Well in a home defense situation you have to compromise. I would want something that is easy to maneuver with, accurate, can hold a light, limits over penetration, not shockingly loud (hence the suppressor), and dependable. I think that the AR is a very capable weapon but it certainly has its flaws. If you read that gawker article you would think that it is some magical killing machine when it won't make that round any deadlier than a mini 14 or any similar gun.
6/14/2016 3:48:24 PM
A Ruger mini 14 with a modified barrel could do just as much harm. I've never seen one of those in gun control ads.^beat me to it.[Edited on June 14, 2016 at 4:01 PM. Reason : asd]
6/14/2016 4:01:08 PM
Maybe that's because there are estimated to be ~5 million ARs in the US but only around ~1 million Mini variants.I already admitted that disingenuous scare mongering of specific gun types is stupid.[Edited on June 14, 2016 at 4:24 PM. Reason : Literally the most common rifle in the US]
6/14/2016 4:16:26 PM
the gun in the gawker link is too long to be a good option in the home IMO
6/14/2016 4:17:33 PM
Mateen didn't use an AR-15. Sig Sauer apparently.
6/14/2016 4:49:49 PM
The Sig MCX is just a piston driven AR with the recoil springs contained within the upper instead of in the buffer tube.
6/14/2016 5:06:30 PM
Sig Sauer MCX - which apparently uses a lot of AR parts. not sure we know the caliber yet.[Edited on June 14, 2016 at 5:07 PM. Reason : ^^]
6/14/2016 5:07:22 PM
I think it's only available in 5.56 and 300 blackout. You can probably get some kind of custom job, but I doubt he did that.
6/14/2016 5:10:19 PM
the police are "well regulated civilian militias". Each local municipality bears arms through their local police department. Its the more specialized, modern world day's expression of the 2nd ammendment. Thanks for playing.
6/14/2016 5:14:47 PM
I mean, virtually all modern military derived semi automatic rifles operate in very similar manner (except bull pup configurations I guess). The particular model of rifle is relatively unimportant. Point is, the AR isn't uniquely bad, dangerous, etc. The kind of thinking demonizing the AR is the same thinking that brought us all the pointless cosmetic bans in the assault weapons law. If we want to have an actual discussion about what should be legal for civilian carry, what a background check should be, when one is performed, etc. the "more poorly thought out emotional gun laws" now crowd needs to educate themselves a bit. It's like the anti-abortion people who have no idea about fetal development. Be passionate but try to at least know a bit about what it is you're passionate about.
6/14/2016 5:23:26 PM
Seems like making the background checks more thorough, and mandatory waiting periods might help thwart the crazies more than anything else.
6/14/2016 5:44:00 PM
^^Similarly gun folks need to stop devolving every single conversation into a technical discussion on ballistics, semantics on what constitutes an assault rifle, and how a clip isn't a magazine, blah blah blah[Edited on June 14, 2016 at 5:45 PM. Reason : Blah]
6/14/2016 5:44:43 PM
I guess, but when it comes to things like writing laws semantics and specifics are massively important. If you have concerns about lethality things like muzzle velocity, size and composition of the round, ballistic characteristics, rounds per sec rate, etc. matter. In fact they're really the only things that matter.Laws drafted off of feelings and as a reaction to specific events are almost ways poorly written, ineffective, and come with a raft if unintended consequences.
6/14/2016 6:20:19 PM
Of those, only rate of fire should matter IMO(semi vs Auto) and I'll add length/ease of concealment (handguns/Sbr vs long gun) Basically how our laws currently differentiate small arms (with the exception of assault weapon bans which I do not support). Muzzle velocity, bullet energy, blah blah are pretty Meaningless to me in regards to regulation since all are very easily potentially lethal.But I'm more talking about general discussions among normal non-politician people. How many god damn times have we seen an exchange ITT or in the media generally that goes something along the lines of:Concerned citizen: why would anyone need a 30 round clip?Gun folks: YOU DUMB MOTHERFUCKER, ITS CALLED A MAGAZINE, GET A FUCKING CLUE MORAN!!!!!Concerned citizen: FUCK YOU GUN NUT WE SHOULD BAN EVERYTHING THE 2ND AMENDMENT IS FOR MILTITIAS IN THE 1800setc etc etc.Where a better response would be : well there are already 10s of millions of 30 round mags in circulation, what good would banning them now do? Plinking with 30 rounds is a true joy that everyone should be so lucky to experience, in a self-defense situation many rounds may be needed to defend against multiple targets, the second amendment says my right to own guns shall not be infringed, that includes the magazines etc etc etc.The semantics shit is just an avoidance mechanism.
6/14/2016 6:41:41 PM
^^^^ hell no.[Edited on June 14, 2016 at 9:26 PM. Reason : no idea WTF happened on this post. Wasn't meaning to reference that at all. ]oh yeah, this is what I was referring to:
6/14/2016 7:47:46 PM
One last thing I forgot about historical meaning is that you gotta have the guns for when the slaves get restless.
6/14/2016 7:59:47 PM
6/14/2016 8:22:01 PM
Yup. I mean, I'm not a big "appeal to authority" type or a fan of "top men" style of governance, but it is important that the laws are written by people informed on the subject. I mean, this is the same congress that has members who think the internet is a series of tubes and are concerned about guns with the shoulder part that goes up.We're nominally governed by people who understand politics but very little else. Our laws are largely written by special interest groups of one kind or another and then voted on by people who receive contributions from those groups.I've seen a lot of people talking about using the terror watch list or the no fly list to deny people their constitutionally protected rights. The ACLU doesn't like this idea, neither do pro gun folks, neither do muslim groups. If you're willing to shit all over this amendment, how soon before we start saying that if you're on a terror watch list you don't have 5th amendment protections, or 6th, or 8th. It's not slippery slope either, this has already happened with the 4th amendment.
6/14/2016 9:01:56 PM
6/14/2016 9:27:45 PM
Yes, but those people have been afforded some form of due process. We restrict felons from voting, and even ex felons. I disagree with that for ex felons, but it's been upheld legally. I sort of feel that way about guns too although a good logical argument could be made for guns in that same way or perhaps differentiate violent felony from non violent. Anyway, your name can end up on that list for no reason, or for politically motivated reasons. I mean, Ted Kennedy was on the no fly list for a while. Stripping people of their rights absolutely must not be Don extra-judicially. Like in said, the feds have been trying and in some cases succeeding on that front for a while now. Don't give them more reason to keep at it.
6/14/2016 9:44:20 PM
6/14/2016 9:55:00 PM
^ those are more like an "injunction" though where if they got the issue cleared up they can own guns again.For felons, seems sensible to have a time period where they can get their rights back.Im against OBama and Trumps idea to use the no fly list to ban gun sales, unless they can make the no fly list something with accountability and an appeals process. I know when I applied for my previous job, eVerify wrongly flagged me as being ineligible to work (i was a naturalized citizen for a few years at the time) and I had to jump through some hoops to clear my name-- and I only had 7 days to do it or the employment offer was voided.A list for gun purchases would likely flag a lot of people who are eligible, but at least they have some recourse to clear their name, and buying a gun isn't as important as having a job.This could be a slippery slope though where someone on the no fly list gets scrutinized for everything else (get pulled over, name is flagged; apply for school, apply for job, etc.), which would be an unreasonable search and seizure, if they can't be removed from the list immediately.
6/14/2016 10:02:51 PM
6/14/2016 10:05:56 PM
felons were the exception, they pretty much are screwed now.But there's been a renewed push to "ban the box" and I think it's reasonable to give felons back all their rights as long as theyve served their time and hit certain milestones.
6/14/2016 10:37:35 PM
6/14/2016 10:42:40 PM
6/14/2016 11:16:23 PM
What do you call the kind of trigger that fires on the pull as well as the release? Apparently those are completely legal, and a coworker of mine just bought one for his AR.IDK, even I'd be kind of weary to mess with one of those.But that could double the rate of fire, yet I don't hear any of the gun control crazies mentioning that.
6/14/2016 11:24:18 PM
"Friend of mine" purchased a modified (caliber was .45 and not .223, that's the only modification) AR in 2 separate pieces at a gun show roughly 15 years ago. Modified .45 Uzi mags with an AR-receiver-sized piece of metal welded near the top. Friend had plenty of .45 ammo so seemed like a cool thing. Safety and Semi Auto were the only 2 options for firing, obviously no fully automatic mode since that's illegal for 99% of people. So during a test to see how well the receiver would accept the .45 cartridges from the modified Uzi mag, the mag was inserted with the slide locked back, and the slide was released forward (or perhaps the slide was forward and after the mag was inserted, the slide was pulled back and allowed to go forward, friend can't remember), it fired a 3 round burst that went through my friend's stereo speaker then out the window. The friend had proper firearms training safety so he or she obviously didn't point it at anyone while testing the magazine loading, but he or she never used that weapon again. My hunch was that the receiver had possibly been modified, or something was just damaged.Moral of the story is I wouldn't trust any of ^that stuff either[Edited on June 15, 2016 at 12:02 AM. Reason : .]
6/14/2016 11:56:25 PM
I swear to god, every single civil liberty Americans have can be systematically stripped away from them, one by one, and not one goddamn peep comes out of the gun-lovin' 'murica crowd. But bring up the need for gun restriction and it's "herp derp derp muh liberties" this and "herp derp, don't tread on me" that.Fuckin' useless.
6/15/2016 1:29:17 AM
^ hell, many of them are the same ones behind all the other transgressions.However, the reverse is also true...the left hardly has clean hands on civil liberties, although I guess they're less bad on balance.^^^ no such thing, and that would be insane. Maybe you mean a bump-fire stock? They make it easier to bump fire, which is more of a stupid party-trick novelty than anything else. I've never actually seen one in the flesh, because they're dumb.[Edited on June 15, 2016 at 8:35 AM. Reason : ]
6/15/2016 8:33:28 AM
they're called binary triggers and it's somehow been deemed legal by the ATF. one trigger action, two shots. even has a selector with "binary" where those who have used military weapons would recgonize the auto selector.watch this guy empty the better part of a 60 round magazine in about 4 secondshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVJHVqgXRVI&t=3m2sgood job gun nuts[Edited on June 15, 2016 at 9:44 AM. Reason : .]
6/15/2016 9:39:37 AM
Wow, I stand corrected. Hadn't seen that yet.Still more of a novelty than anything useful. The idea of it firing upon trigger release would make me uneasy. At least it's select-fire selectable.
6/15/2016 11:05:00 AM
^^That's it. Binary trigger.Scary.If people would put some thought into gun control, rather than use knee-jerk reactions and attempting to tug on heartstrings, then maybe we can get something meaningful put through.For instance, for me, I'm all for suppressors being legal. In practice, they really aren't going to give these mass shooters an edge. These mass shooters want to be heard. Popular media however has made them out to be the go-to firearm companion for assassins, so we just think suppressor=bad.[Edited on June 15, 2016 at 11:16 AM. Reason : asdfa]
6/15/2016 11:16:26 AM
I'm surprised that binary trigger is legal but it also looks like a gimmick too and I doubt it will be very widespread. ^ Most people would be shocked to hear what a suppressor actually sounds like. On my AR it probably isn't even hearing safe, it's pretty damn loud. It's not too bad on my bolt 308 but it's a long way from being movie quiet.
6/15/2016 11:54:09 AM
6/15/2016 1:00:56 PM
No they're not all the same. Many of them advise you dip them in water before you fire. And if they're wet and cool it's quieter than if they're dry and warm, for example. The "TV/movie" silencer sounds aren't very realistic though. I mean hell, the sound of the slide flying forward is louder than the little sound effects they use on TV.
6/15/2016 2:16:43 PM
http://sound.stackexchange.com/questions/29750/origin-of-the-traditional-hollywood-silencer-sound[Edited on June 15, 2016 at 2:21 PM. Reason : so maybe it's not a complete fabrication]
6/15/2016 2:21:20 PM
Ah ok, that makes sense. But if you were right beside the gun, it wouldn't sound that way.
6/15/2016 2:25:21 PM
It also depends not just on the silencer but the round. If you are shooting a pistol that isn't a .22 LR it is not going to be that quiet. Also depends if you are shooting subsonic rounds or not. A subsonic .223 can be pretty quiet but it probably wouldn't cycle the bolt in an AR and the ballistics are going to be pretty bad. The closest non .22 LR I have heard to movie quiet is subsonic 300 BLK out of a bolt gun. It's pretty quiet out of an AR but the bolt itself makes a decent amount of noise.
6/15/2016 2:38:44 PM
6/15/2016 2:46:29 PM
^^A subsonic 5.56 might as well be a 22LR, as it's about the same weight and speed bullet and thus about the same ballistics. There's no reason to pay $1 a round for something a cheap box of 22LR will do just fine.Regarding suppressed AR shooting - While it's true that the action cycling is louder than the suppressed gasses exiting the barrel, the sound of the bullet hitting its target is even louder than that as perceived from the shooter's end. It probably sounds like you hit something with a baseball bat at the receiving end.
6/15/2016 2:58:15 PM
https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/743124262010146816Reuters reporting NRA changing their mind on no fly list and gun purchases.Trump was meeting with them today about this:https://www.rt.com/usa/346839-trump-gun-control-democrats/
6/15/2016 3:47:50 PM
As long as they provide some ways to challenge the list I'm all for it. Of course, if you are considered such a danger that we won't let you on a plane, why are you allowed to be in public at all?
6/15/2016 4:01:21 PM
How do you even get put on the list? How does that process actually work?
6/15/2016 4:11:17 PM
Without essentially neutering the watchlists, which might not be a bad thing, i don't see how this would work.I guess we're just basically making the lists public? This is where the mandatory waiting period comes on, you don't know if youre on the list or not...It'll be interesting to see the details of the legislation.^ according to the RT link, it's basically secret. The FBI has some hunch you're a terrorist, you secretly get put on the list until you try to fly somewhere you won't know. There's a million-ish people on the various lists.[Edited on June 15, 2016 at 4:13 PM. Reason : ][Edited on June 15, 2016 at 4:14 PM. Reason : ]
6/15/2016 4:12:02 PM
Blatant disregard for due process. Sad.
6/15/2016 4:17:10 PM
6/15/2016 4:17:55 PM
^^ yeah, they can't just say "on the list = no guns" without other changes, this is blatantly unconstitutional and I can't see the supreme court not shutting this down quick.They have to add some due process, but as the FBI has commented, doing so could compromise some investigations.[Edited on June 15, 2016 at 4:19 PM. Reason : ]
6/15/2016 4:18:43 PM
I'd venture to guess Donald Trump doesn't even know what due process is.
6/15/2016 4:21:25 PM
And Hillary knows but doesn't care. Talking about just banning people from gun purchases for being on a secret list is blatantly unconstitutional, but that's what many lawmakers are clamoring to do because that's what the damn fool public is yelling for. Such a law would show total disregard for the Constitution and shouldn't be proposed let alone passed, but if you say that you're clearly just a gun nut.
6/15/2016 6:01:27 PM