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This is only about the parents now. How did the gun get loaded? Most 5 year olds can't even tie their shoes. You could teach a monkey to shoot a 22 at a target, but gun safety is another story.
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I think 5 or 6 is a little young for guns with kids. Not enough focus of what they have in their hands. 10 to 12, sure. Hell, the first time I took my sister to the range she was like 45 and I was getting pissed at her with her disregard for range protocol. Then again, she is a lawyer. |
Hugh, I would disagree. I think it's common knowledge that kids are sponges at that age, and there should be no difference in the material you feed them, whether it's gun safety or math. I say the earlier, the better, as long as the parent is in control.
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My FIL gave our son a 22 for his first b'day. Never a problem. He received instruction and was under observation until he could get his own hunting license. Never a problem.
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IMHO they are an appropriate target for gun marketing because you can teach them gun safety and supervise them accordingly. Get them trained young and those lessons will be with them for life. A child raised like this will be a responsible gun owner when they're adults. If you're going to have guns available to civilians in a society then those same civilians must know about gun safety. That is absolutely mandatory. The problem is that so many gun owners don't seem to have any common sense. Like... If you don't plan to shoot something then don't point the gun at that "something". |
ZOA, to each his own. I'm not against it at younger ages. I first took my son shooting at about 11 or 12. We had a J.C. Penny 410 that I had bought probably 40 years ago. He closed the barrel (breech) and it blew a hole in the fence in front of us. I asked if he had his finger on the trigger and he said "No!". I reloaded again and it did the same thing. A broken firing pin. He had paid attention to pointing it down range not near his foot. Those little details make a lot of difference.
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ps: I do agree with ya though....30-30 packs a pretty decent recoil for a child, but not that unreasonable. |
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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1367545514.jpg Had to take & pass when I got my 20 gauge.. Respect & Discipline are key to safe fire arm ownership.... :D |
The problem becomes when does society (often with laws) step in because children occasionally need to be protected from parents, and society needs to be protected from poor decisions by those parents. We have, as a society, decided that a 5-year-old driving a car isn't appropriate, not only can the child hurt himself, but that child can injure others (a car makes a darn good weapon). When you market guns to children, how many others are put into danger by a poor decision made by a parent. The parent looks at the advertising, assumes the gun is appropriate for their child - the ad says so. And does a 5-year-old child really understand the difference between pointing a real gun (which looks and is the same size as a toy gun) and toy gun towards his baby sister. Whether that parent purchased the gun for a child that was in no way prepared mentally or physically to handle a gun, or whether that parent was lax and allowed the firearm to be accessible to an unsupervised child, that parent has not only put their family into a potentially dangerous situation, but has endangered the lives of others. Advertising that guns are appropriate for all children is irresponsible because it endangers children and others outside of a family unit.
I would hope that the parents get charged with child endangerment. |
Ok, relax Francis and all of you PC nimrods....... gun culture is all about parneting. My whole family was tought to respect guns at a young age, heck killed my first deer at 8. Matter of fact we had a gun club and a motor cycle enduro club in elementary school, growing up in Northern Michigan was great.
Those that have never owned guns are the first to say how not to handle them...... What happened in this case was a tragedy but all you PC jackasses who are ranting because the gun was a gift to a kid or was pink need to get a grip. People die every day...... in a car wreck, did you blame the car when the driver ran over the bicyclist, how about the tire manufacture, the cell phone company that they were using while they were texting......... GMAFB!!!!!! |
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Well, you can thank mindless idiots who are stupid enough to Quote:
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Parents can teach gun safety at any age without having "kiddie guns." Marketing a downsized gun that looks like a toy has nothing to do with gun safety training. Two separate issues. Sure, we all know there are some low-information parents who are going to get the idea they ought to get their toddler a gun because of an ad. And we all know they're not the ones with upper-quintile intellectual capability. And yeah, we all think, oh well, not a big hit on the quality of the gene pool... but it's the neighbor's kid who is often the recipient of the bullet. There is a trend for children to have huge influence on family purchases that did not exist when (some of us) were growing up in the 50s. The fast food companies have cashed in on this and are doing very very well. Intellectually lazy parents are creating kids with a sense of control and entitlement that may not exist among the highly enlightened here, but go to the mall and see it for yourself. These families are easy to spot. They're often overweight and the kids are headed for a lifetime of medical problems. And everybody is carrying shopping bags full of stuff. Anyway, My first gun is not a big threat, and I don't mean to imply it is. As a marketing guy, I just don't like the use of children to sell this particular product -- one I consider an adult product; one I consider worthy of some respect and care. |
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Racer - playing the blame game isn't the route to take here. We put real age limits on driver's licenses, because we expect that the child be able to make some decisions when dealing with a potentially lethal item (the car) when the parents aren't around. Just like we do with liquor and cigarettes, we expect the individual to make some responsible decisions when life and death items are involved. Therefore, we have decided as a society that we don't allow companies to market those lethal items to children. A gun is a life and death item. We don't expect a 4-year-old to make responsible decisions when it comes to gun safety, yet, if their parents are making bad decisions regarding guns and their children, not only will the family be affected, but others outside the family unit will likely be affected.
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I also have an issue with pink guns and some of the other gun hype/marketing that seems to be prevalent today...will you GMAFB too? Jackass...why yes I am :p |
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Is there ANYTHING that you would not legislate, Fox? |
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