Biden's Proposed Assault Weapon Ban Is Unconstitutional, Unlikely, and Ineffectual
As usual, Biden's gun policy proposals bump up against reality.

In his State of the Union address last night, President Joe Biden repeated his desire for a new assault weapon ban. "In 10 years that ban was law, mass shootings went down," he insisted. "After we let it expire in a Republican administration, mass shootings tripled." He is referring to a long-sunsetted ban on certain varieties of semiautomatic rifles in effect from 1994 to 2004.
As usual with talk of "assault weapons," the definitions of what weapons he's targeting are both vague and pointless. Biden himself has admitted that weapons of the same level of potential danger to others when misused by criminals will remain legal under any conceivable Democratic plan to institute a ban on new sales of them moving forward. (His plan also involves requiring those who already legally own such weapons—however the government defines them—to register them, which experience shows will also be pointless except in creating a huge class of "criminals" who have never harmed anyone.)
As usual, Biden and his party are aiming at a self-defense and leisure choice of millions of Americans, who never have and never will harm anyone unjustly with their weapons, to target a very small portion of any perceived gun violence crisis.
In 2021, and that year was perfectly typical in this regard, according to National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) data, rifles of all sorts were used in 4.9 percent (or 620) of all homicide offenses that involved firearms and 4.7 percent (or 11,995) of all assault offenses that involved firearms. In terms of homicides, for comparison of the nature of the crisis, motor vehicles/vessels were far more fatal in 2021 to Americans than rifles of any sort, with 951 homicides involving them.
Biden's assertion about the effectiveness of the old ban, and what has happened since then, is also off. Data gathered by the Marshall Project, which defines a "mass shooting" as an event "in which a gunman slaughters four or more strangers in a public place," suggest that Biden was wrong about mass shootings going down during the initial ban from 1994 to 2004.
The Marshall Project divides its analysis into five-year periods so that no one-year outlier muddles the matter. That analysis found that in every five-year period during which the original ban was partly or totally in effect, mass shooting incidents were higher than in the two five-year periods prior to the first ban. When it comes to casualties, the five-year period fully covered by the ban (1997–2001) saw more mass shooting casualties than 1982–86 (25 percent more) or 1987–91 (34 percent more).
To give Biden some credit, the last five-year period for which we have solid data, 2017–21, did see more mass shooting incidents than during the 1994–2004 period when the older assault weapon ban was in place. Still, the rise in such incidents was 50 percent (compared to the only five-year period in the Marshall Project analysis completely covered by the old ban), not the "triple" Biden stated. If we grant that Biden was speaking clumsily and meant to say that mass shooting fatalities "tripled," he's closer to correct. According to the Marshall Project data, fatalities from mass shootings increased 156 percent from 1997 to 2001 (again, the only five-year period in its analysis completely covered by the old ban) to 2017–21.
But, of course, the old "ban" did not eliminate mass ownership and access to existing weapons. The huge rise in mass shooting casualties, meanwhile, is largely a phenomenon of the past five years, casting doubt on any reliable causality across the nation and across time linking Americans' ability to buy new "assault weapons" and increased casualties of gun violence. Indeed, digging into the best relevant social science related to assault weapons and mass shootings, the RAND Corporation, in a paper updated last month, concluded that given "our assessment of these findings and the relative strengths of these studies, we find inconclusive evidence for the effect of assault weapon bans on mass shootings" (emphasis theirs).
The politics of Biden or the Democratic Party getting anywhere with such a new ban are highly iffy. The constitutionality of such a ban on a commonly and historically owned weapon capable of use for self-defense in the home is also highly questionable, especially given the Supreme Court's vacating in July 2022 of Bianchi v. Frosh, a 4th Circuit Court of Appeals decision upholding Maryland's state-level assault weapon ban.
The Supreme Court sent the case back to the 4th Circuit, insisting it must give "further consideration in light of New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. Bruen." That's the case in which the Supreme Court rejected mere "interest-balancing" as sufficient to override Second Amendment rights. This new precedent ought to make lower courts take Americans' rights to possess arms more seriously than they reliably have in the decade and a half since the Heller decision made it clear the amendment covers at least the possession of commonly owned weapons for self-defense in the home.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Biden (D) does not want law abiding Americans the ability to defend themselves using current day technology civilian firearms but is still ok with transferring billions of dollars of weapons to a corrupt regime that had been engaging in genocide against her people and selling some of those arms on the black market (yesterday Chișinău complained about too many arms flowing into Moldova from Ukraine). Biden is the same person that allowed the transfer of $70B of weapons to the Taliban, who he voted to go to war against.
Fuck Joe Biden
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I'm now creating over $35,400 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,300 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link------------------------------------>>> http://Www.JobsRevenue.Com
I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK. 🙂
Here is I started.……......>> http://WWW.SALARYBEZ.COM
But Michael Hihn told us about a billion times that libertarians should be the most enthusiastic supporters of all kinds of gun control laws, including an assault weapons ban.
Mike Hihn followed Sevo’s advice.
Now he is in heaven shouting down at us all in caps.
Probably accusing God of being part of the Christian caliphate.
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.NETPAYFAST.COM
People and their elected officials who want to ban stuff always have the advantage even when their bans are clearly unconstitutional. It takes five minutes to impose a ban and weeks, months, years or decades to overturn the ban. Politicians have almost unlimited time, money and legal resources to defend their unconstitutional bans, while the people harmed by them rarely have such resources, having to rely on public interest groups to pursue justice in their name. Almost immediately after unconstitutional bans are ruled unconstitutional, politicians can, and frequently do, impose new bans with slightly changed wording in an endless cycle of abuse; and nothing bad EVER seems to happen to such officials since they are protected against penalties for abuse of power while in office by tradition if nothing else.
"...in an endless cycle of abuse;"
Definitely worse than "a long train of abuses".
And we do nothing.
The US government is the abusive husband to a citizen's battered wife. It's a never ended cycle of abuse from the government to the citizen whereby government imposes regulations, restrictions, and bans and the citizen has little to no recourse other than going to court which costs money and is fought by the government with endless tax dollars. It's as if being a citizen is being a part of an implied Ponzi scheme. You get fucked regardless and the government just says, "Who? Me?"
Sadly, the same is true for any governmental action on any topic. The only way to prevent it from happening is to elect people who believe the Constitution matters.
That'll only happen if/when the majority of people believe it. Not holding my breath...
If Biden were smart, he'd watch what happens to Illinois's assault weapons ban in the court system. Of course, Biden isn't all that smart.
https://www.thecentersquare.com/illinois/macon-county-judge-issues-third-temporary-restraining-order-against-illinois-gun-ban/article_cb3ae2bc-a7e1-11ed-9d4f-1beeb03f03dc.html
In Macon County, Judge Rodney Forbes followed the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in issuing the order restraining Illinois from enforcing the law. But the order does not apply to the whole state, it only applies to the named plaintiffs and the association “Law-Abiding Gun Owners of Macon County," which has hundreds named in the order.
https://www.thecentersquare.com/illinois/court-rulings-against-gun-regulations-across-u-s-could-have-ramifications-in-illinois/article_4795f630-a733-11ed-82ba-676f780694d7.html
In Illinois, several state-level courts have issued limited temporary restraining orders against the state’s gun ban with more expected in the days ahead. Several federal-level court challenges also are pending against Illinois' new gun ban.
Biden's handlers are smart, and they love being able to push policies that appeal to their base but fail in the courts: this keeps the issue alive indefinitely, and they can blame courts and Republicans indefinitely.
Biden isn't interested in helping people, he is interested in winning elections.
FTFY. None of his policy proposals are particularly realistic.
I repost this once in a while.
There is a reason so many mass shootings happen at schools -- they are gun-free zones. Take that away, allow armed teachers, and mass school shootings will vanish within weeks or months as news reports show how suicidal and ineffective they have become.
Read or skim this article. Shooters stopped by civilians killed far fewer victims, because the stoppers were on the scene, whereas police had to be called, dispatched, arrive, coordinate, assess, and finally act cautiously. One begins to suspect there's a reason Mother Jones and the police ignore shootings with fewer than 4 victims.
The way to stop school shootings is simple:
* Get rid of gun-free zones.
* Let staff and teachers carry on the job. Open, concealed, doesn't matter.
Making carry mandatory isn't necessary, as shown by the statistics above, and it offends my sense of liberty, reduces the employment pool, and many people are not very good with guns.
Another bit of related research: https://crimeresearch.org/2019/05/major-new-research-on-school-safety-schools-that-allow-teachers-to-carry-guns-havent-seen-school-shootings-during-school-hours/
Home income solution to enable everyone to work online and receive weekly payments to bank acct. Earn over $500 every day and get payouts every week straight to account bank. My last month of income was $30,390 and all I do is work up to 4 hours a day on my computer. Easy work and steady income are great with this job.
More information……………………..>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
But, but, but, Biden’s right, isn’t he? The 1992 AWB prohibited semi-auto rifles with bayonet lugs, and during the time it was in place, almost no one was bayoneted to death on America’s mean streets.
Mossberg was still making shotguns with bayonet lugs, and being pump-action made them exempt to almost any other restrictions aside from minimum barrel lenght. Not to mention any "vintage" WW2 service/trophy rifles that people might have had as family heirlooms.
Banning lugs on "assault rifles" (which were then banned outright from 1994-2004 as well) left people with plenty of legal options to bayonet their neighbors, friends and family.
One thing that it's almost impossible to deny is that the expiration of the AWB led to an explosion in demand for the rifles which had been subject to it. Going into the ban, there were something like 1-2 million "grandfathered" rifles in private ownership when the ban on sales of new ones took effect (apparently including the ones used in the Columbine HS shooting), and less than 5 years after the expiration of the Federal ban, when Dems started talking about re-instating it frequently, the number of privately owned "assault" weapons was up to 15 million or more.
"Mass shooting" statistics are meaningless because the definitions are so inconsistent and inconsistently applied, and because mass shootings are such a tiny fraction of people killed in the US.
If you want a meaningful statistic, you need to use "number of murders committed with this type of gun".
If the purpose of 2A is to preserve the ability of the Nation or States to raise a militia on short notice, then the right of the people to keep "weapons of war" should be the most strongly protected since that's exactly what a defensive militia would need to have on hand in large numbers.
Not to mention that the supposed basis for the constitutionality of any kind of firearms regulations is a case in which the Supreme Court ruled that a minimum limit on shotgun barrel length was allowable because the weapons being banned had "no legitimate military use".
Biden's Proposals Are Unconstitutional, Unlikely, and Ineffectual
... no need to expand on that thought
Get a Shotgun!!!!!!!!!!!
Gun Control is a mnetal illnesss, an irrational fear of the danger.
In 2019, there were 364 murders by rifle, and if all had been committed by one of the 20 million AR15's (per Atlantic magazine), then only 300 hundred-thousandths of one percent of all AR15's were used .