Request permission to chip in my own two cents.
This discussion started with "How do you define an assault weapon?"
I'd like to take the discussion back to the beginning, because I feel it has been slowly steered away from it.
An "assault weapon" is a military issue firearm, generally a carbine or rifle, capable of (currently) both automatic or selective automatic fire (i.e. 3-shot bursts) and a magazine of suitable capacity. Amen.
Definiition given through 33 years of active military service.
Some assault weapons can be of handgun size/origin, such as the fully automatic Beretta 93R or the MAC/Ingram.
Others, such as 7.62/.50cal sniper rifles cannot fit in this category because sniping is in itself NOT an assault discipline, quite the opposite.
Perhaps we should discuss if the lawmakers should define an "assalut-style weapon" and ban that category.What would be an "assault-style weapon"?
Typically, a "
rifle or carbine, derived from a military issue assault weapon, capable of semiautomatic fire with the same or balistically similar ammunition, and capable of using the same accessories".
(Definition used by European lawmakers)
For example, the Colt AR-15 derives from the Colt M-16.
For example, the civilian version of the AK-47 / 74.
But not, by the same token, a "riot style shotgun" if the same receiver/breech/magazine are available in the same caliber with a wood stock for hunting.
In other words,
appearance alone cannot define an assault-style weapon, but the possibility of using it in a military-style fashion does.Looking at the definition,
one also realizes that many assault weapon derivatives do not fall in the "assault style weapon" category because they derive from weapons which are today obsolete as assault weapons.
From the Wincherter .30cal carbine we have the Ruger Mini-14 and the 10/22.
Nobody in his right mind would today define the Winchester .30cal carbine as an assault weapon, times have changed, so the derivatives have changed category as well.
But in the 1950s a Mini-14 could well have been considered "assault style".
The same applies to a Garand M1 in 30.06 and .308.
By "assault style" definition, an AR-15 could well be banned, as well as a Beretta BM59, or an AK47/74. I personally see no problem with that.
As for those who want to shoot at coyotes or feral hogs...
Wild boar is considered a delicacy in Europe, think about it.
At what ranges do you shoot your "assault weapons" for coyote control (target practice?) How farther will the bullet fly when you miss? Can you see that far?
Is anyone willing to go on trial for manslaughter when a passer-by is killed at 1000 yards behind the bushes because you missed that coyote at 300 yards?