If 1994 Magazine Ban Democrats Want to Bring Back Was In Effect, More Could Have Died in Tucson
As a group, politicians seem utterly unable to consider the "law of unintended consequences." They are quite good at reflexively throwing a new law up to address past events, but rarely consider the effects their laws will actually have.
A prime example is the magazine ban provisions of the 1994 Crime Bill. Most people remember the Ban on Scary-Looking Cosmetic Features and a ban on manufacturing magazines of more than ten rounds, but the media forgets that the immediate and unexpected reaction to that law was that gun manufacturers responded by making handguns limited to 10-round magazines as small as possible. The result was an entirely new class of subcompact handguns that packs a considerable amount of firepower into a much more concealable package. This gave concealed carry permit holders far more choices, and increased the possibility that they would leave home armed. Increasing the number of Americans going armed in public was the exact opposite of the intention of those that passed the 1994 Crime bill, but that was the direct result. The same politicians have not learned, and are now proposing that they bring back that flawed and ineffective law. They don't seem to grasp that the law they would resurrect very well would have made the carnage in Tucson far worse than it always was. Anti-gun groups and the media were quick to seize upon the fact that Jared Loughner was able to empty a 33-round magazine in a matter of seconds. What most didn't tell you is precisely why his rampage ended.Detachable firearm magazines are typically composed of four parts:
Pima County Sheriff Clarence W. Dupnik shed more light on how the gun was secured during the shooting. A woman grabbed a magazine of ammunition away from the shooter. The shooter, according to Dupnik, was able to grab another magazine - but the spring in it failed. As the shooter's second magazine failed, two men were able to subdue the shooter until law enforcement arrived.
- the magazine body
- the baseplate
- the follower
- the spring
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 11:35 AM
Comments
1
Next step will be a law forbidding citizens from possessing more than one magazine.
No, I do not believe that is too stupid even for a politician. What conceivable improvement to public safety comes from banning flash suppressors or bayonet lugs or pistol grips? If anyone can point me to a single atrocity that depended upon any of those features I'll buy him a sixpack. In every public endeavor, politicians' first impulse, which all too often results in law, is to take a purely cosmetic approach which ignores reality.
It would not surprise me if one were to introduce a law prohibiting firearms being produced in black. No, I'm not being sarcastic.
No, I do not believe that is too stupid even for a politician. What conceivable improvement to public safety comes from banning flash suppressors or bayonet lugs or pistol grips? If anyone can point me to a single atrocity that depended upon any of those features I'll buy him a sixpack. In every public endeavor, politicians' first impulse, which all too often results in law, is to take a purely cosmetic approach which ignores reality.
It would not surprise me if one were to introduce a law prohibiting firearms being produced in black. No, I'm not being sarcastic.
Posted by: Steve Skubinna at January 30, 2011 02:15 PM (aGyTg)
2
Now why didn't I think of that?
Posted by: Veeshir at January 31, 2011 05:30 PM (qFj0L)
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