Another article admonishing the press to learn firearms terms

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hso

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Great piece in USA today that makes many of our arguments clear.

I especially like "Constitutional rights aren't "loopholes.""

http://www.usatoday.com/story/opini...ore-arguing-against-firearms-column/86226712/

Learn gun-speak before arguing against firearms:
We've all heard former Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan's admonition that "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts." Yet the public debate about guns in America takes Moynihan's warning to the next level: Each side not only has its own facts, it has its own language.

For instance, take the rush after the recent Orlando shootings to ban "assault" or "military-style" weapons like the AR-15 rifle. Gun control advocates immediately jumped to regulate sales of "automatic weapons" and "assault rifles" like the AR-15, which they deem too deadly for one individual to need. Scary stories about the AR-15, which Hillary Clinton called "weapons of war" that can fire hundreds of rounds per minute, began circulating, further clouding the story.

For starters, an AR-15 wasn't used in the Orlando shooting. Instead, the shooter used a Sig Sauer MCX semi-automatic rifle and a 9mm handgun. Perhaps this is a distinction without much difference — the Sig Sauer is similar to an AR-15 — but it does demonstrate the rush to vilify the AR-15 by those seeking to regulate its sale.

But more important, neither the Sig Sauer nor the AR-15 is an "assault rifle" under any applicable definition. They are both semi-automatic weapons, meaning every time the user pulls the trigger, the gun fires one bullet — just like any handgun or hunting rifle. Sure, the AR-15 looks more like something out of the "Die Hard" movies, but it doesn't shoot any faster than many smaller guns. ...

Hillary Clinton has called for reinstatement of an "assault weapons" ban signed by her husband — but it's almost certain that ban would not have barred the Orlando shooter from owning his weapon. ...

Further, a 2004 Department of Justice report found that the assault weapons ban caused no discernible change in gun deaths in America, and didn't keep people from getting access to guns that were just as powerful as the AR-15. As Sean Davis at The Federalist has pointed out, between 2003 — the last full year of the assault weapons ban — and 2014, the number of murders committed with rifles dropped by nearly one-third.
...

"Aha," say gun control advocates — but what about the "terror gap" loophole that allows people on terror watch lists to purchase guns?

Well, the Orlando shooter wasn't on any such list, even though he had been investigated and his cases dropped due to lack of evidence. In fact, such a "loophole" actually is due process as protected by the U.S. Constitution. ...Constitutional rights aren't "loopholes."

Of course, pro-gun advocates want to keep firearms out of the hands of terrorists; they simply want the government to ask a judge first. This is why the ACLU has opposed the opportunistic plan congressional Democrats fashioned to politically cash in on the tragedy.
...
The panic after a terrorist shooting is typically the worst time to adjudicate U.S. gun laws; misinformation and demagoguery almost always drown out reason. Following a vote earlier this week, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) tweeted that Senate Republicans had "decided to sell weapons to ISIS." This is particularly rich, given that Warren's cohorts on the left spent much of the last decade accusing George W. Bush of "stealing" Americans' rights. Now that Warren wants to be vice president, she's willing to hand over her due process rights in a gift bag.
 
In their perfect world, they (the left) have "Constitutional Rights". We (the right) only have regulated privileges.
 
From the article: "The panic after a terrorist shooting is typically the worst time to adjudicate U.S. gun laws; misinformation and demagoguery almost always drown out reason."

Yet these were exactly the times NY and CT chose to enact their "emergency" hidden after dark, "pass it to find out what's in it", "vote for it because I'm ordering you to" laws. And we're the worse for it.

Well written article which will probably be ignored by most legislators.
 
hso

In fact, such a "loophole" actually is due process as protected by the U.S. Constitution. ...Constitutional rights aren't "loopholes."

This above all else bears repeating every time the anti-gun rhetoric starts up again following some gun related tragedy.
 
They're trying to teach pigs how to sing.

The Leftist Media will never attempt to get anything about guns "right" or "correct", that doesn't serve their fear-mongering agendas to help the Leftist Liberals gain control over the sheeple. "Sig Sauer MCX semi-automatic rifle" just doesn't have the terrorizing, liver-quivering, knee-knocking shock effect that "assault rifle" does. At least they're not calling everything "machineguns".
 
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