What an "Assault Rifle" ban sounds like to me:
"Well since no guns used in mass shootings have ever been painted pink, lets make it so all guns have to be pink, that will reduce mass shootings!"
Actually, "assault rifles" are illegal in the US unless you get a special permit.
All fully automatic firearms require a permit in the US.
@Pat But that isn't what "assault rifle" means, when people talk about banning them.
@Pat The term "assault weapon" has lost most of its meaning, unfortunately.
Yes: automatic/select-fire weapons are generally illegal in every state, and those are almost never used in "mass shootings" (probably because they're illegal and really hard to get).
However, this is not what people mean when they respond to shootings like in TN with "we need to ban assault rifles".
And it isn't what California means when it bans assault rifles. (It means things like flash suppressors and various safety features, because it's absurd.)
I think @freemo is objecting to this use of the term, not yours.
@ech
The term "assault weapon" never had a definite meaning, it was always ambiguous; probably to give politicians more wiggle room.
>'However, this is not what people mean when they respond to shootings like in TN with "we need to ban assault rifles".'
I'm not sure what people mean when they say things because I can't read their minds and people often lie these days.
When Pete Buttigieg was running in the Dem primaries in 2015 he needed to take a position on guns and he said he supported restrictions on "assault rifles". I'm pretty sure he knows the difference since he was recently a lieutenant in the Navy. He was likely trying to appeal to the Dem base (because they're ignorant about such things) while sending a dog whistle to the 2A supporters in the party (many of whom would understand exactly what he was saying).
I no longer even watch coverage of mass shootings anymore because I don't want to see a distorted view of what's going on in teams of actual numbers.
@freemo