catsmate
No longer the 1
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Messages
- 34,767
Or subject semi-automatic weapons and handguns to the NFA restrictions.Just ban semi auto and auto weapons of any kind! why piss around with esoteric definitions?
Or subject semi-automatic weapons and handguns to the NFA restrictions.Just ban semi auto and auto weapons of any kind! why piss around with esoteric definitions?
I'd exclude rimfire.22s.Why not just all semi-automatics? Why piss around with defining an energy?
Hey, Australians need weapons to defend against the murderous police and the wildlife.In America, we need a lot of guns to defend ourselves from our murderous police. You see? There is a reasonable explanation after all.
I'd exclude rimfire.22s.
On school shootings, Australia (and no doubt the UK) do not have school police. How many school shootings have resulted in the past 30 years due to this scandalous dereliction of government duty? Well I’m not entirely sure of the UK, I’m betting none.
Great then. Let's make a new law that specifies "assault weapons" are guns with removable and large magazines and semi-auto functionality, and other of those intrinsic features. I like it.
However, the fact that the AWB that was initially passed had an imperfect definition that mostly covered "cosmetic features" and yet still resulted in reduced mass shootings - further supported by a skyrocketing number of them when the ban was allowed to expire by a GOP-controlled Congress - is very interesting indeed. As is the fact that the most popular and preferred spree/mass shooting weapon-of-choice at all relevant times was and is the AR-15. Despite the fact that, as you say, the AR-15 could be bought in a "AWB-compliant" configuration, it seems to be the case that even so while the ban was in effect fewer people bought them and went on mass-shooting sprees. While it did not stop mass shootings entirely, objectively speaking the ban had an effect consistent with its intention. It worked.
There is no demand. Even Democrats don't push anything like that.
I'd exclude rimfire.22s.
I'd exclude rimfire.22s.
Great then. Let's make a new law that specifies "assault weapons" are guns with removable and large magazines and semi-auto functionality, and other of those intrinsic features. I like it.
However, the fact that the AWB that was initially passed had an imperfect definition that mostly covered "cosmetic features" and yet still resulted in reduced mass shootings - further supported by a skyrocketing number of them when the ban was allowed to expire by a GOP-controlled Congress - is very interesting indeed. As is the fact that the most popular and preferred spree/mass shooting weapon-of-choice at all relevant times was and is the AR-15. Despite the fact that, as you say, the AR-15 could be bought in a "AWB-compliant" configuration, it seems to be the case that even so while the ban was in effect fewer people bought them and went on mass-shooting sprees. While it did not stop mass shootings entirely, objectively speaking the ban had an effect consistent with its intention. It worked.
The scientific consensus among criminologists and other researchers is that the ban had little to no effect on overall criminal activity, firearm deaths, or the lethality of gun crimes. Studies have found that the overwhelming majority of gun crimes are committed with weapons which are not covered by the AWB, and that assault weapons are less likely to be used in homicides than other weapons. There is tentative evidence that the frequency of mass shootings may have slightly decreased while the ban was in effect, but research is inconclusive, with independent researchers finding conflicting results.
This is highly disputed. From Wiki:
And of course, Columbine was right smack in the middle of it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Assault_Weapons_Ban
The time for halfway measures is long in the rear view mirror. Kid Rock actually has the move: make bullets cost $5k each, and I'd add a maximun of 5 allowed per human. Have low-velocity plinker rounds available for sport shooters, perhaps with wood projectiles.
Think it's Chris Rock, not Kid
And yet multiple sources say it was successful.That attempt failed to actually work.
Your Wiki paragraph specifically excluded mass shootings. If your measure is it didn't stop all the gun murders it was never designed to address, then of course you can say it didn't work.This is highly disputed. From Wiki:
And of course, Columbine was right smack in the middle of it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Assault_Weapons_Ban
The time for halfway measures is long in the rear view mirror.....
A 2019 DiMaggio et al. study looked at mass shooting data for 1981 to 2017 and found that mass-shooting fatalities were 70% less likely to occur during the 1994 to 2004 federal ban period, and that the ban was associated with a 0.1% reduction in total firearm homicide fatalities due to the reduction in mass-shootings' contribution to total homicides.[29] ...
A 2015 study by Mark Gius, professor of economics at Quinnipiac University, studied the law's impact on public mass shootings.[34] Gius defined this subset of mass shootings as those occurring in a relatively public place, targeted random victims, were not otherwise related to a crime (a robbery or act of terrorism), and that involved four or more victim fatalities. Gius found that while assault weapons were not the primary weapon used in this subset of mass shootings, fatalities and injuries were statistically lower during the period the federal ban was active. The 2018 Rand analysis noted that the federal law portion of this analysis lacked a comparison group.[34]
A 2015 study found a small decrease in the rate of mass shootings followed by increases beginning after the ban was lifted.[35] ....
A 2013 study showed that the expiration of the FAWB in 2004 "led to immediate violence increases within areas of Mexico located close to American states where sales of assault weapons became legal. The estimated effects are sizable... the additional homicides stemming from the FAWB expiration represent 21% of all homicides in these municipalities during 2005 and 2006."[39]
Your Wiki paragraph specifically excluded mass shootings. If your measure is it didn't stop all the gun murders it was never designed to address, then of course you can say it didn't work.
Also from the same Wiki link:
The reviews are all over the map: it had a benefit to it had no benefit.
Clearly there was bias pro or con in those studies. See what you want to see, just like the comments on the ban in this thread. I would imagine there was some gun industry dark money involved as well.
The laws need to go further. The GOP and the NRA need to be defeated. And hopefully voters will care where the people they vote for get their money.
Like Trevor Noah said, a law banning assault weapons may not be enough but we have to start somewhere.
That's not to say it is undesirable. It was just impotent. All. Semis. Out. Of. Civilian. Hands. That's the target, along with licensing and the rest. Feel-good twaddling is just national masturbation.
Matthew McConaughey is speaking at a White House press briefing. He says he was born and grew up in Uvalde, where his mother taught school and where he learned responsible gun ownership, and he returned to meet with the parents of victims. He's talking at length about the dead kids.
Which I think we can all agree on but that isn't going to happen overnight or with one move. We have to start somewhere. I would take disputed action over inaction every day of the week.
Anything is going to take decades to work, just like it took us decades to get into this **** show in the first place.