Live from the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill, where
the Committee on the Judiciary is holding its third hearing on gun
regulation since the Sandy Hook Massacre:
Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) opened by laying out her case
for a new, more stringent assault weapons ban. Her major premises
were that mass shootings have increased in the past few years, and
that semi-automatic, military-style assault rifles with
high-capacity magazines have been the common thread in these more
recent incidents.
“We are holding these hearings because the massacre at Newtown
was, sadly, not an anomaly,” she said. As such, she proposes a ban
on semi-automatic rifles which accept detachable magazines and
feature one or more military-style features, such as a front grip
or bayonet. The previous federal ban, in force between 1994 and its
2004 sunset, set the limit at two such feature. The proposed ban
also outlaws a panoply of specific gun models such as the AR-15,
and high-capacity magazines which exceed ten rounds. Senator
Feinstein also singled out a recently developed peripheral called
Slide Fire. This simple sliding stock enables the use of a “bump
fire” technique to discharge a semi-automatic rifle at a rate
approaching fully automatic machine guns with minimal effect on
accuracy.
“Since the Newtown massacre several states … have shown
leadership in (enacting) or strengthening assault weapon bans,”
Senator Feinstein asserted before challenging the federal
government to do the same. After laying out the major provisions of
her own legislation, she attempted to head off major objections to
it. The California Democrat asserted that hunters and sport
shooters would not be affected, and noted that guns and magazines
legally owned as of the ban’s enactment would be grandfathered in,
not confiscated, and even quoted Antonin Scalia’s Heller
opinion: “We think that limitation is fairly supported by the
historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of ‘dangerous and
unusual weapons.’”