ThirdOfFive |
07-25-2022 04:23 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by jimjamuser
(Post 2118899)
Australia ended its mass murder problem when it got rid of semi-auto rifles. The US could do that as well.
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Except that there is no way we will ever get rid of semi-automatic firearms. There are just too many of them in private hands, and most with absolutely no record of who purchased them or who the current owners are.
First of all, semi-automatic rifles are not limited (despite what a lot of people think) to AR-15 type weapons. Best estimates are about 15 million AR-15 - type weapons in private hands with about another 3 million AK - types (guns dot com). Add to that another several million (probably) military surplus - type rifles such as the M1 Garand and Carbine which were put into civilian hands by the truckload after WWII for practically peanuts.
But it isn't just military-style semi-autos. Semi-automatics for sporting purposes have been sold in the U.S. ever since 1903 and there are literally dozens if not hundreds of calibers, variations, etc. etc. out there. And add to that the millions of semi-auto handguns that are in private hands (estimated 85% of all handgun purchases since 1990 have been of semi-auto pistols) and the sheer number becomes staggering. In close quarters a semi-auto handgun is just as deadly as a rifle if not more so, and high-capacity clips are everywhere. The Kel-Tec PMR-30 for example can hold 30 rounds of .22 Magnum ammo. Then there are the hybrids; semi-auto rifles that use pistol ammo, with the magazines often being interchangeable: the Ruger PC Carbine, for example, which is a semi-auto rifle that comes stock with a 17-round clip...but it will also accept Glock 9 MM pistol clips up to 33 rounds, so one can own both a semi-auto rifle and a semi-auto pistol that uses the exact same ammo and clips, and are interchangeable.
Then, of course, there is the .22 long rifle rimfire cartridge, the cartridge which, according to some, has killed more people than any other single cartridge. I'm not sure I believe that but considering the sheer number of semi-auto pistols and rifles out there chambering the cartridge, I suppose it is possible.
But just on the assumption that our government DOES decide to ban semi-autos...just how would that, realistically speaking, be accomplished?
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