As I said, I don't think the NRA would support a review of anything if they thought the review would lead to changes. The NRA won't move on anything that might even be perceived as the slightest infringement on gun owners' "rights". I am sure they have supporters who think that not being able to increase the firepower of a gun infringes on their "rights".
What the gun owners I've seen are saying is that it's stupid to band bump stocks because anyone can make a semi-automatic fire as fast as an automatic just by bumping the gun against their leg. Or some other twaddle. They aren't saying that we shouldn't ban them because of "rights" though probably because they know that won't fly.
IME, when you get into arguments with gun nuts (vs. all gun owners), everything you suggest is "stupid" and "proves you don't know anything about guns". At one point they were saying it's stupid to ban certain guns. If you want to stop gun violence you should limit ammo! they said. So then there was a bill to limit ammo and suddenly that was stupid too.
MacMadame (I think) posted a link to the definition of a terrorism in either this or the other gun thread and I believe that, in order to make proper comparison one cannot compare one incident with another in multiple countries. One needs to look at the same medium, the cirumstances and one country at a time.
Since then I've read that that definition, while the most common and accepted, is not as universal as I thought. However, that doesn't matter because I actually think terrorism is a subset of mass murder. I do think you can compare them at least some of the time. Maybe not things like 9/11 but when a small group goes after a crowd, then, yes, these things are more alike than different. The only difference in that case is motive.
However, I think this focus on mass murder and terrorism is, in some ways, unfortunate because that is such a small part of America's gun problem. We have so many more deaths than other countries from guns. As much as 10x as many. And it's not because we have 10x as many mass murders or terrorism incidents or that ours are more deadly. It's because having guns everywhere means there are more deaths due to suicide, accidents, domestic violence, and murder. Easy access to guns makes it more likely to die via gun.
What happened in Las Vegas was horrific. No doubt about it. The shooter was evil. Everyone is talking about the gun problem in America. But the guns are not shooting killing anyone....people are killing people.
Do you know how stupid you sound when you spout that nonsense off? In particular:
I don't see people taking away the knives, drugs, booze or cars.
I don't even hear people screaming about the horror of it all.
You do realize the all those things are regulated, don't you? You have to have a license to sell booze or drive a car. Your car has to be registered. Drugs are either illegal or need a prescription. You have to be a certain age to drink or drive. Even knives are regulated to some extent. Certain kinds are illegal in certain places. You can't bring them airplanes, for example.
And people scream about drunk driving, the opioid epidemic, distracted driving, etc. all the time.
Not to mention, we don't say "we have a problem with opioids so we shouldn't worry about distracted driving" either. But somehow, if there is any other problem in the world we haven't fixed and we can't come up with a solution to fix 100% of the problem with guns, we shouldn't do anything. And that's somehow logical. Or something.