US What the Owner of an AR-15 Sees in Every Single Place He Goes - Just Bugman FUDD Things

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What the Owner of an AR-15 Sees in Every Single Place He Goes​

April 4, 2023

In addition to the horrifying security camera footage of the shooter who killed six people, including three children, at the Covenant School in Nashville last week, there emerged some less publicized but no less disconcerting images: photos, apparently obtained from social media, of assault-style weapons belonging to the shooter. These guns were emblazoned with adolescent slogans (“hellfire”) and decorated with stickers that might have appeared on the deck of a skateboard: the logo of the fashion house Stüssy, a blue-and-red illustration similar to work by the graphic artist known as Kaws, a maroon globe of uncertain provenance.
These weapons did not call to mind the .30-06 rifle I use for deer hunting in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan or any other gun I have ever handled. At first I did not even register them as belonging to the same category of object. They reminded me of the guitar I owned as an angsty ninth-grader, with its Ralph Nader campaign sticker and the phrase “This machine kills fascists” written in permanent marker in imitation of Woody Guthrie. These guns were lethal weapons, yes. But much as my guitar was not only a musical instrument but also a medium for (dorky and clichéd) personal expression, the guns were acts of and occasions for speech.
Understanding the cultural appeal of AR-15-style semiautomatic rifles like those used in Nashville may not be as urgent a matter as the policy question concerning their availability. Indeed, though I generally support gun rights, I favor imposing restrictions on the manufacture and ownership of AR-15-style weapons. But the problem is deeper than the guns themselves — not just the existence of the evil people who pull the triggers but also the specific place these weapons occupy in American life and the logic by which their ownership seems justifiable to enthusiasts.
The AR-15 is situated at the intersection of a relatively innocent hobbyism and the sinister mainstreaming of features of the militia culture of the 1990s, even among people who lead law-abiding lives. The primary selling point of the AR-15 is that it can be endlessly modified, configured, reimagined. It can become louder or quieter, easier to carry, wield, fire and reload, or more lethal. It is meant to be combined with a seemingly endless array of customizable stocks and grips, blast mitigation devices, piston uppers and conversion kits. These components are themselves paired with a vast assortment of accessories — vests, helmets, straps and other gear unfailingly designated as “tactical.”

It is this adjective, and the ubiquity of references to “tacticians” in advertising copy, review sites and hobby forums, that suggests the baleful aspect of AR-15 culture. Who exactly is practicing these tactics, and where and for what purpose? What this “tactics” business signals is not so much a commitment to action (the overwhelming majority of those who own AR-15s are law-abiding) as a general frame of mind. To the would-be tactician, every place that humans inhabit — housing developments, apartment complexes, stores, strip malls, hotels, churches, hospitals and, yes, schools — is another opportunity to imagine oneself taking part in military-style maneuvers. Where would you go for cover if you were here? How would you hold this position? What weapons and gear would you use?
Such mental habits may be usefully cultivated in the training of U.S. Special Forces. But at a time of social atomization, racial unrest, increased crime rates and widespread drug abuse, it is harder to see the upside of instilling this paranoid attitude among millions of ordinary Americans who otherwise show no indication of moving to remote Montana and stocking ammo for the day the black helicopters arrive.

I am an enthusiastic if undistinguished hunter for whom the most enjoyable time of the year is the long Thanksgiving weekend, when I emerge from the deer blind only for the Michigan-Ohio State football game. My earliest memory of using a gun is at age 6, when I shot at and missed a cloud of bats flocked above an old barn on the edge of our property. But the world of bump stocks and blast mitigation devices is as remote from my experience as is hang gliding. For AR-15 enthusiasts, the gun is not a means to an end — a tool with which you hunt, a weapon with which you protect your family and property — but rather the end itself, a site of fantasy and meaning making.
I suspect that part of the reason for the rise of AR-15 fandom is the decline of other American hobby cultures: auto repair, darkroom photography, ham radio operation and the like. Automobiles have become hulking mobile computers that often can be repaired only by manufacturer-approved dealerships; anyone with a smartphone can now take high-quality pictures; no one needs limited-frequency radio bands anymore to talk with people on the other side of the world. Gun ownership is among the last preserves of community for those who might once have enjoyed the opportunities for the innocent pursuit of mastery and refinement afforded by those innocuous pastimes.
But for all the amateur tinkering, the reality is that these fetishized murder weapons, so often treated by their owners as if they were indistinguishable from model ships or Pokémon cards, have been used repeatedly in incidents like the recent one in Nashville. The pervasiveness of these guns — made possible by the end of the federal ban on assault weapons in 2004 — has led to the creation of social and cultural conditions in which such shootings have become a familiar fact of American life. In that sense, even “harmless” AR-15 fandom belongs somewhere on a continuum with our uncritical attitude toward violent video games, our blithe acceptance of the legalization of cannabis and online gambling and our casual indifference to the weakest and most vulnerable Americans.


In a Christmas card from December 2021, Representative Andy Ogles of Tennessee, a Republican whose district includes Nashville, commemorated the birth of Christ by posing alongside his family with their collection of assault rifles. That same month, Representative Thomas Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, posted a photo on Twitter of his wife and children in front of their Christmas tree in which everyone was holding an assault weapon. My opposition to what the AR-15 represents is not a methodologically rigorous attempt to identify the primary cause of what social scientists call mass shootings. In some ways it is simply an expression of hope for a saner culture, a plea for something other than hypothetical terrorism to form the basis of our leisure time and family memories.

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Matthew Walther (@matthewwalther) is a contributing Opinion writer for The New York Times. He is the editor of The Lamp, a Catholic literary journal, and a media fellow at the Institute for Human Ecology at the Catholic University of America.
 
You know what does remind me of that? Charles Whitman in 1966 killing 15 people with a 30-06 bolt. If this guy were writing then he'd be saying how his .22 can't do that. Except the 22 LR has probably killed the most people of all ammo types across the world. 'Just one more ban' types.
I originally had a Texas Tower shooting reply planned for this thread and then I got distracted and didn't bother finishing the thought, but yes, I agree with this 100%.
 
Then you should easily post one of these funny mainstream leftist memes. Im just seeing excuses
Squirtle.jpg
 
"Hello fellow gun owners! Say, don't you think it's time we all stopped owning guns? I mean, I can't be the only one who's realized that they're dangerous, right? And you wouldn't want to be a danger to anyone, right? RIGHT?! "

Piss off you braindead, greasy, wanna-be elite with such utter contempt for anyone you've deemed below you that you actually thought such an "argument" would work.

The left, once again, tries it's "appeal to experts" approach - and disastrously misunderstands the degree to which people are impressed by an alleged expert doing something stupid/out of touch/uncouth to actual experts.

Or equally unimpressed with the supposed credentials of the supposed expert - Hey, I've looked up at night and seen the moon almost every day of my adult life, that means I'm qualified to make decisions about NASA, right?!

Like, they're convinced that if Bill Nye craps his pants on live national TV, everyone else will start doing it too, to follow the "Expert" - instead of doing what normal people do in situations like that. Telling everyone at the watercooler the next day that Bill Nye was a tard on TV last night who actually went and crapped his pants....
 
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These weapons did not call to mind the .30-06 rifle I use for deer hunting in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan or any other gun I have ever handled.
Bitch, even .30-06 has gotten with the times.
Fucking FUDDs, I'm shocked he mention that all you need is a 1911 in .45, as that will atomize any threat.
 
What dude, you don't find this to be the absolute height of comedy?
Mainstream meme humor is intentionally random and absurd. I don't find it funny either, but the right-wing memes on this thread alone I've seen people claim are better are just the same "tranny bad" statement the right has been saying for years, even if they are well edited.
 
You know what does remind me of that? Charles Whitman in 1966 killing 15 people with a 30-06 bolt. If this guy were writing then he'd be saying how his .22 can't do that. Except the 22 LR has probably killed the most people of all ammo types across the world. 'Just one more ban' types.
.22 LR is actually a popular choice for hitmen and assassin types because of its unique properties and the ability to suppress it, and not over penetrate much.
Bitch, even .30-06 has gotten with the times.
Fucking FUDDs, I'm shocked he mention that all you need is a 1911 in .45, as that will atomize any threat.
I kinda like it but still kinda prefer the wood and steel version. A modern .30-06 support weapon would be the cat's meow though, I think there's even an AR lower in .30-06 but it's not common.
 
I kinda like it but still kinda prefer the wood and steel version. A modern .30-06 support weapon would be the cat's meow though, I think there's even an AR lower in .30-06 but it's not common.
The HCAR is pricy and there is indeed an AR-style atleast rifle that does .30-06. Thing is, modern .308 works just as well, but convincing American gun owners that bigger is not always better is virtually impossible, even if you have the data to back it up. We'll put more powder in cartridges before we'll switch to smaller, ballistically superior bullets.
 
The HCAR is pricy and there is indeed an AR-style atleast rifle that does .30-06. Thing is, modern .308 works just as well, but convincing American gun owners that bigger is not always better is virtually impossible, even if you have the data to back it up. We'll put more powder in cartridges before we'll switch to smaller, ballistically superior bullets.
There's a reason the M14 lasted only a blink-of-an-eye in terms of being the standard issue rifle of a nation's army - fullsize rifle rounds at full auto rates of fire are just too much for the situation at hand.

Nevertheless,

The intermediate cartridge still is dismissed as "made to wound, not kill" by people who've probably, largely, never fired an AR pattern gun in their lives outside of Call of Duty.
 
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The HCAR is pricy and there is indeed an AR-style atleast rifle that does .30-06. Thing is, modern .308 works just as well, but convincing American gun owners that bigger is not always better is virtually impossible, even if you have the data to back it up. We'll put more powder in cartridges before we'll switch to smaller, ballistically superior bullets.
American gun owners especially older ones are rather FUDDish to varying extents to new bullets unless the U.S. military adopts it first. As they only want same old shit ammo that can be bought roughly anywhere in the country.
 
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