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Dina Rickman
Feb 15, 2018
America's latest mass shooting has once again sparked the contentious argument surrounding tighter gun control laws.
In many US states, including Nevada, you don't need a permit to buy a gun - nor are you required to get a licence, register a firearm and there's no limit on the number of guns you can buy at one time.
Donald Trump has repeatedly declared his love for the Second Amendment, and has rolled back a number of President Obama's restrictions on the purchasing of deadly weapons.
Here are a few items that are more difficult to get in America than a semi-automatic rifle:
Kinder Eggs
While the rest of the world enjoys the sweet chocolatey taste of a Kinder Surprise - America’s no-fun Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has banned them on the basis that the toys inside the eggs could be a choking hazard.
Haggis
Continuing on their no-fun theme, the FDA has also banned Haggis imports. Americans can make their own but the US won’t let any food into the country which contains sheep lung.
Shark fins
Shark fins, a traditional Chinese delicacy, have been banned in California since 2011. Once their fins have been removed sharks are often put back in the ocean where they are likely to drown because of their restricted movement.
Nigella Lawson
Nigella Lawson was reportedly stopped from boarding a British Airways flight to America in 2014 after she publicly confessed to taking drugs. The ban was later lifted in preparation for her show The Taste.
Nipples
This poster for Sin City 2 featuring Eva Green was reportedly banned in the US for being too provocative.
Dictionaries
The Merriam-Webster 10th edition was removed from classrooms in southern California in 2010 following a parent’s complaint that children could read the definition of the term “oral sex”.
Lengthy bingo games
In North Carolina bingo games are not allowed to last more than five hours unless they are held in a fair.
The ice bucket challenge
The US state department has banned its diplomats from doing the ice bucket challenge, in support of research into Motor Neurone Disease (known as ALS in America). State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf told the Telegraph that people in public offices such as ambassadors could not use them for private gain "no matter how worthy the cause is".
Editor's message:. Please note this is an update of an article first published in 2014
More: This clip shows why America needs to change its ridiculous gun laws
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