The gun tourism business in Las Vegas, Nevada, remains popular in the aftermath of the mass shooting that killed 59 people and injured over 500 others on Sunday night.
It was business as usual for shooting ranges across the city on Monday morning, merely hours after a 64-year-old man rained bullets on a large crowd attending a music festival next to his hotel, committing what has become known as the deadliest mass shooting is modern US history.
While the tragedy has once again prompted nationwide debates over stricter gun control laws, shooting ranges in Vegas have been providing military-grade weapons to all people for a small price.
In one center, named Machine Gun Helicopters, the patrons can board helicopters and fire automatic weapons at human dummy targets from a chopper, in what the owners call a “true door gunner experience.”
A billboard for Battlefield Vegas, another shooting range, offers enthusiasts the chance to shoot a…