Firearms are basically tubes with various degrees of complexity designed to fire projectiles with the purpose of killing something, whether it's game in the case of hunting arms or people in the case of military and police weapons. Used correctly they can produce deadly force and used incorrectly they do the same.
The rate of their use for killing doesn't change the primary purpose they were created for. You could use them for other purposes but they make poor hammers or door stops for example.
Well, I originally said that I was going to let someone else disagree with you, but since your post has an air of absoluteness that strikes me as smug and ignorant, I have two reasons why you are wrong. The first one is simply a general appeal to your common sense. And the second reason is a technical explanation.
So, forgive me if I accuse you of making a point with semantics meant to misinform, but please hear me out.
Reason 1: If firearms are designed for the purpose of killing, then that means despite being a hunter and competitive shooter, firing thousands of rounds using different rifles and pistols, I've never used a firearm for it's designed purpose and fervently hope that I never do. And, a point that I tried to make with you earlier with no success, an overwhelming majority of 99.99% of owners and firearms are in a similar situation as I am.
Reason 2: From a technical point of view, firearms aren't designed to kill, they are designed to accurately direct/propel a projectile.
Ammunition on the other hand...Ammunition is designed for different purposes...
- blank ammo, designed to simulate firing a 'real' bullet.
- There are rubber bullets and other less lethal ammunition.
- This page shows different types of common bullets such as wadcutters, full metal jacket, soft point, hollow point, etc.
- Less common types of ammunition include armor piercing, incendiary, and tracer rounds.
- All of these different types of ammunition, in the same caliber, can be fired in the same firearm with no modifications (blank adapters being the only exception that comes to mind).
Once the bullet has left the barrel, the firearm has performed it's designed function. It's the ammunition that is designed for different purposes. Wadcutters to punch nice clean holes in a paper target. Rubber bullets to stun a person with much less chance of killing them. Armor piercing to, well, pierce armor. And so it goes.
Perhaps, I am arguing semantics, as well, or making pointless distinctions? A firearm by itself is no better than a club. Ammunition by itself is about the same as a firecracker. Are firearms and ammunition so intertwined in a gun control advocates mind that one automatically equates with the other?