![]() |
Matt, they get them at gunshows, no paperwork that way.
|
Quote:
I could not agree more that the loss of any child in a firearms accident is tragic. So is the loss of a child in a drowning accident, car accident, bicycle accident, or any other way. While I have experienced none of these in my immediate family (there have been some in the extended family, over the generations), I don't think I need to in order to be able to sympathize with any parent who has suffered such a loss. Quote:
Children face a myriad of risks when growing up. The generally accepted notion is that they are not responsible enough, smart enough, aware enough, or anything "enough" to make their own choices regarding these risks until a certain age. That is why they have parents. Some parents are uncomfortable with exposing their children to any sort of risk or, therefor, the responsibility that comes with making decisions (guided decisions, at first) pertinent to those risks. Some parents are far too comfortable exposing their children to far too great of risk at a given age (I'm being generous here - these parents are more like lazy and inattentive, like the mother of this poor kid) and their kids inevitably get hurt. All of our comfort levels fall somewhere inbetween those two extremes. It's up to us to decide. I won't decide for you; I won't let you decide for me. I think that's fair. My comfort level includes assuming the risks (and reaping the rewards) of introducing my children to firearms at an early age. Yours does not. That's fine. Just don't put words in my mouth in an effort to make my position appear unreasonable or untenable. You may not like it, it may not be for you, but it worked for me, my extended family over many generations, and millions of other like me. |
Quote:
Walmart has gotta be 100% checked... and god knows, I'd sure be hoping these folks are scrutinized. Shoppers at WalMart |
Quote:
|
The majority of the 4-10 year olds can't fill out the paperwork because the public education system has failed them...they can't read and write. This injustice must be addressed, I suggest higher taxes, increased regulation and more standardized testing. These 4-10 year olds have rights!
|
Quote:
But just in case you are, here is the quote. AGAIN. Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
The contents of the quote is unadulterated BS. You either made it up, or are so ignorant about the subject matter that you are merely repeating what someone else made up. So why should we believe anything else you post? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
1) wouldn't have had access to the gun and ammo. 2) would have known better than to"play" with the weapon. I knew at 5 where my fathers guns were, but I also knew better than to mess with them, and they weren't locked up either. Quote:
Quote:
4-Year-Old Boy Steals Mom's Car for a Joy Ride - YouTube 4-Year-Old Boy Steals Mom's Car for a Joy Ride - YouTube By geobeats · 1 min · 510 views · Added Sep 28, 2012 4-Year-Old Boy Steals Mom's Car for a Joy Ride ... The young child reportedly stole his mother's keys while she ... 11, Steals Car Goes for Joy Ride: ... 4-Year-Old Boy Steals Mom's Car for a Joy Ride - YouTube Boy, 7, Steals Grandmother's Car for Mall Joyride | Fox News Boy, 7, Steals Grandmother's Car for Mall Joyride | Fox News May 01, 2010 · ... grandmother's car on a joyride to an ... Steals Grandmother's Car for Mall Joyride. ... her car was, The Star Press reported. Child welfare ... 4-Year-Old Steals Mom's Car & Goes on a Joy Ride | The Stir thestir.cafemom.com/toddler/144230/4yearold_steals_moms_car_goes 4-Year-Old Steals Mom's Car & Goes on a Joy Ride by Mary Fischer September 28, 2012 at 2:35 PM 19. ... What 4-year-old child has ever driven a car before?! Young girl steals car, goes on joy ride - FOX19.com-Cincinnati ... www.fox19.com/story/20967184/young-girl-steals-car-goes-on-joy-ride Young girl steals car, goes on ... A six-year-old girl managed to take her mother's car for a joyride in ... telling firefighters he could no longer care for the child. 8-year-old boy steals grandma's car, crashes near Schuylkill … articles.mcall.com › Schuylkill Haven An 8-year-old Schuylkill County boy took his grandmother's car for a joy ride this ... the unnamed child was wearing a seat ... allegedly steals car ... 7 Year old steals car and goes on a GTA RAMPAGE !!! - Page 2 ... 7 Year old steals car and goes on a GTA RAMPAGE !!! - Page 2 - Xbox360Achievements.org 65 replies in thread 7 Year old steals car and goes on a GTA RAMPAGE !!! ... He should have been hurt. ... If that were my child he would have got his ass spanked. Hungry 6-Year-Old Crashes Minivan During Junk Food Joyride | … thestir.cafemom.com/big_kid/119100/hungry_6yearold_crashes_minivan... Has your child ever done anything ... everyone is home so that he can't get out. ... glad he wasn't hurt and no one else was either. however i don't ... 4-Year-Old Takes Mom’s Car For a Joyride - ABC News abcnews.go.com/.../2011/10/4-year-old-takes-moms-car-for-a-joyride Oct 14, 2011 · 4-Year-Old Takes Mom’s Car For a Joyride Email 1 Smaller ... No bystanders or fellow drivers were hurt, and police said the child sustained minor to ... |
And the background check is not waived by a majority of states. That is simply not true. Only sales between private individuals are exempt and only in certain states. Im not sure how many gun shows you have been to in your life but my experience has been that at least 1/2 of the sellers at every gun show I attend are dealers. I have been to hundreds of shows.
|
Yes, and you're making my point. This isn't about going to the show and trying to buy a gun from a dealer who is obliged to run a background check. This is about going to the other vendors (probably more like 40%) who are private parties.
You can go to any private seller/collector and buy without a background check in 33 states. That *is* the majority, per my original quote. |
So the manufacturer is marketing the pink rifle through some sort of backdoor plan by which the gun is first legally purchased at a dealer and then later sold between private sellers at a gun show...
What is next? The parents of the tragically killed child sue the private seller form the gun show for not making sure they understood the gravity of thier decision to allow a child access to a gun? Either way it's the parents that would be checked through NCIS. The purchase would likely be legal through either a dealer or private seller. In the end it still comes back to parenting, background check or not. |
We don't disagree on the bigger points, but some people seem unwilling to accept the notion that lots of guns are purchased without background checks. Universal background checks are supported by the majority of NRA members and a larger % of the public.
But that's just an overarching context to the 'rifles marketed as toys' problem. Looks like social pressure has caused Crickett to pull back its images of kiddies with guns. The predictable response will be a surge of parents running to buy Crickett rifles. And on it goes. |
Quote:
|
Im all for social pressure over new regulation. So they drop the cartoon and paint all the rifles black, whatever.
I just don't see how increased background checks will make much of a difference. Those who can't pass them will still find guns. Those who lie on the forms still won't be prosecuted, and still won't be able to complete the transaction. I agree that a whole lot of guns are purchased without a check. Not sure how to stop that, even with a new law requiring universal checks. The government doesnt know if I have a gun, and if I sell one to a person I know without a check they won't know about that either. Since there is no database there really isn't a way to make it work. We currently don't prosecute those who lie on the background check form, the Toomey bill didn't contain any additional enforcement provisions. The DOJ and Obama really don't care about prosecutions, they care about gaining a political victory. |
Quote:
Quote:
Feel free to explain how these activities are dissimilar, and why my comparison is "preposterous". |
Drowning in their parents' pools is the number cause of death for kids in AZ. And we have a LOT of guns here with few restrictions.
|
Quote:
Or how much marketing has Budweiser done aimed at 5-year-olds, made grape flavored beer, and then packaged it in a Mickey Mouse decorated can? According to the logic here - that would be OK, responsible adults wouldn't buy grape beer for their children who begged for their folks to buy it, so they can be like Tommy next door, or at least let them have access to it when they aren't around (but if they are around - throwing back a cold one with dad would be OK) however, in 29 states it is legal for parents to buy kids booze and for kids to drink with parent's consent, just like it is OK for parents to buy 5-year-olds guns. We don't allow booze to be marketed to children, not just because they can't buy it (but they can use it - just like guns - can't buy, but can use), but because it just is a bad idea. We have decided, even if it is OK for parents to buy them liquor, and for them to drink liquor (at private locations that don't sell booze with parental consent), we don't market or create liquor products that are appealing to 5-year-olds. Just like we shouldn't be marketing or creating firearms that are appealing to 5-year-olds. |
Quote:
I don't have the answer, but we should be able to improve the situation. This guy got a gun because someone helped him: N.Y. man who shot dead 2 firefighters killed grandmother in 1980 - CNN.com Children get guns because they find (primarily) family weapons. Things are bad enough without making toy versions that confuse children... [Yes, I know all Pelican parents are perfect. But not all parents are.] There's a stat on the Internet that may be valid or maybe not (I've heard sometimes things on the Internet aren't true.) that from 1979 to 2010, 111K children were killed by gunshots. If true, that's more than all US soldiers in 60 years of war. Accidental gun deaths are not 'isolated incidents.' Adding to the rate of death just seems dumb to me. |
Quote:
When was the last time you were at a gun show? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
NRA-ILA | Don't Believe Everything You Read |
Quote:
In the drowning scenario, sadly, any miscalculation by the child and/or the supervising parent can result in instant tragedy. But again, you'll be hard pressed to convince the population that these two fall into the same risk category (5 year old shooting a rifle, 5 year old swimming). I guess I'm further perplexed by this notion of "irresponsible" parents are to blame for these accidents with rifles, drownings, etc. I guess what it seems you're not considering, and it's been stated by several posters, is that participating in high risk activities with children, such as shooting rifles at 5, increases the risk for danger if an ACCIDENT should occur, even when parents are responsible and diligent. Which is why we are saying mitigate the risk and an issue (tragedy) won't happen. That's it. We will agree to disagree. |
Quote:
|
Ed, I think you are unfairly raising the risk level of having a rifle in the hands of a child with proper parental supervision. The stats simply do not support your position. Stated as a percentage of actual participants in these various activities, the shooting sports enjoy a lower child accident/mortality rate than swimming, bicycling, or any number of other "safer" activities. Far lower.
So, as far as your "risk catagories", the shooting sports are actually far lower on that scale than many other common recreational activities that we thing nothing of letting our kids enjoy. Guns add an element to the equation that nothing else does - emotion. Looking at the cold, hard statistics, though, shows the shooting sports as one of the most risk-free any child can undertake. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I certainly think that before any Crickett is sold the parents and children should attend a 20 hour training course regarding all safety/hazard aspects of the weapon, that is what you are advocating - right Zoa? |
Quote:
You could counter with how many of the kids on bikes were trained? Really? Which government-sponsored bicycle training program would that be? |
Quote:
So, do you get the point that your statement regarding training and proper use is an impossible thing to factor in when looking at the statistics regarding children on bicycles/fatalities vs children with guns/fatalities? |
Quote:
|
I understand a whole lot about personal responsibility - and why we place very little value in it.
We could say - you are personally responsible for driving at a safe speed. Ha, how high would the fatality rate be on the roads today if that were the case. Or in the case of corporate America - you are personally responsible for not dumping pollutants into this lake... if that were the case, and we had responsible corporate citizens, Lake Michigan wouldn't have caught on fire. So, when it comes to children, who are dependent upon the 'personal responsibility' of others, we usually err on the side of caution. We as a society understand that unfortunately far too often parents are sadly lacking in the 'personal responsibility' aspect of parenting, but, should we place children, and almost uniquely others when it comes to firearms (irresponsible parents who let their children have access to guns place many others at risk, not just their families) at increased risk because of parental irresponsibility? Again, we usually err on the side of caution. We don't market booze to children, even though it is legal in most states for children to have a drink with their parents. Don't you think it would be perhaps a little more responsible for gun manufacturers not to market guns to children, even though it is legal for children to use firearms? |
Quote:
Background: The Case Against Gun Background Checks - ABC News Background checks for guns: What you need to know - U.S. News The most recent bill: Bill Summary & Status - 113th Congress (2013 - 2014) - S.649 - THOMAS (Library of Congress) |
:rolleyes:
When is the last time you were at a gun show? |
Quote:
I guess you didn't like losing. |
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 07:47 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website