By Jacob Sullum
(Reason.com) Yesterday Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.) revealed that her "assault weapon" ban will not be part
of the gun control bill that Senate Democrats plan to offer next
month. Although her bill still can be offered as an amendment,
Politico
reports, "its exclusion from the package makes what was already
an uphill battle an almost certain defeat." At the risk of reading
too much into this delightful development, I count it as a victory
not just for the Second Amendment but for rationality in
lawmaking.
As a
comparison of the testimony pro and con readily reveals,
supporters of Feinstein's bill never offered a plausible, let alone
persuasive, explanation for the distinction she drew between the
guns she deemed "legitimate" and the dreaded "assault weapons" she
sought to ban. The closer you
looked at the bill, the less sense it made, a fact that
Feinstein tried to paper over by
encouraging people to conflate semi-automatic, military-style
rifles with the machine guns carried by soldiers. That flagrant
fraud sufficed to win passage of the federal "assault weapon" ban
that expired in 2004 (which was also sponsored by Feinstein), and
it continues to influence
public opinion. But this time around it was not enough to obscure
the absurdity of Feinsten's attempt to distinguish between good and
evil guns by reference to irrelevant features such as barrel
shrouds and adjustable stocks. With no evidence or arguments to
offer, Feinstein despicably invoked dead, "dismembered" children in
a transparent bid to short-circuit logical thought. Her appeal to
blind fear was familiar to anyone who has watched this
authoritarian centrist rail
against mythical drugs or kowtow
to the national security state. I savor her richly deserved
defeat.
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