I like shooting. When I turn 18 and get the money for a gun, I do believe I will own a bolt action rifle as well as a shotgun. I'll probably get a semi-automatic rifle (typically confused with an assault rifle) with a 30 round magazine. The shotgun will be accessible for my home. Any extraneous rifles will be locked, unloaded, cleaned, and possibly disassembled.
When I turn 21 I will apply for a concealed carry permit, take the required courses, and train regularly with a handgun to use as a carry weapon. This will be maintained and kept on me for the defense of myself and any other citizens who might (but hopefully won't) need it. I'm also debating applying for ATF approval for a pre-1986 true assault rifle that will fire fully automatic. It will be locked and disassembled. I will train with it regularly and occasionally take it out for a day of fun because it is a great hobby.
All of these will be maintained and stored with ammunition. Disassembled (with the exception of home defense weapons) but accessible in a reasonably short amount of time.
I do not ever intend on using these to take a human life but if one is forcibly going to be taken I'm not going to let it be mine, that of a loved one, or that of an innocent bystander if I can help it.
Consider this: First we have our classic tyrannical government scenario. This cannot be discounted considering our country's foundation. Also we do have history of people in power abusing said power. This isn't to say we're expecting our government to come down and oppress its citizens. But consider a martial law scenario where a section of the military under the command of a single person indiscriminately fires upon civilians in US territory. This isn't something I expect or hope to happen in my lifetime. But what if it does?
What about invasion from a foreign entity? A war or terrorist attack? What if the people on any of the hijacked planes on 9/11 had been carrying semi automatic weapons?
What about civil unrest? During the LA riots, several shop owners successfully defended their stores with automatic weapons. If I was looting a store and the owner pulled a fully activated AK-47, I'd move across the street. Several people had to defend their homes during Hurricane Katrina. What if something stupid happens, like the power grid going down? I live in a neighborhood of several hundred homes that's a 15 minute drive away from thenearest store and a 45 minute drive from the nearest hospital. I couldn't locate a police station right now if my life depended on it. I have a rough idea of the nearest fire station. It's a 20 minute drive. There's a 2 lane road to get into my neighborhood and if that gets blocked off at any point, you can't get in or out. If power failed for 2 weeks, we would not be on the top of the priority list for the authorities. Consider there's no supplies for miles, I can guarantee we'd have robberies. We already had over 40 break ins in 2 months last summer, and that was just bored kids.
Again, I'm not saying this happens, but if it does, I'm not going to be able to go out, buy a gun, get hundreds of rounds of ammo, and train and get proficient with it. If anything goes bad, even for a couple days before it gets back under control, I'm willing to bet you want the responsible neighbor with the gun on your side.
Also, let's talk about the restrictions. High powered semi automatic rifles kill many, many less people than handguns. The two most offending weapons are, I believe, a .38 and a .357, both revolvers. Both are cheap to buy, easy to handle, and only hold 6 rounds. Under any gun ban, these would still be legal. Even New York, which just capped magazines at 7 rounds, would have absolutely no provisions against the two biggest killers in America.
Also, it's believed that in the Newtown shooting, the assault rifle actually wasn't fired. It was all handguns. The Virginia Tech killer used a Glock handgun (legal) which he was incredibly proficient with. The Columbine killers used a Tech-9 (which would be banned under new laws), a sawed off shotgun (legal, but not to saw down) and handguns (legal) along with improvised CO2 bombs they called "crickets".
The DC sniper used a .223 caliber rifle, but if I remember, it was bolt action and not semi automatic. Even if it was a semi auto, no more than a few rounds were fired and they were long range.
In fact, Aurora is perhaps an outlier in the fact that an automatic assault rifle was used. I think if anybody in that theater had a gun, especially an automatic (and obviously the training) they could have at least suppressed him, got his head down, and distracted him long enough for people to escape. That's assuming the civilian shooting back doesn't even hit the target.
Also, we have to look at Finland, who has almost identical gun laws to us. You do have to declare a reason to own a weapon, but sport shooting and gun collecting are considered valid reasons, which means anyone who really wanted one could get it anyways. Yet, Finland has one of the absolute lowest gun death rates in the world.
I think that's all I have to say for now.
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