'ichris said:
Yes 10 murders are better than 11. In fact 0 murders are better than 10. But since there is no way we can prevent crazy people from killing, how about we try to limit the amount of damage they can attempt to do.
Placing an arbitrary limit on magazine capacity won't make a difference in a mad man's ability to harm people. The tool he uses is just a choice among many options. Suggesting a gun's "sole purpose" is to kill is a dumbed-down simplification that ignores why millions of people choose own them.
The vast majority of guns today are sold with magazines that hold over 10 rounds, that includes handguns. Since 2004 when the original AWB expired there's been at least 10 million AR15s purchased by law abiding citizens. That's just a rough guess. Then for every AR15 there's got to be at least a few
standard capacity 30-round magazines to go with them. But since the politicians started talking about banning them several million more have been sold, just since last November.
Yearly NICS background checks:
'99 - 9,138,123
'00 - 8,543,037
'01 - 8,910,191
'02 - 8,454,322
'03 - 8,481,588
'04 - 8,687,671
'05 - 8,952,945
'06 - 10,036,9339
'07 - 11,177,335
'08 - 12,709,023
'09 - 14,033,824
'10 - 14,409,616
'11 - 16,454,951
'12 - 19,592,303
Even if just a third of these sales included magazines that hold more than 10 rounds, that's at least 50 million weapons. Confiscating them is a logistical impossibility. Banning future production doesn't make society any safer than it was yesterday.
These millions of new guns in law abiding citizens hands haven't caused an uptick in violent crimes according to FBI stats. I'll repeat, more guns did not cause more violence. So what makes you think a new AWB or magazine limits will make an impact?

reluctantly.For weeks now in this thread I have been arguing for a ban on high capacity magazines. I've quoted law enforcement, given examples, and I thought I made a pretty good case. But opponents keep making the highlighted points over and over, and I don't have a satisfactory answer to them, and I can't find any satisfactory answers from others in support, either.
I truly, truly believe that if we had a society with no gun magazines that exceeded 10 bullets, we would have a safer society. I believe that mass shootings would, for the most part, involve less casualties, and lives would be saved. But the nay sayers are correct; there's no way to get to that society. We can't confiscate, and there's too many already out there, and this printing technology means it's too easy to make more whatever the law says.
Laws only make sense, ultimately, if they're enforceable. Until someone can demonstrate a satisfactory way to make this law enforceable (and I just don't see how), I'm changing my stance on this issue. It doesn't make any sense.