It is often said that guns,
particularly assault rifles, are designed for one thing, and one
thing only: to kill lots of people.
Assault rifles in the United States
are failing miserably in this purpose. There are
tens of millions of assault rifles in America. Because the definition of an
assault rifle has been rather fuzzy, the number can be said to be
anywhere from 10 million to 30 million. Of those, the AR-15 type is
fairly common with numbers between 5 and 10 million.
The FBI murder statistics do not
differentiate between types of rifles. There are about 100 million
rifles in the United States. In 2009, the last year in which
numbers have been reported, there were 13,636 murders. Guns
were used to murder 9,146 people. Hands and feet were used to murder 801 people. Blunt objects were used to murder 611 people. Rifles were used to murder 348
people, and that is all rifles, of which assault rifles are only a
small fraction. Assault rifles are used so infrequently in homicides
that many police departments almost never see them; in 2009, there
were nine states that did not have a single murder committed with any
rifle.
So why is the left so intent on
banning rifles that are the most suitable for militia use (clearly protected by the U.S. Constitution), when they
are used so rarely in murder? Banning baseball bats would make
more sense, yet would be nearly as senseless.
It is this disassociation from facts
and reality that lead many ordinary people to believe that when their
government works to disarm them, it is up to no good.
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