. “Wow he defended himself with a gun and saved lives! Waah but it’s still an assault weapon and not a defense weapon!”
The thing is ANYTHING can be classified as an “assault weapon”. A pillow is an assault weapon. You can suffocate someone with a pillow. Ban pillows!
This is just another example of how the communist propaganda machine posing as our MSM brainwashes the public, they create new terms all the time to mislead, to push forth an agenda. “Illegals” are now “undocumented workers”..They get “workers” in that term when in reality they are “foreigners who take jobs from US citizens” which is happening here and has been happening here in New York city for years, especially in the construction industry. A lot of construction workers are out of work because of these Fs.
I can kill people with it.
That's an assault weapon.
The first person to coin the phrase “assault weapon” was Adolph Hitler, anbd here it is:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StG_44
The first full automatic rifle, in production BEFORE Mr. Kalashnikov’s AK-** series of rifles.
Any of the rifles that are on Senator Babs Feinstein’s list, are SEMI-AUTOMATIC.
Just to trip these Congressional idiots up, until we vote them, or (let’s just leave that unanswered, for now);
I’d buy TWO, yes, TWO lever action rifles, well, maybe THREE.
1. Caliber .30-30, your choice of brand.
2. Caliber .45-70 (Read the tests done in Sandy Hook, NJ, 1800’s.)
3. Caliber .357 Magnum, your choice of brand.
Yes, I have heard all the arguments between an SKS (semi), AK (semi), AR (semi), and all the rest, that have always brought out a (semi) to compare.
Do you, the reader, see the commonality of those arguing? I don’t think they realize, that the legal eyes, Unconstitutional or not, are looking at (semi) right now, and not lever action. Yes, I support their right to own them, but I also admit that I have shot them in the past, while in military uniform, and they are not my cup of tea. You can blaze away, singularly firing each cartridge, as fast as your finger doesn’t cramp, and that’s ok. I ‘know my limitations’, know my tubular magazine limit, know to ‘shoot two, load two’, and above all, know my range length capability, with each fired cartridge and lever throw. I, also, know that a successfully launched .45-70 projectile will have enough, at range enough, to do what is required. Take a ‘one ounce fishing weight’, launch it with enough velocity to mortally wound an American Bison at 300 yards, at point of aim/point of impact, from a lever action rifle.
(Watch Hickok45 on YouTube hit the gong, (loudly), at 200 yards!)
Have a nice day!
Her definition of an illegal weapon (assault weapon or not) is like the court’s definition of pornography. You will know it when you see it.
Seriously, I have inherited an M1 Carbine with 10, 15 and 30 round magazines. It is the paratrooper model with colapsable stock. Unless I toss the stock and the 15 and 30 round magazine, it is a banned weapon by her “new” definition. Even then it may still be illegal as it is “capable” of accepting a magazine of over ten rounds.
The Truth About Assault Weapons
Check it out
Take a look at the definition: Definition of WEAPON http://www.merriam-webster.com... 1: something (as a club, knife, or gun) used to injure, defeat, or destroy Examples of WEAPON Assault with a deadly WeaponThat arbitrarily defined phrase is just a means to ban all guns scary looking or not.
A question for her would be -
how do you make a firearm that accepts a magazine know whether the magazine is 5/7/10/30 rounds?
If I remember correctly, Dan White was the Northern California coordinator for Handgun Control Inc.
I agree. I have one lever action now, my next one is going to be a .45-70 Marlin. Very popular in grizzly country.
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