nikki191 said:
yes being a military designed weapon specifically made to kill humans does make it inherently more dangerous. its got a large capacity clip thats very fast to change, the 5.56mm round is a military round thats designed to tumble and break up causing as much damage as possible to human targets. its not a hunting weapon and there is no reason for a civilian outside of a museum to own a military weapon.
seriously if you think you actually need an assault rifle for home defense then you have more to worry about than the odd burglar
No, that's more or less entirely wrong.
Again, the AR-15 is not an assault rifle. It is not in military use either.
It is fed from a detachable magazine, not a clip.
It uses the 5.56mm round, yes, which, BTW, is almost identical to the .223 Remington it was derived from, which was designed for hunting. You can fire .223 from an AR-15 if you want.
The 5.56mm round was not especially designed to tumble, it does this because all bullets do, due to their shape.
No 5.56mm rounds used by military forces are designed to fragment, as this was expressly forbidden under the Hague convention several decades before the 5.56mm round was developed.
EDIT: Expanding or fragmenting bullets are legal in most parts of the US. This is a totally seperate issue to what weapon they are fired from, however.