AR-15 style rifles rose to iconic status in US via marketing,
militarization
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[July 19, 2024]
By Brad Brooks
LOVELAND, Colorado (Reuters) - Conservative politicians pose with
AR-style rifles for Christmas card portraits. Churches in deep red
states give them away at raffles. Demonstrators on both sides of the
political divide tote them at protests.
A bill in Congress supported by conservative representatives even wants
to designate the AR-15 style rifle as "the National Gun of the United
States."
The AR platform of rifle - used in several of the most notorious and
deadly mass shootings in American history in the past two decades - is
in the spotlight again because a would-be assassin used one on Saturday
to shoot former President Donald Trump, grazing him on the ear.
Deft marketing and the partisan divide have helped drive many Americans'
embrace of this style of gun, making it a potent cultural and political
symbol in a country where the Constitution's Second Amendment enshrines
the right to bear arms.
"The romanticism around the AR-15s comes from marketing," said Carolyn
Gallaher, an American University professor whose research has in part
focused on militia violence and who has followed the rise of AR-style
guns. "It's like theater."
"Gun manufacturers are trying to sell a product and they have done so in
a way that taps into some visceral things, like hyper-masculinity, the
notions of safety and protection and tapping into the soldier ethos,"
she said.
The gun industry's marketing was at the center of a successful lawsuit
lodged against Remington Arms by some parents of victims of the 2012
Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, and is an argument being used by
parents of children killed in the 2022 Uvalde, Texas, school shooting in
their lawsuits against gunmaker Daniel Defense, along with Meta and
Activision Blizzard. The gunmen in both those shootings used an AR-15
style weapon.
The AR-15 was first developed in the 1950s by gunmaker ArmaLite, from
which the "AR" in the name originates. It was a slow seller for its
first decades of existence. Gunmaker Colt bought the manufacturing
rights to the AR-15 in 1959. Most of the patents on the gun expired in
the 1970s, allowing other gun companies to build their versions.
From 1994 to 2004, the weapon was largely blocked from being sold by a
U.S. assault weapons ban written to last 10 years. It was not renewed,
and most talk about a new one comes from liberal Democrats.
Sales of ARs have exploded since 2004 and there are now more than 28
million in circulation in the U.S., according to the National Shooting
Sports Foundation, the trade association for gunmakers.
Chris Waltz, a Georgia-based gun salesman and founder of the popular
AR-15 Gun Owners of America group, said the AR-15 style weapon became
emblematic of gun rights advocates' resistance to liberal attempts to
ban the weapons.
"The more they are targeted and talked about by liberals, the more the
Second Amendment community embraces them," Waltz said.
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A man holds an AR-15 rife at an exhibition booth during the National
Rifle Association (NRA) annual convention in Dallas, Texas, U.S.,
May 18, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
He added that opponents of the AR don't mention that millions of
Americans use them every day in a legal and safe manner, nor that
rifles are typically used in less than 3% of the country's gun
deaths, according to FBI data.
The end of the national weapons ban coincided with America's growing
military mindset following the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and the
subsequent Afghanistan and Iraq wars. The AR-15 platform obtained a
foothold in civilian culture unlike any weapon before it, experts
say.
Chris Goss, who has sold guns for 35 years, pointed to a wall in his
Foundation Firearms shop in Loveland, Colorado, where a half dozen
AR-15 style guns were displayed. Goss said the platform has several
attributes buyers like - it has low recoil and is easy to shoot and
for buyers to modify themselves. With prices now starting below
$500, it is fairly inexpensive.
But Goss said appearance is also key to the platform's popularity
with gun proponents and its demonization by gun opponents.
"It's scary looking," he said. "When you look at the AR-15 guns you
think: army, military, war, death."
Goss said some people gravitate toward the AR-15 platform for
superficial reasons.
"If I show those same people an even more powerful semi-automatic
rifle with a wood stock that doesn't have that military look, they
don't want it."
Gallaher, the professor, agreed with Goss that the AR platform's
cosmetics have both driven its popularity and made it a political
and cultural touchstone.
"For young men, it's a way to tap into masculinity," she said.
In conservative parts of the U.S., the image of an AR-15 style
weapon is commonplace, from a silhouette on "Come and Take It"
bumper stickers to T-shirts hawking coffee.
Conservative politicians such as U.S. Representative Lauren Boebert,
a Republican firebrand representing Colorado, have published photos
of themselves with their children all holding the guns.
Boebert, whose office did not immediately respond to a request for
comment, is a co-sponsor of the "AR-15 National Gun Act" bill that
would designate the weapon as the "National Gun of the United
States."
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Loveland, Colorado; Editing by Donna
Bryson and Daniel Wallis)
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