Ummm, not to split hairs or otherwise interrupt what looks an awful lot like a nasty bout of knuckleheaditus, but can anyone tell me... has 1 hair on 1 human beings chinny-chin-chin been harmed by a legally owned 'grenade' launcher in the U.S., either purposefully or by accident, in...say... the last 5 years?
And just for clarity, "grenade" launchers? Anyone else see that as a pretty serious grasp at straws? Otherwise, bringing such nonsense up serves only to prove the very point of this thread. From the ominous and Satanic 'grenade' launcher, one can legally fire the following: dummy rounds, smoke shells, parachute flares, and a chalk-dust training round. Actual "Grenades" are still
quite illegal. If I'm wrong, please point me to the fish and tackle shop that sells incendiary/fragmentary/high explosive ammunition, cuz I'll be there with 5 Mastercards and a pocket full of greenbacks tomorrow.
So let me ask, if this little zinger was not brought up to flame the subject or be otherwise annoying and useless, what was the point of mentioning "grenade" launchers at all? Perhaps because they LOOK threatening attached to the underside of an AR15? hmmm... It's one or the other, so which is it? They do carry a certain military "look", no doubt about it. REALITY: the flare gun on my grandfathers boat (RIP) posed more actual danger in 1983 than the 'grenade' launcher attached to my AR does today, and that says quite a lot, I'd suggest. It says that banning such items is an absolute exercise in futility and, if such a ban ever achieved, amounts to legislative stupidity. 'Assault weapons' bans have markedly little use as a safety precaution. Assault weapons bans are capable of one thing only, which is to restrict/nullify the cosmetic and modern appeal, or "intimidation factor" (as it were) of a certain type of firearms. Such enormous attention given to the mere color and shape of a gun is patently ridiculous. Banning those guns appeases people who wouldn't know a gun from a child's toy in the first place.
Then again, there's always the question of "telescoping stocks".