Nothing to say about the chart above?
N ANALYSIS OF MASS shootings in the United States of America reveals one variable that has remained remarkably consistent over time: The use of detachable, high-capacity ammunition magazines that hold more than 10 cartridges.
A recent study of mass shootings by the Citizens Crime Commission of New York City identified 30 such incidents from 1984 until the present in which semiautomatic firearms (either handguns or long guns) and high-capacity ammunition magazines were used. This includes Virginia Tech (2007), Northern Illinois University (2008), Fort Hood (2009), Tucson (2011), Aurora (2012), Oak Creek (2012), and Sandy Hook (2012).
[See a collection of political cartoons on gun control and gun rights.]
It is notable that several of these shootings were stopped when the gunman attempted to reload his firearm, including the 1993 shooting on the Long Island Railroad, the 1998 shooting at Thurston High School in Oregon and, of course, Tucson.
In a dramatic statement made in an Arizona courtroom in November, Tucson victim Gabrielle Giffords and her husband Mark Kelly made it clear that politicians who refuse to see the connection between mass murder and high-capacity ammunition magazines are being willfully blind:
Notice how above the chart, it says the Virginia tech shooter had X number of magazines, most of them 10 round. It doesn't include the fact that out of X number, there were also 15 round and they were initially used.
I concede the point if someone is determined to kill people they will do it with a musket if that is what they have available. And handguns aren't going away any time soon, but I think most people whether they are 1st responders or potential victims, will fare much better against a person with a handgun than a long gun. Especially a long gun with a lot of rounds. Why is it that I can't legally hunt a duck with more than 3 rounds in the chamber, but Bubba can have an AR15 with 30 round magazines?