Re: Three questions: 1) Were automatic weapons used?
1) To my knowledge, maybe. It was an XM-15, but there are two variants that either comply or do not comply with the Federal Assault Weapons Ban because some states have kept the law in place. I cannot find reliable reports on whether the XM-15 in question was fully automatic or just semi-automatic.
2) An assault rifle is different from an assault weapon. Basically an assault rifle is a battle rifle that may or may not be capable of full-auto or burst-fire modes. An assault weapon is a legal definition and as such, is ridiculous to the average person: a bayonet mount and a telescoping stock make a weapon an assault weapon, for instance.
3) There was no reason to get more specific about arms, as the real intent was to give the collective citizenry the power of military arms so they could not be easily subdued by force. The Second Amendment has nothing to do with hunting or self-defense, but of the legitimate concern that government of one kind or another would subdue the people with unreasonable and unjust demands.
Originally posted by Polish_Silver
View Post
2) An assault rifle is different from an assault weapon. Basically an assault rifle is a battle rifle that may or may not be capable of full-auto or burst-fire modes. An assault weapon is a legal definition and as such, is ridiculous to the average person: a bayonet mount and a telescoping stock make a weapon an assault weapon, for instance.
3) There was no reason to get more specific about arms, as the real intent was to give the collective citizenry the power of military arms so they could not be easily subdued by force. The Second Amendment has nothing to do with hunting or self-defense, but of the legitimate concern that government of one kind or another would subdue the people with unreasonable and unjust demands.
Comment