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Los Angeles, CA—There are
those journalists who seem to think are experts on firearms. At least that’s what they want their readers
and viewers think. For the most part
they’ve never fired a gun and if they have it was not under the supervision of
a professional trainer.
These folks write and speak
words for a living, so they want to be colorful and use what they feel are the
strongest terms and phrases. Too often
they don’t have a clue what they are talking about. That’s when their ignorance is laid bare.
Here are the most misused
terms:
1.
Assault Rifle
2.
High Powered
Rifle
3.
Point Blank Range
4.
Execution Style
5.
Clip
Journalists for some reason
believe cops are experts on firearms.
Some of them are but its rarely the police bosses or their department
spokespeople. Reporters most often quote gibberish from their police
sources.
Most readers think they know
just what these terms mean. Okay here
are the answers:
An assault rifle is a long
gun or carbine that fires more than a single round for each pull of the
trigger. Often the term Machine gun is
used and that can be wrong too. Then
there is the sub-machine gun.
Confused? Each term has a
different meaning. It may be time to do
a little enterprising research!
High Powered Rifles. Carbines like the M-4, M-16 or AK-47 or the
semi-automatic look-alike cousins are a lot of things but high powered is never
one of them. When you say high-powered
you are speaking of heavy ammunition with a lot of lead and gun powder. .308, 30-06 or larger rounds can be considered
high powered compared to smaller round fired by the aforementioned carbines or
hand gun rounds.
Point Blank Range. I have
seen great defense attorneys embarrass seasoned cops who have used this term
during court testimony. Okay officer,
would you please explain to the jury just what point blank range is? Are you scratching your head now? Don’t ever use a term you can’t easily define
just because it sounds cool.
Execution Style. Again this term is generally misused when a
defenseless victim is shot, perhaps while on their knees. However execution style is being tied to a
stake, blindfolded and shot by riflemen. That hopefully only happens after some Due
Process. Avoid this term except in
actual executions by firing squads.
Clip. A clip for firearms is a metal device that
holds ammunition rounds together. There
are very few types of firearms that require clips. People trying to describe ammunition
magazines redundantly and ignorantly use the term clip. Clip and magazine are not synonyms.
I ask every so -called journalist
who reports crime stories; why not take a simple firearms course? Why stay ignorant?
One last thing! Gun store owners or salespeople are not NRA spokespeople! The may know guns but they are the wrong people to ask about gun control. Call the NRA and they will get you to the right local person for a really interesting soundbite.
One last thing! Gun store owners or salespeople are not NRA spokespeople! The may know guns but they are the wrong people to ask about gun control. Call the NRA and they will get you to the right local person for a really interesting soundbite.
Comments
1)fire and intermediate type cartridge like 5.56,7.92x33,7.62x39 or 5.45x39.
2)be a select fire weapon:safe, semi, full auto or a burst option.
3)large capacity box magazine:typically over 20 rounds
4)be a carbine type configuration,39 inches or 1 meter or less in length
Guns like G3,FN-FAL,Cetme,M-14 are not assault rifles,they are battle rifles.
Calling every pistol a Glock, calling a semi-auto pistol a revolver, using the term "assault weapon" which is an invention of the gun control crowd, every rifle is a sniper rifle, even assault weapons.
On the clips versus magazine terminology, clip and magazine may be used interchangeably. While an en bloc clip or a stripper clip is not a mag, a mag is certainly a clip in colloquial use.
The reason that the military is adamant about the word magazine is because when we trans-itioned from M1 to M14 we went from en bloc clips to mags. In order to halt confusion with regards to resupply, they strictly enforced the nomenclature. We no longer have the risk of wrong ammo resupply, but the term mag is now culturally embedded.
Regards.
But don't get your hopes up. Reporters are no more accurate with anything they report on, than they are with guns. Most are ordinary propagandists.