Agreed. The statistical incidence of "assault weapon" (a difficult category to define properly, to begin with) violence is quite low. Most gun violence involves handguns, not long guns, yet it's the fear of "military-style weapons" that many use to promote change. I'm no adversary to changes if they are predicated on good principles, but please don't insult my intelligence by pointing at the scary-looking guns. Show me statistics, and aim at the weapons most likely to be used in crime.Any discussion about the rate of "gun violence" coupled to "Assault Weapons" is a non-starter from the start.
Long guns of any sort are seldom used in "US Gun Crimes"...."Assault Weapons" dramatically less than that.
Ya'll are falling victim to the "If it saves ONE life" mentality linked to media saturation of tragedies that are statistically minuscule. Handguns NY FAR do most of the killing in the USA. This hoopla over assault weapons is a side-show that allows politicians to bathe in the spot light.