Ways and means to prevent a future mass active shooter incident in the US

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Todjaeger

Potstirrer
In the wake of the mass shooting in Newtown CT, USA there have been a number of comments, suggestions, and claims as to what could and/or should be done to prevent any such future mass shooting within the US. These positions that people and groups have staked out come from all over the US in terms of politics, economics, cultural/geographic location, etc. Fortunately, virtually all such people and groups (the Westboro Baptists being one such exception) agree that a repeat of what occurred within the Sandy Hook Elementary School on December 14th is unacceptable and efforts must be made to prevent anything similar from happening again.

The intent of this thread is to look at the legal, historical, social, and practical realities which are or could become involved in preventing a repetition of the shooting in Newtown.

While input from anywhere is welcome, suggestions and solutions which would be workable within the US are desired. What are not desired at all are partisan comments and accusations of who is to blame for such incidents, or suggestions which are not supported in terms of why they would/would not work.

Perhaps ideas and suggestions discussed here could bear fruit in preventing or minimizing future incidents.
 

alexsa

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
From an Australian perspective you could look at the gun control measures adopted after the Port Arthur shootings.

The issue is that the culture and legal frame work in the US is different so to suggest the same measures can simply be transplanted may not be practical.


I fully agree that assalt rifles (and 30 cal mini guns for crying out loud) do not need to be in the hands of the general public. The weapons are certainly not optimised for hunting game and really only have one use.


In simple terms stopping the sale of military weapons to the public would be a start, I suspect removal of existing weapons would be politically difficult but really should happen.


It would be considerably more difficult to cause this sort of carnage with a bolt action hunting rifle with a five round mag.


Arming teachers is an idiotic idea ans schools SHOULD be safe.
 

Volkodav

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
One of the most obvious and easiest to implement changes would be to improve the security of existing firearms so only the registered owner can readily access them and it becomes almost impossible for another person to steal unsupervised weapons. The other advantage would be a reduction in accidental shooting deaths of children playing with guns.

My thinking is even if a person is justified in carrying a concealed weapon, what about the other guns they have at home when they are out and about? Secure them appropriately and they are less likely to fall into the wrong hands, i.e. a child, a mentally unstable person or a criminal.
 

ADMk2

Just a bloke
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
The presence of military style weapons is so omnipresent throughout American society that any solution involving the removal of guns from society is going to be a difficult long term commitment, but everyone has to start somewhere and the outcomes of the current situation are so horrific, that a huge effort has to be made, regardless of how "difficult" it may be perceived.

I'd recommend starting with the total ban on all semi-automatic centre-fire rifles and shotguns. All sales from now on will stop and a large scale Government buy-back scheme, rolling out over multiple years for current lawful obtained weapons would be enacted to eventually remove these weapons from society as far as possible.

Due to the cost, which is going to be huge, there's no getting around that, a rolling buy-back scheme state by state could be commenced by the USG, with possession of them, lawful up until the buy-back scheme hits town, with reasonable compensation afforded to those who've acquired them lawfully.

Semi-auto rimfire (with tubular or fixed magazines only ie: slow reload times, suitable for farmers, hunters etc) lever, bolt action and pump action centrefire rifles, pump action shotguns and pistols (with limited magazine capacities and calibres) would still lawfully would allowed, but with far stricter security, carriage and storage requirements.

Furthermore EVERY single user must, on a yearly basis and at their own expense, undergo a psychiatric evaluation in order to renew their firearm licence. The USG could regulate the cost of these, to ensure people aren't ripped off by dodgy psychiatrists, but the assessment must be performed yearly and be confirmed through the production of a letter or report from the psychiatrist, before any licence can be renewed or applied for.

All weapons must be registered in a national database maintained by ATF, with access made available to all other Federal, State and local law enforcement authorities.

All forms of "mail order" purchases of weapons, parts or ammunition must be banned, with all acquisition of same done in person at registered weapons dealers, with the production of a current, valid weapons licence required for the acquisition of ANY weapon, major component or ammunition for a weapon.

All weapons, major components and ammunition purchases must be done through registered weapons dealer. Any sale of weapons must also be facilitated through a weapons dealer. So if a person wants to sell a gun to a buddy, he must lodge it with a weapons dealer, the buyer must undertake the acquisition of a new weapon process and then collect the weapon from the dealer once the return notification of the purchase is received from the agency responsible for weapons registrations.

The weapons dealer will be entitled to charge a reasonable fee for storage of the weapon and facilitating the purchase, again a Government stipulated fee for this service, can prevent exploitation of this scheme.

Purchases of new weapons must have a cooling off period. After a decision is made to purchase a weapon, a notification must be forwarded to the agency responsible for licencing and registration alerting them to the acquisition of the weapon, including: serial number, make, model, calibre etc. This process can facilitate the cooling off period.

The process would thus be: decide on a particular weapon, obtain it's particulars from a gun dealer, notify the responsible agency in an approved format, await and receive notification of the receipt of application and authorisation to acquire the weapon, collect and pay for it from the dealer. Any such process should be limited in time not to be overly onerous on a legitimate purchaser, but it should include a reaonable delay to provide a distinct "cooling off period" say 2 weeks minimum between notification of intent to purchase a weapon and the approval to do so.

Now the responsible agency should not themselves have the power to refuse approval to a legitimate user who holds a current licence, but a process should be enabled where that agency, a law enforcement agency, the gun dealer or some other interested party should have the right to appeal to a court opposing the acquisition of said weapon.

The definition of "interested party" should be defined in law, but should include: family members, work or student colleagues, medical practitioners, school or education department employees, a clergy member who can establish direct knowledge or contact with the person, or a person who has lodged a formal criminal complaint against the firearm holder with a law enforcement agency, relating to the use or threatened use of violence against them by the licenced firearm holder, or a person who has obtained any sort of court order against the firearm holder preventing the use of violence or the threat of violence by that person, including domestic violence prevention order, apprehended violence protection orders or similar such restraining orders.

In any case, the firearm holder must be afforded the opportunity to defend himself against such appeal before a court, with the responsibility (and the cost) for arguing the case against approval of the acquisition weapon borne by those appealing the approval.

If all that could be implemented (a big ask I know) I think an awful lot of the current gun violence could be reduced and would give much greater weight to the statement from licenced firearm owners that they ARE responsible users.
 

the road runner

Active Member
Have been thinking of this for a while.

Could you not have a Firing Range that is attached to a police station.
All semi/automatic weapons are stored at the police station and police officers act as Range officers.
Police would get money when people go and pay to use the range.They could also see if people are well versed in safety of fire arms and also check the records of the fire arms users

For Hunting ,Bolt action,Lever action rifles could be taken home and stored in home safes.
 

Gremlin29

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
We would save more kids by banning swimming pools, they claim more children annually than all school shootings combined. Is gun control really about saving life and limb or is it an irrational type of fear, similar to the fear of flying?
 

ADMk2

Just a bloke
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
We would save more kids by banning swimming pools, they claim more children annually than all school shootings combined. Is gun control really about saving life and limb or is it an irrational type of fear, similar to the fear of flying?
Sure. Ignoring every problem IS easier than doing something to address it... Swimming pools ARE dangerous but they do things about it. Mandatory pool fencing, mandatory swim training and so on. Unfortunately the mindset seems to be, "guns are too hard" and it's people's fault not "gun's fault".

More than 100 people were murdered by others using firearms in the 2 week period immediately after the Newtown massacre and yesterday we saw another attempt that sadly saw 2 firefighters led into an ambush and murdered.

U.S. Shooting Deaths Since Sandy Hook Top 100

Thinking that guns aren't the problem is the irrational thing IMHO. They and the ridiculous ease of obtaining them ARE the problem AND the easiest thing to change, unless you think changing someones mindset through education is much easier and a more successful approach...

Or better yet, the NRA's "what we need is more guns" attitude. Yeah, THAT should help out of control access to guns by those intent upon using them for killing others...

:rolleyes:
 

Gremlin29

Super Moderator
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
So people that murder with guns wouldn't murder if they didn't have a gun? That seems pretty silly to believe. Canada banned guns some years back, hasn't had any effect at all on homicide there. Take a look at Scotland's stats, or South Africa or any country that has all but outright banned gun ownership. The effect is negligible enough to be argued which indicates to me that gun bans are as ineffective as any other sort of ban. And that's before we even get into the Bill of Rights.
 

Volkodav

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
Gun control is often seen as an attack on rational law abiding citizens who just happen to own guns, it is not and should never be. Gun control is rather about limiting access to military type assaut weapons by irrational and/or criminally inclined individuals and groups whose aim is to threaten, injure and kill innocent people.
 

OPSSG

Super Moderator
Staff member
Gun control is often seen as an attack on rational law abiding citizens who just happen to own guns, it is not and should never be. Gun control is rather about limiting access to military type assaut weapons by irrational and/or criminally inclined individuals and groups whose aim is to threaten, injure and kill innocent people.
Yes? I don't disagree, since I come from a society that largely does not own arms.

But 'gun control' as being discussed in this thread is an American problem and it begs an American solution. The political culture in America is quite different from that of Europe, Australia or Singapore and we cannot simply 'wish' the differences away. We cannot just apply the context of another society/country onto the Americans; as the Americans have their own norms, values, and laws. Without due regard to the American context (laws at Federal and State level relating to gun ownership), we will not get much further -- and this current discussion has the potential to become a discussion about their values vs your values or their laws vs your laws.

I would love to see how US politicians of national standing articulate a strong position on gun control but I have not seen it as yet.
 
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ADMk2

Just a bloke
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
So people that murder with guns wouldn't murder if they didn't have a gun? That seems pretty silly to believe. Canada banned guns some years back, hasn't had any effect at all on homicide there. Take a look at Scotland's stats, or South Africa or any country that has all but outright banned gun ownership. The effect is negligible enough to be argued which indicates to me that gun bans are as ineffective as any other sort of ban. And that's before we even get into the Bill of Rights.
Canada hasn't banned the private ownership of guns at all. It has vastly restricted the types that can be acquired true enough, but many of the types I believe shouldn't be available, still are in Canada. These include semi-automatic M4 and AR-15 types. But their actions actually demonstrate the complete opposite of what you are saying.

Overall Canadian homicides have declined slightly (but reasonably consistently) over the last 35 years, but Canadian shooting murders HAVE decreased significantly overall over the last 35 years. The biggest factors in this have been identified as stringent licencing and registration of weapons, as well as stringent limits on the types and capabilities of firearms lawfully allowed for ownership.

Homicides by method

As to homicide rates between Canada and your country here's what the stats show.

Here's the non-firearm rate for Canada and demographically similar parts of the USA in 2006 (the last time a nation-wide census collecting this data was performed in Canada):

https://lh3.ggpht.com/-hKx2LW78_c8/...nada-demographic-similar-2006-non-firearm.png

Essentially the same with only a very slight advantage to the USA. Canada had a percentage rate of 1.33 and selected portions of the USA, not including African American and Latino peoples had a percentage of 1.32.

Now for the overall rate, with all defined variations of homicide (including firearms), demographically speaking for those same groups:

https://lh3.ggpht.com/-rgJ3Tq8OLGM/...od-us-canada-demographic-similar-2006-all.png

The difference starts to increase quite rapidly.

1.94 (Canada) and 2.87 (USA) respectively. Now statistically you might argue that's only an extra person or so per one hundred thousand people. Bad for that person I guess, but a tragedy when the national perspective is looked at...

Now let's look at the overall percentage rate per 100,000 people for both Countries, including all defined variations of homicide (with all ethnic groups included):

https://lh3.ggpht.com/-3i4FZTwLWFQ/...s1600/b-homicides-per-1000-canada-us-2006.png

Whoa. How's that Canadian comparison starting to look?

Canada stays the same at 1.94 but the USA is up to 6.42...

Now personally I don't see the difference between including ethnic persons or not, surely a person killed is a tragedy no matter which ethnic group they belong to, but even if you consider primarily anglo-saxon and asian based groups, the homicide rate remains larger in the USA under as similar a comparison as can be made, but the vaster population differences make this difference enormous.

Political Calculations: U.S. vs Canada: Homicide Edition

Now I believe firmly that the only real difference in such a debate, is the ease with which persons can be killed, when a firearm is used to perform the act.

Homicides will happen in society regardless of what's lawful and what isn't. I must say I don't get the idea of throwing in red herrings such as, "oh yeah but what about how many people cars kill" or "swimming pools kill people too" and what raising such points does exactly to help address the problem of 9000+ gun related homicides per year occurring in your country?

Your country, that has 3 statistical anomalies out of Western Countries and one legal anomaly. Of the statistical anomalies, one being the highest number of firearms per 100,000 people, two the highest rate of homicides per 100,000 people and three, the highest proportion of gun related homicides per 100,000.

Of the legal anomaly, they specifically are weakest gun control laws out of that same group...

It just doesn't seem like "rocket science" to me...
 

Todjaeger

Potstirrer
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
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But 'gun control' as being discussed in this thread is an American problem and it begs an American solution. The political culture in America is quite different from that of Europe or Australia and we cannot simply 'wish' the differences away. We cannot just apply the context of another society/country onto them; as the Americans have their own norms, values, and laws. Without due regard to the American context (at Federal and State level on laws relating to gun ownership), we will not get much further -- and this current discussion has the potential to become a discussion about their values vs your values or their laws vs your laws.
Indeed, as OPSSG mentioned this issue of gun violence is one the US faces, and it is important that suggestions be made within the social, political, and legal context of the US.

Some things which are important to know/understand, so that the US context can be better understood or appreciated.

Roughly a third of the worlds' small arms are within the US/US ownership (~300 mil. small arms of various types). That works out to there being enough guns within the US for every man, woman and child to have their own.

Further, the numbers I have seen suggest that while US gunowner households are a "minority" population (i.e. less than 50% of US households have a firearm), it is a sizeable minority (~40% or so). Going further with that, ~20% of households with firearms own ~65% of all US firearms.

In strictly practical terms, making a significant decrease in the number of firearms owned within the US would be difficult, just due to the sheer numbers. As an example of what I mean, there are ~10 mil. firearms in neighbouring Canada. If the entire inventory of Canadian guns were to double, with the extra guns coming from the US, that would only cause a ~4% decrease in the total US gun inventory.

It also must be understood that the US has social, political, and legal traditions which support private ownership of firearms, along with the concept of ownership for self-defence and defence or property. Part of the US gun tradition also stems from the Colonial period of the citizen-soldier. At the time the US was founded, it was decided that the government would rely upon various state militias which could be called up as needed, instead of there being a standing national army. This was itself an extention of, and outgrowth from the War of Independence fought with Britain, as well as the English Civil War which was fought at a time many of the colonies were being first founded. At the time, Parliament needed to meet at least every two years, because it was prohibited for the Army to be funded for longer periods. When Parliament met in session, it would then vote for the continuation of funding to sustain the British Army. The US in the early days after becoming independent, under both the Articles of Confederacy as well as the Constitution of the United States, followed a similar provision, where Congress (being the Legislative body and having budgetary authority) met annually, and each year needed to budget for the regular Army, being unable to vote on a budget with a duration longer than a year.

However, the US (Legislative and Executive branches) took things further, in that the standing regular Army was just 700 troops scattered up and down the Atlantic coast in the thirteen founding colonies and their territories. The actual role of the Army regulars was not to serve as a unit formation, or even act as a cadre. The regulars were instead stationed at various Federal armouries and arsenals, and they were tasked with acting as guards to protect the warehoused guns, cannon, powder and shot in peacetime. In the event of hostilities, the regulars were then to oversee the distribution of the Federal arms to the local militia units, essentially acting as Ordnance and Stores personnel.

Fast forward two hundred years though, and it is now felt that part of the reason for the 2nd Amendment to the Constitution of the United States was to prevent the government from being able to disarm the populace, leaving the populace without the means to rise and overthrow the government, like was done to found the US.

In many respects, it is that later belief/tradition which causes problems in terms of gun control, as adherents tend to view the government with suspicion and as a (potential) threat. Believers tend to view attempts at gun control as the government attempting to limit their ability to resist government actions. They also want to make sure that they have weapons which would be most/best effective in fighting against the government, if thing came to that. This is part of the reason for the popularity for military style weapons, as such weapons are really designed for use against humans.

If, over the course of generations, there starts to be a marked notice in interest in firearms within the US, then perhaps there could be significant gun control movement. Otherwise though, I suspect it would be better to focus more attention to tweaking specific elements of gun control, as well as non gun control efforts.

One other thing which IMO is important to consider, is that while gun control efforts could lead to a reduction in gun deaths, they might also just induce people who wish to cause mass harm/terror to use a different mechanism, something other than a firearm.

-Cheers
 

protoplasm

Active Member
It isn't rocket science, but there is a pervading culture through large areas of America that says that the "right to bear arms" means the right to possess and use assault style weapons. There is no need for members of the public to be able to fire that many powerful rounds that quickly, there just isn't.

Changing the American mindset around gun ownership is enormous, not impossible, just enormous.
 

ADMk2

Just a bloke
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
One other thing which IMO is important to consider, is that while gun control efforts could lead to a reduction in gun deaths, they might also just induce people who wish to cause mass harm/terror to use a different mechanism, something other than a firearm.

-Cheers
They do already, however when conducting threat assessments, I have always been taught to address the most likely threat first and with the greatest majority of your available resources.

The far most likely terrorist threat in modern society is the atypical active shooter scenario we've seen so often this year.

All the major terror attacks in US history, haven't caused as much death as the gun related homicide incidents that have occurred in the USA in 2012 alone...

As for the covert / open carriage argument, statistically speaking, America would be better off if everyone carried rifles... Handguns represent the weapon of choice in the overwhelming majority of all gun related homicides.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/Ushomicidesbyweapon.svg

Count back 40 years and you can count in excess of 600,000 gun related homicides in the USA, yet the American soldier losses from the Vietnam war (58,000), seem far worse to most.

That is an unusual perspective to me...
 

My2Cents

Active Member
Before this goes much farther can we agree on a couple of things?
  1. An assault rifle is a rifle capable of automatic fire. Semi-auto does not count.
  2. The weapon used was not an assault rifle.
  3. Assault rifles and other automatic or explosive launching weapons require a special federal license to possess, and they don’t give out many. Getting and maintaining that license requires most the checks being proposed here.
  4. There are an almost infinite number of alternatives if guns are not available, ranging from improvised explosive and incendiaries devices large enough to fill a truck, to knifes, clubs, and rocks.
The technical term for people like the one who caused the latest incident is ‘active shooters’. The key to preventing these incidents is stopping the shooter before he acts. Most are under some kind of psychiatric care before the crime is committed. Most show signs before the act. It is illegal in the US for healthcare professionals to report these individuals to law enforcement.

That’s right. Someone knew this could happen, but couldn’t alert anyone without breaking the law.

See Ray Kelly Interview Rampage Shooters - Why We Can’t Stop Rampage Shooters - Esquire
 

My2Cents

Active Member
All the major terror attacks in US history, haven't caused as much death as the gun related homicide incidents that have occurred in the USA in 2012 alone...

As for the covert / open carriage argument, statistically speaking, America would be better off if everyone carried rifles... Handguns represent the weapon of choice in the overwhelming majority of all gun related homicides.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/Ushomicidesbyweapon.svg
Those statistics are distorted because they include people killed by suicide, accidents, acts of self defense and the police as homicides (which is legally correct). These are not the numbers of people killed by criminals. The numbers also include deaths resulting from criminal-on-criminal homicides (wars between drug gangs mostly) that have alternative access to weapons.
Count back 40 years and you can count in excess of 600,000 gun related homicides in the USA, yet the American soldier losses from the Vietnam war (58,000), seem far worse to most.
That is a strawman argument. Besides, the totals over 40 years for many other causes of death, like drowning, automobiles, food poisoning, etc. will exceed the losses in Vietnam as well. Go back 75 years and the deaths from poison gas alone will totally eclipse the Vietnam losses as well.
 

ADMk2

Just a bloke
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
Before this goes much farther can we agree on a couple of things?
  1. An assault rifle is a rifle capable of automatic fire. Semi-auto does not count.
  2. The weapon used was not an assault rifle.
  3. Assault rifles and other automatic or explosive launching weapons require a special federal license to possess, and they don’t give out many. Getting and maintaining that license requires most the checks being proposed here.
  4. There are an almost infinite number of alternatives if guns are not available, ranging from improvised explosive and incendiaries devices large enough to fill a truck, to knifes, clubs, and rocks.
The technical term for people like the one who caused the latest incident is ‘active shooters’. The key to preventing these incidents is stopping the shooter before he acts. Most are under some kind of psychiatric care before the crime is committed. Most show signs before the act. It is illegal in the US for healthcare professionals to report these individuals to law enforcement.

That’s right. Someone knew this could happen, but couldn’t alert anyone without breaking the law.

See Ray Kelly Interview Rampage Shooters - Why We Can’t Stop Rampage Shooters - Esquire
So a semi-automatic HK 417, on issue to many military forces nowadays, is not an assault rifle? In the USA it's sold as the H&K MR762 to civilian users...

That term "assault rifle" is a media term, irrelevant to the discussion at hand. The fact is, any AR-15 type, clone etc is a rapid fire capable weapon. Most military issued "automatic rifles" are intended to fire about 90 rounds a minute (not the theoretical cyclic rate) a number which a civilianised AR-15 "Hunter's rifles" can easily achieve.

When equipped with 30, 40, 70 or 100 round drum magazines, such a weapon only has one purpose and it ain't "varmint knockin"...

And you're right there are many ways to kill, but that lonely disaffected kid isn't going to go and steal his mum's IED now is he?
 

old faithful

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
So people that murder with guns wouldn't murder if they didn't have a gun? That seems pretty silly to believe. Canada banned guns some years back, hasn't had any effect at all on homicide there. Take a look at Scotland's stats, or South Africa or any country that has all but outright banned gun ownership. The effect is negligible enough to be argued which indicates to me that gun bans are as ineffective as any other sort of ban. And that's before we even get into the Bill of Rights.
Not talking about banning guns. Just banning semi and full auto guns, or regulating their use.

Realisticly, considering how many are out there in The US, I would like to see, registration of all fire arms nation wide. safe storage of all guns. Special permits for semi auto, including membership of an aproved semi/auto/military club, and use of that weapon at that club. transportation of that weapon to and from that club. Breaches of rules mean confiscation of gûn and permit forever.

Murders will still kill with illegal guns, leagal guns, bricks,knives fists, but they won't punch 20 kids and 4 adults to death, or throw bricks and kill 2 and injure 2 firemen from 50 yards.

Anyway, we can discuss this again, after the next US nut job gets a semi auto, kills a heap, and my family and I half a world away, watch it on TV and read about in our papers, you see, the world is a small place now days, and like it or not, because of the media, the rest of the western world is a kindaUS colony.
 

ADMk2

Just a bloke
Staff member
Verified Defense Pro
Those statistics are distorted because they include people killed by suicide, accidents, acts of self defense and the police as homicides (which is legally correct). These are not the numbers of people killed by criminals. The numbers also include deaths resulting from criminal-on-criminal homicides (wars between drug gangs mostly) that have alternative access to weapons.
They would have ever decreasing access to those weapons which is the point many who argue as you do overlook.

However you want to "explain" 19,000 homicides a year in your country it is a problem that needs fixing, whether it's suicide, murder or accident. There isn't one silver bullet for the problem, a whole range of things have to change, but people not owning military weapons is definitely a big one.

Gang on gang warfare may be an instance where no-one in "polite society" is particular involved, but is that what you are prepared to tolerate within your community? They can do whatever they like to each other, as long as it doesn't affect me? And here I was thinking Americans were patriots? One nation under god and all that?

No matter what is done, 280 million guns exist in the USA. Until those numbers rapidly decline or people stop thinking that pulling a trigger is the best way to resolve a problem, those "distorted numbers" aren't going to change.

That is a strawman argument. Besides, the totals over 40 years for many other causes of death, like drowning, automobiles, food poisoning, etc. will exceed the losses in Vietnam as well. Go back 75 years and the deaths from poison gas alone will totally eclipse the Vietnam losses as well.
It's not a strawman argument at all. Bringing up motor vehicle accidents, swimming pool accidents and the like is the strawman. Every single one of those accidents is addressed through some direct action - safer cars, better designed roads, laws and policies designed to make it safer to drive, swimming pool fences, mandatory swimming training for infants and children and so on, yet your larger and far more visible trouble is ignored due mainly to ignorant lobby groups, interested mostly in the status quo, or if possible (ie: more guns!) increasing their share of it.

The point you fail to grasp in my analogy, was that the losses in Vietnam were what ultimately caused your politicians to lose the political will to fight there and you therefore stopped.

Yet far great numbers of losses on American soil from gun related homicides haven't inspired them to do a damn thing about the problem...
 

My2Cents

Active Member
So a semi-automatic HK 417, on issue to many military forces nowadays, is not an assault rifle? In the USA it's sold as the H&K MR762 to civilian users...
The HK417 is a selective fire (semi-automatic or full automatic controlled by the position of the safety lever) weapon. The MR762 is semi-automatic ONLY. They are not the same identical weapon.
That term "assault rifle" is a media term, irrelevant to the discussion at hand.
Assault rifle is a technical term describing a selective fire weapon using an intermediate cartridge, such as 5.56x45mm or 7.62x39mm. The HK417 uses a full power 7.63x51mm cartridge and is therefore categorized as a battle rifle, not an assault rifle.

The media’s abuse of the term “assault rifle” is a major problem, but irrelevant to the discussion at hand. They probably think it makes the story more ‘sexy’.
The fact is, any AR-15 type, clone etc is a rapid fire capable weapon. Most military issued "automatic rifles" are intended to fire about 90 rounds a minute (not the theoretical cyclic rate) a number which a civilianised AR-15 "Hunter's rifles" can easily achieve.
It may be possible to achieve, but you probably cannot even be sure they will all go over there, in the general direction of the target. You sure can’t aim it.
And you're right there are many ways to kill, but that lonely disaffected kid isn't going to go and steal his mum's IED now is he?
Assuming he is incapable of making pipe bombs, Molotov cocktails, or obtaining matches or a cigarette lighter?
 
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