That's kind of the point. Full automatic is used to provide suppressing fire and isn't meant to be used often. It's a better tactic for covering others who have to move around, such as pulling a wounded soldier behind cover or support movement of others into better firing positions.Luke wrote:Eh. I think automatic weapons take everything away from marksmanship. Sure you have grouping, but accuracy doesn't mean a lick.ninjainspandex wrote: Im cool with long extensive background checks for gun ownership as long as the license also allows for ownership of full auto weapons as well.
As for weapons like that, the intent was to allow a populace to rise up against a tyrannical government, so letting the people have access to whatever weapons the military was using would help to put them on an equal footing. Nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons largely were nonexistent. But the American Revolution had been one by a combination of militias, a national army, and private citizens operating as guerrilla fighters. Allowing the populace to keep their firearms meant that in case of foreign invasion or domestic tyranny, the populace had the equipment it needed to again form militias and instigate guerrilla warfare.
And as far as taking guns away from the populace in an attempt to argue it will lead to fewer shooting deaths, it might...though admittedly it might not reduce crime by that much. Most murders are committed with handguns, not automatic rifles. And violent crime overall has been going down steadily since 1993. The increasing rates through the 1980s are often blamed on violence surrounding illegal drugs, particularly cocaine. In general the US has a violent rate similar to a developing nation as opposed to a first world one. To me that signifies less of a problem with weapons and more of an issue with our social fabric.
Internally, the US is defined by economic struggles and upheavals, segregation based on ethnicity, a corrupt and highly partisan political system, and troubled by a variety of issues relating to our handling of sexual orientation, religion, approaches to crime and organized crime, etc. To think that merely removing guns will solve the problem feels more like trying to put a band-aid on a gunshot wound. None of our major battles have worked out: the War on Drugs is a joke, the War on Poverty has done little to stop a relatively consistent poverty rate, and the War on Terrorism...well, I'm sure everyone here has thoughts on that one. And a large part of this is that instead of seriously sitting down and considering our options, we rely mostly on our constituents desires and knee-jerk reactions to fix our problems. This current look at gun control is a knee-jerk reaction to several highly publicized shootings. It's sexy in politics right now to make statements one way or the other, but depending on the measures taken right now, in a year it likely won't be, so we won't hear much about it.

