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-   -   Please explain to me "My first gun." (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/747742-please-explain-me-my-first-gun.html)

berettafan 05-07-2013 08:46 AM

not to mention texting is not very professional.

foxpaws 05-07-2013 08:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by berettafan (Post 7427670)
not to mention texting is not very professional.

You must not do business with anyone under 30... tons and tons of business is being conducted on phones, with texts....

Racerbvd 05-07-2013 08:57 AM

What they are really saying is that liberals shouldn't be parents, as they aren't responsible enough or capably of saying NO to a child and their minds aren't strong enough to not be be able to resist non-mass-media advertising.

Enabling people who make bad decisions shouldn't be rewarded and punishing those who do make good decisions for the betterment of losers who want the Gov to take care of them..

Quote:

not to mention texting is not very professional.
At the Track or other loud venues my work takes me too, it is a way to communicate when you can't hear the person next to you, or a phone.

berettafan 05-07-2013 09:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by foxpaws (Post 7427683)
You must not do business with anyone under 30... tons and tons of business is being conducted on phones, with texts....

Out of several hundred clients i'd guess a quarter are under 30 and quite a few more are in their 30's. my clients can choose their method of corresponding with me but i doubt many would be impressed if i initiated actual business conversations via text. for one thing it's tedious to type things out on a small phone and for another it's not as easy to collate entire conversations into record keeping systems. it can also be intrusive.

winders 05-07-2013 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by berettafan (Post 7427633)
my opinion is the better good is served at the cost of convenience.

That's just crazy......you obviously don't need to use your phone when moving in a vehicle. That may be your reality but it is not the reality for everyone.

You realize the same logic could be (and is) used to take your guns away, don't you?

Scott

berettafan 05-07-2013 09:33 AM

keeping a firearm in my home is not a matter of convenience.

foxpaws 05-07-2013 09:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by berettafan (Post 7427752)
Out of several hundred clients i'd guess a quarter are under 30 and quite a few more are in their 30's. my clients can choose their method of corresponding with me but i doubt many would be impressed if i initiated actual business conversations via text. for one thing it's tedious to type things out on a small phone and for another it's not as easy to collate entire conversations into record keeping systems. it can also be intrusive.

Why are you suddenly saying 'initiated' - there was nothing about 'initiated' in your original supposition. I suppose it is because you suddenly realized that lots of business is done via texts.... but now you need to quantify your statement.

Again lots and lots of business is being done every day via texts -

But I do like 'the better good is served' - have these socialist thoughts often? ;)

Jeff Higgins 05-07-2013 09:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by techweenie (Post 7427557)
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.

You keep mentioning the "as a toy" angle. I can assure you, in a lifetime of immersion in the firearms world, I have never seen anyone present a firearm to a kid "as a toy". You are, again, speaking from a position of ignorance. I've asked you repeatedly for your personal experiences in this realm, and you have steadfastly avoided answering those inquiries. That, coupled with the rhetoric you have spewed on this thread, states very clearly that you have no experience in this regard. Your "as a toy" position is a fantasy of your own making. You have nothing to support that position. It is simply your opinion, arrived at to further demonize gun owners, and clearly has no basis in fact or actual experience. You are attempting to dramatize this.

Quote:

Originally Posted by techweenie (Post 7427557)
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.

Let's deconstruct this for a moment. How many parents, casually looking for your "toy" for their child, are going to go to a gun show to look for it? How many non-shooting, "toy" shopping parents, will even think of that, and then go to the trouble to track down a gun show and do that? Why on earth would they bother, when the WalMart on the corner stocks them? You are grasping at straws.

Your argument becomes extremely incongruous on this point. Nobody goes to a gun show to get in some "toy" shopping for their kids. The folks attending gun shows tend to be at least somewhat into, well, - guns. They are enthusiasts, with a bit more interest and knowledge than the John Q. Public that would be likely to view these rifles as your "toys". In other words, it is extremely unlikely that your ignorant, ill-informed public that may actually see these rifles as "toys" would ever stumble across a gun show, or think of searching out a gun show, at which to purchase them - that's way too much trouble when they are readily available at the local sporting goods store. Conversely, it is equally likely that anyone purchasing one at a gun show will know full well that it is no "toy".

As a related asside, any licensed dealer selling at any gun show in the land still sells under the same rules they do when in their shop. Same forms, same background checks. Now while I cannot vouch for all gun clubs, mine - the Washington Arms Collectors - conducts, as a requirement for membership, the very same background check required to purchase a fiream at a dealer. At our shows, we can only sell to or buy from other currently active members. We actually have people arrested that are caught violating this rule.

It is my understanding that many other clubs accross the nation follow these same rules. I have been to gun shows in virtually every western state, and many in the mid west. At each and every show I have ever attended, the hosting club has had the same "members only" rule on firearms sales and purchases. Those are my first hand experiences with this supposed "gun show loophole" - it is really no more than a media/political talking point, aimed at the ignorant and ill-informed. Like you. So, I'll ask you the same sort of question that has so far gone unanswered - what are your experiences with this? I think I already know the answer...

Tech, face it - you are arguing from a position of emotion and ignorance. I don't expect you will ever change that position, and you are certainly free to cling to it. The difference between you and I on this point, however, is that I have lived a lifetime immersed in the world of firearms. My opinions are based not only upon my own experiences, but also upon the collective experiences of a wonderful community - one quite unlike any other in this country, or anywhere else on earth. You can continue to chip at us from the outside looking in - everyone is entitled to their voice, their opinion. You need to understand, however, just how foolish you look, so stubbornly clinging to you emotionally based, ignorant opinions. That (and again, I understand you say it is not your intention), and do not try to change us. You don't have to understand us, you don't have to like us - but you have no right to try, in your emotional ignorance, to change us.

vash 05-07-2013 09:59 AM

i'm old enough to remember my mom buying me those candy cigarettes. hahahah.

now that was a splendid idea!!

as a goofy 5-year old, i had no business of owning a firearm. i got a daisy BB gun at 8 and i was a complete menace. my mom wanted me to grow up a smoker, but not a shooter..apparently. i got a real 22 at 11. and looking back, i was not the best 11 year old gun owner. i had full access to that rifle and ammo. i shot it in my backyard. idiot!!

glad i got smarter. if i had kids..i do it differently. 100% supervised. zero access without me present.

to each their own.

foxpaws 05-07-2013 10:08 AM

Actually Keystone is more concerned about the Davey Crickett Beanie Baby ending up in 'age inappropriate' children's hands then their rifles....
Note-Jeff H - having collateral like beanie babies to market your guns is marketing to children.

In their catalog - the only 'age appropriate warning' comes with the Davey Crickett Beanie Baby - on page 4, the rest of the catalog - i.e. the rifles, don't say 'parental supervision suggested' or imply at all that a responsible adult should be around... but gosh darn, that dangerous beanie baby has its warning right next to it printed in the catalog...

edit - So, I guess you could imply that Keystone markets toys more responsibly than it markets real firearms.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1367946525.jpg

Racerbvd 05-07-2013 10:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by foxpaws (Post 7427871)
Actually Keystone is more concerned about the Davey Crickett Beanie Baby ending up in 'age inappropriate' children's hands then their rifles....

In their catalog - the only 'age appropriate warning' comes with the Davey Crickett Beanie Baby - on page 4, the rest of the catalog - i.e. the rifles, don't say 'parental supervision suggested' or imply at all that a responsible adult should be around... but gosh darn, that dangerous beanie baby has its warning right next to it printed in the catalog...

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1367946525.jpg

Again, the CHILD can not buy a gun, it takes an adult to do that, what about that don't you understand.. Maybe you should start hanging out with a smarter, better class of people than those coke whores you enable.

flipper35 05-07-2013 10:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by techweenie (Post 7427599)
...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.

If they are kept in the gun safe with the guns jr wouldn't have access to them now would he?

foxpaws 05-07-2013 10:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racerbvd (Post 7427884)
Again, the CHILD can not buy a gun, it takes an adult to do that, what about that don't you understand.. Maybe you should start hanging out with a smarter, better class of people than those coke whores you enable.

And a child cannot buy cigarettes, but that didn't stop RJ Reynolds from marketing to children. You don't seem to understand some basic marketing strategies racer, when it comes to marketing to children. There are lots of books and studies out there if you are interested in expanding your knowledge regarding how various firms market to children and why marketing to children is very effective. A good start would be Merchants of Death: The American Tobacco Industry.

However, the whole insult thing you got going - nice...

scottmandue 05-07-2013 10:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Higgins (Post 7426854)
I would agree with you save for the fact that purchasing one of these is far different from purchasing a toy. They are not sold in toy stores. One must go to a federally licensed dealer to purchase one. Yes, in a WalMart or similar large department store, they will be found all under the same roof. But we still cannot simply pluck one off the shelf, throw it in the shopping cart, and check it out with your other items. The transaction must be made at the gun counter. The transaction must be preceded by the mandatory background check through NICS. The purchaser must fill out the federal form. At the end of all of this, if it is still not clear that we are not buying a toy, there is probably little else we can do to help the situation.

Good point

Racerbvd 05-07-2013 10:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by foxpaws (Post 7427899)
And a child cannot buy cigarettes, but that didn't stop RJ Reynolds from marketing to children. You don't seem to understand some basic marketing strategies racer, when it comes to marketing to children. There are lots of books and studies out there if you are interested in expanding your knowledge regarding how various firms market to children and why marketing to children is very effective. A good start would be Merchants of Death: The American Tobacco Industry.

However, the whole insult thing you got going - nice...

I understand marketing, you don't understand good parenting, and there lies the problem.. Just because you and other liberals can't say no to your kids, doesn't mean everyone is a bad parent.

techweenie 05-07-2013 10:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Higgins (Post 7427811)
You keep mentioning the "as a toy" angle. I can assure you, in a lifetime of immersion in the firearms world, I have never seen anyone present a firearm to a kid "as a toy". You are, again, speaking from a position of ignorance. I've asked you repeatedly for your personal experiences in this realm, and you have steadfastly avoided answering those inquiries. That, coupled with the rhetoric you have spewed on this thread, states very clearly that you have no experience in this regard. Your "as a toy" position is a fantasy of your own making. You have nothing to support that position. It is simply your opinion, arrived at to further demonize gun owners, and clearly has no basis in fact or actual experience. You are attempting to dramatize this.

Yeah, why would I dramatize children being killed playing with deadly toys? Makes no sense.

And you keep asking about my background. Did you read post #8 of this thread?

flipper35 05-07-2013 10:39 AM

The problem today is nobody wants to take responsibility for anything. Generally speaking.

techweenie 05-07-2013 10:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racerbvd (Post 7427918)
I understand marketing, you don't understand good parenting, and there lies the problem.. Just because you and other liberals can't say no to your kids, doesn't mean everyone is a bad parent.

Well, that'll work out well, since only liberal children will die from accidental gunshot wounds! :rolleyes:

winders 05-07-2013 10:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by foxpaws (Post 7427899)
And a child cannot buy cigarettes, but that didn't stop RJ Reynolds from marketing to children. You don't seem to understand some basic marketing strategies racer, when it comes to marketing to children. There are lots of books and studies out there if you are interested in expanding your knowledge regarding how various firms market to children and why marketing to children is very effective. A good start would be Merchants of Death: The American Tobacco Industry.

Rifles are not cigarettes and comparing rifles to cigarettes is duplicitous and something only an unreasonable person would do. You are making the leap that rifles are bad just like cigarettes. That is not the case.

There is a difference between marketing a rifle designed for children to adults and children and marketing cigarettes to adults and children.

Rifles should used by children only under adult supervision. Children should never smoke cigarettes, adult supervision or not.

The bottom line here is that you think guns are evil.......so you viewpoint is tainted.

Scott

Racerbvd 05-07-2013 10:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by techweenie (Post 7427931)
Well, that'll work out well, since only liberal children will die from accidental gunshot wounds! :rolleyes:

Works in Chicago.

foxpaws 05-07-2013 10:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racerbvd (Post 7427918)
I understand marketing, you don't understand good parenting, and there lies the problem.. Just because you and other liberals can't say no to your kids, doesn't mean everyone is a bad parent.

Well, the assumptions (amazingly, and constantly incorrect) continue to be stated by you.

I would imagine that the family involved in this tragedy isn't liberal, most posters here at least would define as being bad parents (at least by the consistent theme of 'it is the parents responsibility').

Guns that look like toys and are marketed to children too young to understand the difference is irresponsible corporate behavior at the least.

No amount of preaching to a 5-year-old that their pink 'barbie' gun is dangerous is going to sink in enough to make a difference if that child comes across the gun outside of a safe. It looks like a toy, has a cartoon character on it, and heck, they can point the GI Jane rifle at their little brother and nothing happened before... It is an irresponsible product, marketed irresponsibly.

foxpaws 05-07-2013 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by winders (Post 7427936)
Rifles are not cigarettes and comparing rifles to cigarettes is duplicitous and something only an unreasonable person would do. You are making the leap that rifles are bad just like cigarettes. That is not the case.

There is a difference between marketing a rifle designed for children to adults and children and marketing cigarettes to adults and children.

Rifles should used by children only under adult supervision. Children should never smoke cigarettes, adult supervision or not.

The bottom line here is that you think guns are evil.......so you viewpoint is tainted.

Scott

I own guns, have shot since I was 12, had a CWP since the time you had to have the local sheriff personally vouch for you...

You don't know me at all.

I am not comparing the actual item - I am comparing the marketing of the item. We do not market cigarettes to children (via legislation) because children are not able to make informed, rational decisions regarding cigarettes. We should not market guns to children because children are not able to make informed rational decisions regarding firearms.

winders 05-07-2013 11:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by foxpaws (Post 7427965)
I am not comparing the actual item - I am comparing the marketing of the item. We do not market cigarettes to children (via legislation) because children are not able to make informed, rational decisions regarding cigarettes. We should not market guns to children because children are not able to make informed rational decisions regarding firearms.

Children cannot buy guns. Only adults can. I see no problem with a child going up to dad or mom and saying that they want a rifle. The parent gets to make the call on if and when a rifle is purchased and, if purchased, how that rifle is used.

These rifle ads you despise so much are not on TV, the radio, local billboards, the local playground, etc.

There is no proper way to use cigarettes. They are always bad for you. There is absolutely nothing wrong with a properly used rifle.

Toys kill significantly more children than rifles do. Based on your logic, we should not market toys to children because children are not able to make informed rational decisions regarding toys.

Scott

EMJ 05-07-2013 11:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff Higgins (Post 7427811)
You keep mentioning the "as a toy" angle. I can assure you, in a lifetime of immersion in the firearms world, I have never seen anyone present a firearm to a kid "as a toy". You are, again, speaking from a position of ignorance. I've asked you repeatedly for your personal experiences in this realm, and you have steadfastly avoided answering those inquiries. That, coupled with the rhetoric you have spewed on this thread, states very clearly that you have no experience in this regard. Your "as a toy" position is a fantasy of your own making. You have nothing to support that position. It is simply your opinion, arrived at to further demonize gun owners, and clearly has no basis in fact or actual experience. You are attempting to dramatize this.



Let's deconstruct this for a moment. How many parents, casually looking for your "toy" for their child, are going to go to a gun show to look for it? How many non-shooting, "toy" shopping parents, will even think of that, and then go to the trouble to track down a gun show and do that? Why on earth would they bother, when the WalMart on the corner stocks them? You are grasping at straws.

Your argument becomes extremely incongruous on this point. Nobody goes to a gun show to get in some "toy" shopping for their kids. The folks attending gun shows tend to be at least somewhat into, well, - guns. They are enthusiasts, with a bit more interest and knowledge than the John Q. Public that would be likely to view these rifles as your "toys". In other words, it is extremely unlikely that your ignorant, ill-informed public that may actually see these rifles as "toys" would ever stumble across a gun show, or think of searching out a gun show, at which to purchase them - that's way too much trouble when they are readily available at the local sporting goods store. Conversely, it is equally likely that anyone purchasing one at a gun show will know full well that it is no "toy".

As a related asside, any licensed dealer selling at any gun show in the land still sells under the same rules they do when in their shop. Same forms, same background checks. Now while I cannot vouch for all gun clubs, mine - the Washington Arms Collectors - conducts, as a requirement for membership, the very same background check required to purchase a fiream at a dealer. At our shows, we can only sell to or buy from other currently active members. We actually have people arrested that are caught violating this rule.

It is my understanding that many other clubs accross the nation follow these same rules. I have been to gun shows in virtually every western state, and many in the mid west. At each and every show I have ever attended, the hosting club has had the same "members only" rule on firearms sales and purchases. Those are my first hand experiences with this supposed "gun show loophole" - it is really no more than a media/political talking point, aimed at the ignorant and ill-informed. Like you. So, I'll ask you the same sort of question that has so far gone unanswered - what are your experiences with this? I think I already know the answer...

Tech, face it - you are arguing from a position of emotion and ignorance. I don't expect you will ever change that position, and you are certainly free to cling to it. The difference between you and I on this point, however, is that I have lived a lifetime immersed in the world of firearms. My opinions are based not only upon my own experiences, but also upon the collective experiences of a wonderful community - one quite unlike any other in this country, or anywhere else on earth. You can continue to chip at us from the outside looking in - everyone is entitled to their voice, their opinion. You need to understand, however, just how foolish you look, so stubbornly clinging to you emotionally based, ignorant opinions. That (and again, I understand you say it is not your intention), and do not try to change us. You don't have to understand us, you don't have to like us - but you have no right to try, in your emotional ignorance, to change us.

The irony of this post is that it seems very clear that you've not experienced, fortunately, an incident in which an accident has occurred with a child and a firearm, as you profess throughout. With all due respect, seems to me for someone who is calling anyone who disagrees with you ignorant, misinformed and emotional, you have absolutely no experience with the issue. How can you summarily dismiss the known statistics of the unfortunate accidents where children have actually killed other children or others when the parent was standing right there? A split second of inattention and a tragedy occurs. Because it hasn't happened to you or your circle, and hopefully it never does, it isn't an issue? I can respect and appreciate your view, but your experience of utopia around this issue is just not real world. Accidents happen all the time involving even the most diligent parents. For those who say this is the price of freedom, that is very sad.

Personally, I wouldn't put my little 5-year-old girl in the position of shooting weapons, and I, once upon a time, instructed hundreds of military personnel, and shot thousands of rounds in a multitude of weapons. I've seen the accidents ADULTs have, the odds are much greater for pre-schoolers. But again, I am open minded enough to understand that in some demographics, this simply is a way of life (Young children firing weapons). And with this, it is a riskier proposition for the children involved. To say it isn't is simply disengenuous, and I guess that's the issue that I have. If a child is blown away because a parent, responsible or not, put a gun in their hand, that's just one too many.

EMJ 05-07-2013 11:18 AM

Double post....

Seahawk 05-07-2013 11:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by foxpaws (Post 7427582)
How would your cell phone know if you were driving or were a passenger on a bus or train?

It isn't as simple as you might think seahawk.

So, your need to text on a train is more valuable than the lives of teenagers (I'm arguing like a Progressive)? How dare you be so unthinking, so uncaring.

We must do something. Texting kills. The first person to design an app that figures out how to allow parents to block their kids texting while in a car (it is simple, btw, the tech exists) wins.

The train or bus can have a ten dollars sensor that allows all functionality.

This is not going to the moon, folks...think of the Newtown Massacre that happens every day because Progressives won't propose legislation because they need to text on a train! On a serious note, I followed a Ford Focus driving on rural roads today that was all over the white lines, back and forth, punctures the middle yellow lines as well. Ten miles of this. I finally caught up to her at a stop light. She had her phone in front of her grill, busily texting. This is serious stuff and absolutely needs to be addressed.

Racerbvd 05-07-2013 11:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by winders (Post 7428004)
Children cannot buy guns. Only adults can. I see no problem with a child going up to dad or mom and saying that they want a rifle. The parent gets to make the call on if and when a rifle is purchased and, if purchased, how that rifle is used.

These rifle ads you despise so much are not on TV, the radio, local billboards, the local playground, etc.

There is no proper way to use cigarettes. They are always bad for you. There is absolutely nothing wrong with a properly used rifle.

Toys kill significantly more children than rifles do. Based on your logic, we should not market toys to children because children are not able to make informed rational decisions regarding toys.

Scott

Scott,

She just doesn't seen to understand that kids can't buy guns. Aids kills a lot of gays, yet, people like her are pushing for homosexuality to be taught as normal in schools.
The fact that more children die from choking on things, like the Beenie Baby that she critizised the manufactor for having a "not for children under 3" than pink guns every year. Course, since she doesn't think people are smart enough to have common sense enough be responsible for their own actions and it is always someone else's fault. :mad:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1367951557.jpg

EMJ 05-07-2013 11:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seahawk (Post 7428029)
The first person to design an app that figures out how to allow parents to block their kids texting while in a car (it is simple, btw, the tech exists) wins.

Sprint is offering this feature (Dale, Jr. ad).

Seahawk 05-07-2013 11:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EMJ (Post 7428040)
Sprint is offering this feature (Dale, Jr. ad).

Excellent. I didn't know it was available.

Seems like it costs $2 a month and is available on Android phones.

I propose that any parent who does not buy this service is negligent, and that any manufacturer, service provider who does not make this service available for free be held accountable. How can anyone charge for this service? It is racist and anti-poor: Why should poor families have to suffer?

This is clearly a known safety hazard with available solutions. Apple should be ashamed. If a child is killed because a parent or corporation, responsible or not, put a phone in their hand, that's just one too many.

BlueSkyJaunte 05-07-2013 11:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by techweenie (Post 7427557)
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.

And this is why attempting a conversation with you is pointless. You use outright lies as your talking points.

If you're willing to go that far, why should we believe what you say about your "background"?

foxpaws 05-07-2013 11:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Seahawk (Post 7428029)
So, your need to text on a train is more valuable than the lives of teenagers (I'm arguing like a Progressive)? How dare you be so unthinking, so uncaring.

We must do something. Texting kills. The first person to design an app that figures out how to allow parents to block their kids texting while in a car (it is simple, btw, the tech exists) wins.

The train or bus can have a ten dollars sensor that allows all functionality.

This is not going to the moon, folks...think of the Newtown Massacre that happens every day because Progressives won't propose legislation because they need to text on a train! On a serious note, I followed a Ford Focus driving on rural roads today that was all over the white lines, back and forth, punctures the middle yellow lines as well. Ten miles of this. I finally caught up to her at a stop light. She had her phone in front of her grill, busily texting. This is serious stuff and absolutely needs to be addressed.

AT&T or Samsung does not have marketing items such as videos and promo items that encourage children to text and drive - Keystone has marketing items such as videos and promo items that encourage 5-year-olds to shoot rifles.

Yes, texting and driving does need to be addressed - just like drinking and driving was addressed, just like marketing guns to 5-year-olds needs to be addressed.

techweenie 05-07-2013 11:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BlueSkyJaunte (Post 7428052)
And this is why attempting a conversation with you is pointless. You use outright lies as your talking points.

If you're willing to go that far, why should we believe what you say about your "background"?

So, point out the 'outright lies,' please. Or do you just want to leave it vague?

BlueSkyJaunte 05-07-2013 11:52 AM

I already did. Look at the quoted text. Utter BS.

techweenie 05-07-2013 11:56 AM

What "quoted text" are you referring to?

flipper35 05-07-2013 11:57 AM

Just out of curiosity since I have not seen any of the ads, where does one find these ads in print or on TV? Highlightes? Nick Jr? PBS Kids? Hulu? Cable or OTA TV? I don't watch a lot of TV so I could be missing them somewehere.

foxpaws 05-07-2013 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Racerbvd (Post 7428037)
Scott,

She just doesn't seen to understand that kids can't buy guns. Aids kills a lot of gays, yet, people like her are pushing for homosexuality to be taught as normal in schools.
The fact that more children die from choking on things, like the Beenie Baby that she critizised the manufactor for having a "not for children under 3" than pink guns every year. Course, since she doesn't think people are smart enough to have common sense enough be responsible for their own actions and it is always someone else's fault. :mad:

What you don't understand is you mitigate the deaths - you avoid marketing rifles to 5-year-olds.

Life is fatal - it will happen to all of us. However, marketing guns that look like toys, marketed like toys, however are not toys, to 5-year-olds are fatalities waiting to happen.

Apparently, according to you racer, the people who had this terrible tragedy happen to them aren't 'smart enough' or don't have enough 'common sense', and their family is suffering for their 'not enough' actions. But, who paid the price as well - society. We all lost a child, who knows what amazing things Caroline Sparks may have done...

Obviously you didn't read earlier - I think the parents, at the very least, should be charged with endangering a child. I think they should be held very responsible for their neglect.

techweenie 05-07-2013 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by foxpaws (Post 7428061)
AT&T or Samsung does not have marketing items such as videos and promo items that encourage children to text and drive - Keystone has marketing items such as videos and promo items that encourage 5-year-olds to shoot rifles.

Yes, texting and driving does need to be addressed - just like drinking and driving was addressed, just like marketing guns to 5-year-olds needs to be addressed.

Apparently there's an epidemic of 4-10 year olds texting and driving that I was unaware of.

flipper35 05-07-2013 12:11 PM

It is very common nowdays. How else are they supposed to send a pic of their first rifle hanging in the rack in the back window of the pickup while on the way to the range?

matt711 05-07-2013 12:11 PM

In much the same way that there is an epidemic of 4-10 year olds beating down the doors at Wal-Mart to purchase pink .22 rifles...

techweenie 05-07-2013 12:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by matt711 (Post 7428114)
In much the same way that there is an epidemic of 4-10 year olds beating down the doors at Wal-Mart to purchase pink .22 rifles...

Too shay.


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