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Kate Fall's avatar

If someone attacks me, I'll unlock my gun safe, load my AR-15, and then the attacker will be sorry? Or should I carry the AR-15 everywhere loaded? It just seems like the fear of attack or home invasion would be mitigated by a handgun; the AR-15 seems like it would be a burden in that scenario.

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Travis's avatar

An AR-15 hit to a torso at under 50 yards is usually going to drop someone immediately. You often have to shoot someone several times with a handgun in the torso to drop them. There is an insane amount of difference in lethality between a .223/5.56 bullet fired from an AR-15 versus a jacketed hollow point fired by a handgun. It's not even close. What the AR-15 lacks in smaller size it makes up for in terminal ballistics.

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Walternate's avatar

The ugly reality of self-defense is that you're not concerned about your would-be attacker in the slightest. The very reason we don't want these guns used on children is precisely why someone would want it for self-defense. You want to stop them immediately. And contrary to popular opinion, the caliber doesn't necessarily mean "stopping power", often thought to mean the impact itself is forceful enough to stop someone. In reality, what stops them is most likely a sudden drop in blood pressure caused by serious internal damage leading to unconsciousness.

That being said, there are many weapons that can stop someone in their tracks and it doesn't mean that I should own one. Most people would probably be best served by a 12ga shotgun to product their home and family. Out on the street, that's not going to work, but I'm not against concealed carry at all. My problem is that even when Texas required me to take a course in order to get my license, people that had scary bad aim (like missing a human-shaped target at 3 yards!!) still got their licenses!!!!!! At that point it just feels like it's about revenue collection for the state and not about ensuring safe carriers.

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Apr 11, 2023
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Kate Fall's avatar

This may be true for some people, but it's not my experience with the MAGAs in my family. They have income-earning skills and people skills that give them lots of confidence. They also have a lot of misplaced anger they don't know what to do with. As the men get over the age of 70, their impulse control seems to lessen and the threats slip out.

Do you have to feel powerless to threaten violence? Sometimes, that is the underlying reason. But not always. Rage doesn't always come from powerlessness. And it doesn't help that this rage is constantly being stoked beyond proportion by an honor culture.

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