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Protesters descend on the offices of the NRA.
I recently had a debate on gun control with a colleague on television. It was one of dozens following the tragic mass shooting in Newtown, Conn. After I pressed him on some fast and loose gun terms he used, he â" to his great credit â" e-mailed to ask what he could read to get a better handle on the language.
Heâs not alone. The vast lexicon of gun verbiage is arcane and incredibly technical â" and because of that, frequently misused by the voices most vocal on gun control.
This isnât just a semantic problem of getting the words wrong. Itâs become a political problem, and, worse, one of the reasons our national conversation on guns actually impedes progress in reducing gun crime.
So in the interest of serious solutions, I urge anyone interested in having a real conversation about guns to learn something about them, and to stop using terms meant to scare and confuse instead of solve.
Hereâs a quick lesson.
Rapid fire: When gun control advocates use descriptors like ârapid fireâ itâs meant to conjure scary images of fully automatic bullet spray. Think Rambo: Squeeze the trigger and 30 rounds spit out. Well, the weapons used in Columbine, Virginia Tech, Aurora, Newtown and virtually every other mass shooting in recent history were not fully automatic. They were semi-automatic, meaning one bullet discharge per trigger pull.
Rapid fire doesnât describe the gun or the type of ammunition used; it describes the shooterâs ability to shoot and reload quickly. Semi-automatic handguns can be fired ârapidly.â Many shotguns are semi-automatic. So if you advocate banning ârapid-fire guns,â you may be talking about the handgun your mom keeps by her bed or the shotgun your dad uses for deer hunting
High-capacity: There is no such thing as âhigh-capacity ammunition,â as the Washington Post called it, or âhigh-capacity weaponsâ as Politico called them. Ammunition â" that is, bullets â" have only one capacity: the capacity to kill. High capacity refers only to magazines, the ammunition feeding device.
But even when used correctly, the term is arbitrary. Thereâs no single definition for what makes a magazine high-capacity. The 1994 assault weapons ban limited magazines to 10 rounds.
Shooters can get around magazine restrictions by â" you guessed it â" buying more magazines. A proficient shooter can reload within seconds. One of the Columbine shooters had 13 10-round magazines for his 9 mm carbine, which he shot 96 times. And they donât need a scary-looking military weapon, either. Handguns with detachable magazines, as Seung-Hui Cho proved at Virginia Tech, work just as well.
But letâs say we banned magazines over 10 rounds. And then letâs say a prospective mass shooter was one of the rare criminals who follow gun laws, and he bought only one legal 10-round magazine. If heâd killed 10 children instead of 20, I imagine weâd be just as outraged. So how many deaths at a time are too many? Ten? Why not five? Or two? Shouldnât we be trying to find ways to stop lunatics and criminals from shooting one person, not one-more-than-10 people?
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