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"At least six children worldwide have died from choking on the toys" [kneejerkcomment] So Mattel is six times more likely to support terrorism than Crockpot? [/kneejerkcomment] Statistics still show the hospital or national road system is the most danerous place for children to go. The American public is still being trained to fear and acccept, using media sensationalism. |
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20 children a year are killed by this aggressively marketed tool, found in almost EVERY house: http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1367694257.jpg No more or less tragic, no more or less negligent than the parents that failed to protect their kids from guns. You guys want to arrest and prosecute the parents of the 20 kids that die every year in plastic pails? If not, why not...they are just as negligent. The kids are all just as dead, victims of stupid parents and inanimate objects. If you guys want to ban guns, all guns, just say it and act on it. Free yourself. Other than that, stop using children as props and focus on the slaughter that goes on everyday in this country, get to the root cause and act on it: Insist we enforce the laws currently in place. |
I had to come back to this thread one more time after a visit to Walmart yesterday to pick up some fishing stuff. I don't think I've ever even glanced in their long gun display before as I own plenty and don't even window shop there. Approaching the display, what is front-and-center but one of the toy like pink, ultra small rifle (there was also a black one behind it). I just don't see ANY reason at all for such tiny little POS toys to be marketed to the masses. Something that hasn't been mentioned in this thread...my LEO tennant tells me the gang-bangers are already painting the tips their real guns orange to give them an edge. Don't sell/buy real guns that look like toys....it's just a REALLY bad idea for many reasons.
Sorry about doing it again Redbeard! ..."disconnected"...but shooting .22 since I was 6-7 :) |
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Interesting arguments for sure.
I guess one thing ill add is that there would be one more 2 year old alive today if that gun was either locked up or not in that home to begin with. That covers both sides. |
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huh....
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That's the beauty of marketing... if the pink guns don't sell, they come off the shelves. If they do sell, then what's all the fuss? Why shouldn't people be free to buy pink guns for their kids? Too many people leap immediately to some emotional negative reaction to guns, especially with regard to kids. Stop trying to legislate every f*cking thing free people do!
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Marketing guns to kids 4-10 is just plain stupid and the manufacturer is apparently reaping the consequences in social media. Naturally, a side effect of this will be a run on Crickett guns, because some people are terrified they'll have their freedoms impinged. The gun manufacturers laugh all the way to the bank. |
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<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Eysu4mY1dvQ" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> <iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/VXzFp1lshBE" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> Quote:
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The Police and other "safety" agencies should STFU on social issues and voting endorsements. They tend to mirror Boss Hogg politics......just sayin'...........
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When you click on the little person symbol, it provides a bubble of information; date, name, age of victim and so forth, Quote:
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I mentioned earlier that both of my boys received Chipmunk rifles on their sixth Christmasses. What a godsend - we never had "kid size" rifles when I was that age. We had to struggle to make do with adult rifles. Something that fit us better, allowing us to learn proper form earlier on, would have been very welcome indeed. It sure was when it came time to teach my two boys. Oh, and their little rifles? They have been making the rounds at work for the last 12-15 years, as other guys are having kids reach that age. Those rifles are now with their third family since I passed them on. I'll eventually get them back and save them for my grand kids. Oh, and about that "social media" - I know for a lot of people, social media is a very, very big deal. Social media = real life. Folks that fit that description would be shocked to learn that there are still an awful lot of people to whom none of it really matters - folks who live real life outside of the cyber electronic world. You know, those hopeless people who live in flyover country, clinging to their God and guns. I would suspect a lot of their customers fall into that catagory. As the witless hand-wringing ninnies that seem to dominate cyberspace blather on and on via their various little media devices about something they know nothing about, these customers will quietly carry on as if none of it matters. Because it doesn't. |
Well said Jeff. And I think it is just about time to squish this topic down the drain.
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Since the initial incident, two other young brothers have shot their sisters. One sister survived.
The notion that kids *should* have guns is ludicrous. To call a 'child-sized' rifle a "godsend" is truly bizarre. And to use social media to discount social media... well there are some irony-deficient folks out there. |
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You have put up another straw man argument. No one has EVER suggested arming kids. Have you stopped beating your wife? :rolleyes: |
Since the report a hundred teenagers have died while driving and texting on their iPhones..
The notion that teenage drivers should have an iPhone capable of texting while driving, without a warning screen or pop-up by the way, is ludicrous. Apple can fix this, disable texting while driving, a simple matter of tying in GPS speed and text messaging ability. Why don't they do it? It is an epidemic and Apple sits idly by, as do you. A car, a teenager and an iPhone makes marketing to [I]infants[I] sensible. Quote:
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Paul and Jeff, stop making sense... It won't change the haters minds....
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No young child should have access to a gun, loaded or not, without an adult present. The problem here is not the gun. The problem is the adult or adults that are responsible for the children. I started shooting guns (rifles and shotguns) when I was 8 years old. I used guns that was appropriately sized for a kid my size. Using an adult sized rifle or shotgun would have be stupid. So yes, a 'child-sized' rifle was a "godsend". Scott |
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You failed to answer my question - what is your personal, or your family's experience with any of this? I'll say it again - your view very much appears to be based on emotions brought forth by this incident, with absolutely no real world experience of your own. Your view runs contrary to the experiences of millions of Americans, spread over generations, who have successfully taught their children to shoot at very early ages and have suffered no ill consequences as a result. And yes, a properly fitting rifle is a godsend. I say that based upon personal experience in teaching not only kids, but adults, to shoot. Your accusation of "ludicrous" is based upon... upon... what? Certainly not practical experience in the matter so, in the absence of that, it is clearly based upon ignorance. With a large helping of emotion. Hardly a solid footing on which to base such an accusation. So, again, it is clear that you are not here to learn anything or to listen to anyone, in spite of the title of this thread. You are here to state your position, rant, and vent. You have summarily dismissed anyone's explanations that do not agree with the viewpoint you already had when you started this thread. |
God doesn't give two ****s if kids have guns available to them. Let's be real here. Perhaps in frontier times a properly fitted rifle for a kid was indeed a godsend as the boy might be protecting his family while dad was out on a cattle drive or some such thing...but in these times a firearm for kids is entirely a pleasurable pursuit and nothing more.
While I don't agree with much of weenies thoughts on the matter I think we need to be honest when there is something accurate amidst the comments. |
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berettafan,
Oh, stop it! You are interpreting the word "godsend" too literally.....it's a noun that means "A very helpful or valuable event, person, or thing." Scott |
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THIS is a movement i'd put money behind. without question. It is a perfect example of the selective morality being applied to the subject of guns. Fat ass pussified attorneys (aka politicians) in DC don't 'get' guns so they push against them. They sure as hell need to be able to text their mistresses while riding in their limos to the 5 star hotel for a tryst though. |
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Scott |
What a bizzare little sidetrack. Oh well, back on track.
Seems to me that many folks have been made aware of a very deeply rooted American tradition that they never knew existed. Unfortunately, they were made aware only through a tragic accident, parental negligence, or whatever you want to call it. The record of safety and success enjoyed by the vast majority participating in this tradition is immaterial to them. They do not want to hear about it. They have an agenda. Pointing out the almost limitless ways in which children are tragically killed or seriously injured (in numbers vastly exceeding those by firearms) means nothing to these people. They have an agenda. They will focus on this one way, and just this one way, because of that agenda. The kids mean nothing compared to that agenda. That much is clear. Hiding behind "please explain to me..." is pretty damn transparent. |
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I don't have time to read the whole thread.
I'm a gun owner and advocate and agree that the problem here is lack of parental responsibility. However isn't there some concern with making guns into toys? Guns are serious business and dangerous, yes with proper training and adult supervision they can be used by children safely and they should have small scale firearms for youngsters to use. However doesn't making them in fun colors and putting cartoon characters on them takes away for the seriousness of their function? For children AND adults? "Oh here honey play with your cute little pink toy." Perhaps untrained and unexperienced parents are buying these firearm and handing them to there children thinking they are harmless "toys"? "What is that Billy? You want the GI Joe .22? OK... here...now shut up, go play, and don't bother daddy." |
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Sorry, not persuaded. Marketing a toy-like gun to 4-10 year olds -- as a toy -- is wrong. Apparently the advertising has been pulled as a result of social media pressure.
As for the process to purchase a gun for a child, the majority of states waive any paperwork for gun show purchases. So it's really no different from buying an action figure. |
So TW, having a discussion with you is pointless
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It isn't as simple as you might think seahawk. Again, marketing an item to small children (bright colors, cartoon figures) like a rifle is wrong. If Keystone was serious with regards to making sure this is an activity that always involved adult supervision - they would market the rifle to adults - no cartoon figures, no bright colors that appeal to children and not adults. Just like we don't have Dora the Explorer out there hawking cigarettes to children, we shouldn't have a little cartoon cricket hawking guns to children. |
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I heard no compelling reason for a toy like gun to be marketed to 4-10 year olds. I got a lot of 'tradition' and personal history... I think its inevitable that bad results come from giving very young kids the notion that a gun is their toy. By the way, a speaker at the NRA convention a couple days ago said all kids should keep a gun in their bedroom. I doubt this is a widespread view, but it shows -- to me at least -- that the topic brings more emotion than logic. Sure, parental control makes everything okay. But how many of us found dad's stash of dirty magazines as a kid? You cannot provide 100% oversight to a child. |
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Luddites were quaint and well meaning, but eventually buried. |
business is not what is taking place on phones. you have business to do you go to the office or pull the car over. what's so hard about that? I don't think our economic system will fall apart if people can't text their buddies on the metro.
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