Coyote wrote:At some point, they have to work with the real thing, and the sooner they develop good habits about safety and handling, the better.
Why? Is it inevitable that people will have to use real firearms sometime in their life?
Coyote wrote:If they're up for it at 11 (and the kid in the OP obviously wasn't, but he's not the representative for all kids) then let them learn it at 11. Learning guns at an early age gives them that many more years of experience at safe handling, and it can also take the "gee-whiz! Awesome!" factor out of guns. When we started getting M-16s in the Army, you could tell the guys who knew about guns because they casually slung them and walked off. The others waved them around like Rambo (until the Drill Sergeants put them in the front leaning rest; took just a couple seconds). I'd never known guns, growing up, and I was intimidated as all hell.
Ah, I see. It's to prepare the kids for a military career. That's why we should make child-sized guns, it's to prepare for when they join the army!
What kind of bullshit reason is that?
Coyote wrote:For those who are doing it right, let them do it right. A parent who is paying attention to his kid should be able to tell if little Junior isn't ready for this. Same goes for the move from tricycle to bicycle, go-karts, riding a mini-bike or small frame motorcycle (I had one of those when I was 10, myself).
You're comparing bicycles to a gun?
Coyote wrote:Keeping people in the dark until the last possible minute isn't always the best thing.
If we go on the premise that every single person will
need to use a firearm at some point in their life, you would make sense.
But that's not the case.