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This will not be the first magazine capacity limit at the federal level. Feds tried a 10 round magazine limit in the past. The purpose of this restriction was to reduce the availability of high cap magazines. Rather than reducing the rate of ownership of high cap magazines it caused in the end after the dust settled a massive proliferation of the ownership of high cap magazines which brought about the development of more types of high cap magazines. This time around gun owners are not hesitating and they are buying up all the high cap magazines they can get their hands on because of a fear, or worry that there will be another magazine capacity limit. In the end this new ban will be reversed or expired and the final result will be that rather than having 10% of gun owners with a few high cap magazines, half of gun owners will have stashes of high cap magazines. Every time gun control groups take action they help the gun industry sell more guns and accessories.
Things have changed since Clinton's assault weapon ban. Gun control caught Americans off guard as lies and deception were used at every step in the advancement of gun control, in other words naive people were tricked into restricting a civil liberty and were given no reduction in crime or increase in security for it. The pro gun movement has had time to fully develop and mature by now, and there will be strong opposition and rebellion to any further restriction. Mexico, a nation of very strong gun control with an effective ban on guns, has had dozens of political assassinations in recent times, yet they have in place much stronger restrictions than a magazine capacity limit.
The final effect that this ban will have is a massive proliferation in the interest in high cap magazines and diversity of brands and types, and a proliferation in manufacturing capacity. Many states have enacted legislation that will supersede federal regulation of products that are manufactured and purchased only in the state. This will result in high capacity manufacturing being established in each of these states. So the ban will not stop high cap magazine enthusiasts from buying them and once the ban is lifted or expires there will be so much extra high cap magazine manufacturing capacity that prices will drop and proliferation will reach all time levels that would otherwise not be possible.
Before the AWB only odd individual owned battle rifles (what some call assault rifles) now the "assault rifles" are some of the most popular types of gun.
Should we ban high capacity magazines? Are high cap magazines necessary? The real question you should be asking is should we provoke Americans into making the high cap magazine industry into a success story.
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