Not from the semi-automatic "assault' rifles that many want to ban.
How many per year were killed in Australia prior to the gun ban? IIRC, you had one incident and decided to ban them. Not trying to turn this into a gun thread, but rather trying to find the actual risk you're willing to take in general.
[ETA: "The gun ban" is an American misconception with no basis in reality. Guns are not banned in Australia, and in fact for some people such as farmers they are very easy to obtain].
I think that focusing on any subset of guns is misguided from a gun control point of view. You might as well focus purely on pearl-handled revolvers with bells on, and argue that because such guns cause very few or no deaths that possession of those particular guns should not be controlled. While I don't support laws that make some guns harder to own than others on irrational bases, I do support laws that make some guns harder to own on objective bases like limited civilian usefulness, usefulness for spree killing, how easily concealed they are and whatnot.
Australia has 60-100 gun homicides per year, 15-30 accidental deaths and a few hundred suicides. It's not a huge concern compared to smoking, alcohol, unsafe vehicles and so on but it's still a concern. I also think you're forgetting the Hoddle Street Massacre, which also involved a semiautomatic rifle among other weapons, and I don't doubt that previous gun-related events with large death tolls (Queen Street massacre, Milperra Massacre) influenced public opinion in favour of gun control generally even if semiautomatic weapons weren't central to them.
Based on that background I'm in favour of making people jump through a few hoops to own a gun, including making them explain why they need or want one. I wouldn't be in favour of patting down everyone who gets on a bus for guns, though, to pick an example of a measure I think would cause a public nuisance far beyond any benefit it might have.
Just thought I'd post this so Kevin could have a big olde laugh about it
Do you not understand the difference between an appeal to emotion and an intelligent argument?
Or do you understand the difference and not care?