Stas Bush wrote:How are you going to enforce standars of supervision? Do you agree that even a supervised child is more dangerous, with an industrial tool, than a trained adult in the same place?
Start with existing systems that work and expand from there. We already have programs in place such as Drivers Ed and you have to take a test just to get a Drivers License. We can expand that idea. Many states and local communities have what is called Hunters Ed. In essence it is a gun safety class that you take. For child hunter it is typicaly required to hunt in the first place. You have to have a hunting license to hunt, you have to either be 18 years of age or have Hunters Ed if under 18 years of age. Expand on this concept. Required education with a working educational standard that emphasizes safety. When dealing with children you use age appropriate calibers.
Recreational activities can be banned if it is shown people cannot adequately control their recreational tools. Hunting is basically a recreational activity. Who the fuck relies on it to live in the modern world? Psycho primitivists?
With the current economic crisis in this country, you would be surprised. There has been an increase in people obtaining hunting licenses country wide as a means to try and cut back on living expenses. Yes recreational activity can be banned if it is sufficiently dangerous and poorly used. But you need extraordinary proof to ban controlled recreation. Its easier to ban people from shooting out their back door than it is to ban people from shooting on a firing range.
Yeah, but NOT BY THEIR FUCKING PARENTS. By a professional commitee? Sure, why not. Also, some ages simply have inadequate physical and psychological maturity no matter how you cut it - the muscles and brain of an 8-year old is really underdeveloped compared to an adult.
I quite agree. I would never hand a large caliber weapon to a child or a novice shooter. A child shooting a .22 is going to be quite adequate. The .22 will seem powerful for the child due to reasons you already stated.
A gun is stored at home. It has been shown that most common storage devices are unsafe and prone to easy failure. The child is at home at all times, or most times. It is also routine access if the daddy takes his kiddie out for shooting often. I doubt daddy takes a child to operate a carier excavator often, so that's certainly nothing even close to the routine of gun use.
Extraordinary care should be taken in firearms storage with children. You are right that its a common problem, and its one that needs to be solved. There are some possible answers. Safes with dial combinations. Guns required to be kept with breech locks with individual keys. Keys be kept in another dial safe. Guns kept outside of the house if conditions similar to these cannot be met.
What's the point of making complex restrictions if you can just ban the use of guns by children? Your recreational activities and "hunting"?
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Yeah. You impressed me. You failed to bring up a real reason for children to train to operate deadly tools, unless you're training them for sports or actually make child soldiers out of them.
You cannot dismiss a valid reason simply because its not one you would use.
Yeah? This "restriction" is for the most part equivalent to a ban. Real industrial machinery is not to be employed or operated by children. Children can drive real cars, but that mostly arrives at a high degree of maturity (over 14) and parents do it to train them for an activity that hardly qualifies as 'recreational' since the car is a necessary industrial tool for many.
No, it is not a ban. Children of suitable maturity and capability can and do achieve these goals.
Yeah. Which means parents have no fucking business to evaluate their own kiddie. And for the most part, it would be easier to just ban it alltogether because there's no valid necessity for the use of guns by a child, outside of recreational activities which mean jack shit. End of story.
I never said they should. A parent should have some degree of responsibility in this no doubt, but they are not the evaluator. If they know things that are important for the evaluator to be knowledgeable about the child, they have a duty of responsibility to report this information.
Easier to ban? So you would restrict civil liberties just because you find it easier then trying to allow the safe use of something? We let children fly, but because I think guns are difficult lets ban them entirely. And recreational activities are not jack and shit. We do a great deal for recreational purposes and you do not get to ignore this simply because you don't like it. Its a valid reason and if you want to BAN something rather then work with reasonable restrictions, the burden is on you to prove such a ban is the best course of action. Your arguments already betray this as you admit there can be rules that are effective, if extremely restrictive to degrees. But instead of trying to address the problem, you actually try and ignore it. Rather then heal the broken hand you would rather amputate the arm just to be done with it.