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🗓️ 28 March 2023
⏱️ 20 minutes
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At a school in Nashville on Monday, a shooter used two AR-style weapons and a handgun to kill three children and three adults. Today on “Post Reports,” we look at the history of the AR-15 and how it became America’s gun.
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The AR-15 wasn’t supposed to be a bestseller.
The rugged, powerful weapon was originally designed as a military rifle in the late 1950s. “An outstanding weapon with phenomenal lethality,” an internal Pentagon report raved. It soon became standard issue for U.S. troops in the Vietnam War, where the weapon earned a new name: the M16.
Few gunmakers saw a semiautomatic version of the rifle — with its shrouded barrel, pistol grip and jutting ammunition magazine — as a product for ordinary people. It didn’t seem suited for hunting. It seemed like overkill for home defense. Gun executives doubted many buyers would want to spend their money on one.
And yet, today, the AR-15 is the best-selling rifle in the United States, industry figures indicate. About 1 in 20 U.S. adults — or roughly 16 million people — own at least one AR-15, according to polling data from The Washington Post and Ipsos.
So, how did we get here? The Post’s Todd Frankel explains.
What damage can an AR-15 do to a human body? The Post examined autopsy and postmortem reports from nearly a hundred victims of previous mass shootings that involved AR-15-style rifles to show the impact of bullets from an AR-15 on the body.
High-capacity-magazine bans could save lives. Will they hold up in court? Legislative and legal battles flare over restrictions that experts say could reduce casualties in AR-15 attacks.
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0:00.0 | On Monday, we learned about a shooter in Nashville, Tennessee, who entered a private |
0:07.3 | Christian school and killed three students and three adults using AR-15 style weapons. |
0:14.3 | More and more, we're hearing about shootings involving the semi-automatic rifles. |
0:18.5 | So, you know, the air of the team plays such a big role in everyday life, you know, school |
0:27.4 | shootings, mass shootings, these horrible events. |
0:29.9 | And we were kind of curious how we got here. |
0:31.5 | How did this gun that was invented in the late 50s as a military gun? |
0:35.2 | How did it become such a mainstream American consumer product? |
0:39.3 | Todd Frankl is one of the reporters at the post who has been looking into the AR-15 |
0:44.0 | and its origin story. |
0:45.5 | AR-15 style weapons are now the best-selling guns in America. |
0:50.3 | But Todd says this popularity was surprising. |
0:54.1 | The rifle, which was designed for the military, didn't seem well-suited for hunting. |
0:58.8 | And it seemed too powerful for just home defense. |
1:02.6 | It was intended to kill people and quickly. |
1:06.1 | Twenty years ago, the gun industry itself was a little suspicious of the AR-15. |
1:09.6 | They didn't allow it to trade shows, or whether they did, they kept it behind, you know, |
1:13.5 | velvet ropes and only allowed law enforcement back there. |
1:16.5 | You know, they didn't see a market for selling this to the consumers. |
1:19.6 | But now, if you walk into a gun shop, which I've walked into lots of gun shops for the |
1:23.2 | story, you know, it's on the wall. |
1:26.6 | Everything has been changed by this gun, and we want to understand how we got to this |
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