it was handguns? still, Assualt weapons ban needs to come back.
It will do (and did) nothing. We've discussed this in other threads before, but the AWB was primarily cosmetic. There was only
one functional limitation made by the AWB, and that was limiting detachable magazine capacity to no more than 10 rounds for newly manufactured magazines. All that did was make old magazines cost more, and there was no limit on how many magazines or how much ammunition you purchased. Everything else was around folding/telescoping stocks, bayonet lugs, and flash hiders.
If you really want to make a goal that is reachable within the next couple of years, overhaul the NICS process and consider adding in more inputs for mental health professionals and courts to
immediately interfere with a person's ability to purchase firearms. Admittedly, it doesn't address what you do if the fucker already has guns, if he stole some guns, or if he gets something off a "non-traditional" market, but it does add some hurdles around people who go to Gander Mountain right after nutting up. The whole NICS system really needs to become a non-manual process. As I've said before, I can code the database and front end in my stupid head, so this isn't beyond the ability of a contracted software company.
I would also submit that we consider ending non-registered/non-titled firearms sales. Pay money for the transfer and track the things starting with every sale after 1/1/2013 (sample date). I don't care about the "Hitler registered firearms, too" bullshit. If you had a gun and suddenly it's no longer trackable, there better be a goddamn police report or you're gonna be liable for all the nasty shit that boomstick goes on to do.
Quite the opposite, if more people were carrying a gun it would mean more people capable of killing the shooter before this could take place.
In an
elementary school?
How come? Genuine question.
Htown (if he'll excuse me for answering for him) is saying it's a
Constitutional Amendment that is part of the
Bill of Rights. The amount of agreement required to actually overturn a part of the Constitution (
even if it's been done before) requires an
enormous amount of agreement between law makers and/or the voting public. It's not something that some guy just writes up and people say "hey, sounds good to me" and just gets signed into law. It's a bit beyond Obamacare or the Fiscal Cliff in divisiveness.
Furthermore (
and isn't part of Htown's position, but is my addition), there are more guns than there are people. How would you even find them all? If you found them, how would you slag them all? Nation-wide gun buy-back programs? Even if you "ok, we're going to completely stop making or selling guns, gun parts, and ammunition as of tomorrow", I've got a rifle that's 100 years old and it runs like a Singer sewing machine... and I've only done some minor maintenance on it. Modern ammunition has a potential shelf life of centuries. Furthermore, if things like dies and gunpowder remain available, people will be able to make their own ammunition for a very long time. So, just waiting them out isn't going to work either.
Also, to head off the thought-experiment folks: They've tried integrating electronics into firearms for both fire control and for safety, but those things have been a bust. There was significant push-back from the gun-owning community toward putting anything in a gun that could compromise reliability or that would allow someone to turn them off remotely. Moreover, the eBullets and electronic triggers were pieces of shit. The only successful application of electronics has been in optics.
As an owner of automatic weapons I can say I love going to a range and firing them.
Pretty sure he means semiauto and has no idea of the difference between an actual automatic and a "news story" automatic. That's not meant as an insult to ronito.