It fits Russian gun restrictions on length, because the gay impingement system with the retarded buffer tube means the gun is ridiculously long.
Also if you ignore the gay impingement system and surprisingly bad .223 round, the armalite rifle is actually not a bad rifle, the modularity is amazing, and it tries very hard to be friendly to the user. There's any number of reasons to like it.
>>528908
Sort of.
They have a right to use guns for self defense, and protection of property. Also for purposes of hunting, pest removal, and sport activities.
Guns can only be used by sane Russian citizens who own a house or apartment. Homeless people or visiting asian slaves cannot own guns for example, neither can addicts, homos, trannies or gamblers.
Right to ownership is not constitution based, it's license based. Licenses are issued every 5 years after a background check. There's a training course for first time buyers.
Limits on guns are some weird rifling laws, like smoothbore or partly rifled shotguns are ok, but you can apply to own a fully rifled sporting rifle. There's a 10 round mag limit and no full autos. Trauma guns with 25 joule energy are common, and aren't counted as "firearms" in statistics. Guns under 7.5J in energy and under 4.5mm in caliber aren't counted as firearms either.
Can't own any nukes or biological weapons, and most chemical weapons (toxins, nerve gasses) are banned unless permitted by government.
There is no right to carry, unless you're carrying for hunting purposes. So there's a universal right to carry if you say you're hunting wabbits. That excuse obviously won't work in Moscow, but fuck Moscow.
1 in 8 civilians is a gun owner, and two thirds are illegal. Military, politicians or police can get a dispensation to own and carry in public a gun with waaaay less restrictions.