Americans
don't need high-capacity weapons to protect themselves, but if they want a
weapon for protection, "buy a shotgun," Vice President Joe Biden
said.
"If you want to
protect yourself, get a double-barreled shotgun," Biden said during a live town
hall on Facebook hosted by Parents magazine.
"You don't need
an AR-15," Biden said, referring to the semiautomatic rifle used in some recent
U.S. massacres.
"It's harder to
aim, it's harder to use and, in fact, you don't need 30 rounds to protect
yourself. Buy a shotgun. Buy a shotgun," the vice president
said.
Biden, who told
viewers he had two shotguns in his home, said most military-style weapons aren't
good for home defense.
He questioned
the need for any hunter to use an assault weapon such as the assault-style
AR-15, a civilian version of the U.S. military's M-16
rifle.
"If you can't
get the deer in the second or third shot, you shouldn't be out hunting deer,"
Biden said during the Facebook session.
The White House
has urged Congress to adopt universal background checks, ban certain types of
military-style weapons and curb the sale of high-capacity magazine clips to
reduce gun violence.
A magazine clip
is an ammunition storage and feeding device within or attached to a repeating
firearm.
White House
efforts have faced stiff resistance from gun-rights groups including the
National Rifle Association and individual gun owners.
Biden said
Tuesday universal background checks are a common-sense solution to the
problem.
"Everyone who
purchases a weapon has to have a background check," he said, adding new
gun-safety laws would not be a first step toward
confiscation.
"There is no ban
on guns," Biden said. "Nobody is going to take anyone's
guns.
"I have two
shotguns at home," he said. "They're in a cabinet. They're locked. There is
ammunition there as well. No one is going to come and take my gun. No one's
going to take anyone's gun. We're talking about a background
check."
He also said the
Constitution gives the government power to ban certain types of
weapons.
"Now, if that
were not the case, then you should be able to go buy a flame-thrower that the
military has. You should be able to go, if you're a billionaire, buy an F-15
[jet fighter] loaded with ordnance. You should be able to buy an M1 tank. You
should be able to buy a machine gun. You should be able to buy a grenade
launcher. And you can't do those things," he said.
If Americans
accept those limitations, the question becomes balancing the right to weapons
for self-defense and sporting use against those that are
outlawed.
Biden Thursday
is to travel to Western Connecticut State University in Danbury, about 10 miles
from Newtown, where 20 children and six adult staff members were killed at Sandy
Hook Elementary School.
He is to deliver
remarks at a conference on gun violence hosted by Democratic Sens. Richard
Blumenthal and Chris Murphy of Connecticut and Rep. Elizabeth Esty, D-Conn.
UPI
Congress' latest
effort at a new assault weapons ban would protect more than 2,200 specific
firearms, including a semi-automatic rifle that is nearly identical to one of
the guns used in the bloodiest shootout in FBI history. Huffington
Post The American gun
market is estimated at $2 billion to $3 billion a year. Business
Week Each year, about
4 to 7 million new firearms are manufactured for sale in the United States.
bradycampaign.org There are more
gun dealers and gun stores than there are major supermarkets in the United
States, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. ABC
News In the last
twelve months, over 20 million background checks have been performed by the FBI.
That amounts to a gun being purchased in America about every 1.5 seconds.
infowars.com
ISH/HJ