There is an entire billion post thread on this forum about police militarization and police brutality...
"But why would a civilian need a gun like that?"
In my eyes the most effective means of gun control for the peculiar political situation in the US would be to add fees for their purchase (annually renewing) and to require manufacturers and owners of operable weapons to have a locking mechanism on the trigger with an electronic or physical key. These policies would be helpful by themselves, but more importantly I think they would help in deescalating the conversation and making the issue less politically toxic over time.
The locking mechanisms would help with things like teen suicide and gun theft, but the effects of the increased price of both the mechanisms and the fees would make gun ownership less accessible for people looking to buy and own guns for frivolous reasons. If you had to pay an additional $500-1000 per gun on purchase and like $200-400 yearly each, plus the increased cost the safety regulations add to the market price, more hobbyists, collectors, hunters, the "home invasion" crowd, and others would be priced out and would prefer other hobbies. People who own multiple guns and collectors of many guns would likely prefer to have most of them permanently deactivated or sold rather than pay annual fees on something they don't use, and general rates of ownership and proliferation would drop. And if the industry were maimed in the process, maybe the obviously corrupt influence of money and business interests on the debate would diminish as well.
In many respects, the "responsible gun-owner" group is the greatest obstacle to public policy that makes any sense (despite themselves not having done anything wrong) because their central position in the rhetoric distorts the issues and create a bloc of voters that have a large personal interest in gun legislation only by virtue of it being connected to their hobby. If people bought fewer guns simply because they were more expensive, more people would look at the issue from a disinterested view of public welfare and would be more open to evidence-based policy, rather than considering themselves to be personally under attack and their self-image of responsibility to be personally slighted whenever the possibility of gun control is brought up.
"Lets take guns away from the poor people so only rich people can have guns, nevermind that poor people live in higher-risk areas where they need guns far more than rich people. Then lets also put locks and stuff on them that will get people raped and killed when they can't find their keys in a panic. Also lets destroy a large American industry and ignore the validity of any of these people's views."
Nope. Non-starter. Try again with less getting people killed, please. I have a trigger lock for my shotgun, for example. Its... well honestly I don't know where it is. Will you send the police door to door confiscating any firearm that doesn't have its thousand-dollar lock? I'm burying mine in motor oil-soaked rags out back. You tracked the serial number? Parts kits and ghost guns. An AR-15 is $85 if you are willing to put that last 20% of drilling and filing on a plastic molding in. It isn't serialized and it isn't tracked.
A hunting rifle is any rifle in a caliber fit to shoot the given animal in. "Varmit hunting" for pest animals is loosely regulated. Game animals proper is a state-by-state matter. There may be a ban on semi-automatic rifles in a given state for game harvesting. Most purpose-built hunting rifles are Mauser-derivative bolt action rifles in ~.30 caliber. For example, the very popular Remington 700 is basically the Mauser action in modern furniture. These are all dual-purpose as being far better infantry rifles than anyone was issued in WWI or WWII with the exception of the M1 Garand. They fire heavier bullets for more foot-pounds of energy than intermediate cartridges. Many of them fire cartridges more powerful than a standard infantry machine gun, and they all do so with a level of mechanical accuracy far, far better than their counterparts a hundred years ago. This is because the machining and precision of mass manufacture has improved tremendously in the last hundred years.
Tacticool gun bling exists mostly for home defense and competitive sport shooting. However, anything that lets you more efficiently acquire and shoot a steel plate at 100 meters can allow you to acquire and shoot a deer at 100 meters. Gun lights are tremendously valuable in home defense as it ensures a shooter can identify the suspected threat as an actual threat, reducing accidental shootings. So... gun bling isn't useless. Even something as odd as a red-dot sight on a shotgun would be fantastic for shooting deer with slugs. Red dot on target, bang. There is a reason the military gobbles the stuff up even on the world-class operator level.
Long rifles are responsible for fuck all in a big ship's worth of gun violence, Reelya is correct. The reverse is that handguns are responsible for all the concealed-carry interventions into attempted mass shootings, robberies, assaults and rapes. There's also no real need to reduce the demand for rifles in the long run, since you just admit they aren't responsible for the problem.
"What are military style weapons in civilian hands for?", asks a thread full of people who have complained for years about a President being a puppet controlled by a foreign government, fretted over a racist forced-migration threat for millions of undocumented neighbors, lamented the rise of racially-motivated killings of minority youth by unaccountable police, feared the militarization of formerly civilian police agencies, contemplated the virtues of an entire reconstruction of the American economic system, and the only answer anyone has is, "shoot coyotes".
That's... that's the joke to me. The need for every citizen to have arms equal to the common infantryman under the bed is every step toward a tin-pot dictatorship that you bemoan. How much faster would your rights be trampled over if there was no fear of a general insurrection against tyranny? Every President in our history has stepped down from power at the end of his term for this very reason; very few countries can say the same, none of which are of our size.
I am going to say this, however.
The FBI needs to issue a better-fitting holster if its agents are going to be inverted in the line of duty.