Yogi wrote:Coyote wrote:I never said it would be a requirement for everyone. But to be honest, I think it'd be a good idea if basic gun safety was taught on a broad level-- what they are and are not capable of, how to tell if it is loaded, how to unload and 'safe' it, etc.
Chances are most people will never need a firearm, but then again I also learned the basics of CPR and I've never needed that, either. I see heart defibrillators in the mall; I have no idea how to work one but I think it's a good idea to learn. I also have insurance on my house, but that doesn't mean I intend for it be burned down.
Learning how to handle or deal with dangerous things in a safe manner is rarely a bad idea, y'know?
Not what you said. You said that everyone will need to use the real thing sooner or later. If you're talking about just mandatory firearms training, why use child-sized weapons that can fire real bullets, and then allow them to be carried off the firing range? According to you, it should never be used outside of one.
Okay, I should clarify: I'm talking partially about the population of people who intend to learn firearms and use them for whatever purposes, and the general population who will
probably never need or want to use them. When I say that most people will never
need a firearms I'm saying that people who buy guns for home protection rarely ever need to defend themselves. Even policemen and soldiers can go an entire career, or decades, without ever using their weapons for anything more than training range practice. I myself went to the Sunni Triangle in Iraq and fired all of 7 shots the whole year I was there, and all of them were warning shots. So I never truly "needed" the weapon to engage and kill an enemy. But I sure wasn't going to go there without it, either.
For those who intend to use firearms in their lives, there is a 100% need for proper and complete training. Under those circumstances, they'll fire at a supervised range until they are ready to exercise their rights and responsibility in daily life. Whether that includes daily carrying of a weapons or not is besides the point; I'm talking about training phase for those intended to use weapons.
For those who
never intend to use firearms, I personally think there is a need for education and familiarization training because it would help cut down on misunderstandings and misconception, and it would also be a good idea if people who don't use firearms could still undertake basic safety actions if they should run across one... and also know the legalities of what rights and responsibilities their gun-owning neighbors have.
Coyote wrote:People who don't learn anything about guns tend to either be scared of them (for unrealistic reasons) or in awe of them (for equally unrealistic reasons). Teach them the reality at an appropriate age and both misconceptions dry up. You realize you're advocating in favor of ignorance here, right?
Evidence please?
I don't know if there are any in-depth psychological studies done about people who are taught about guns at an early age vs. people who aren't taught about guns at an early age. I know only from experience and what other trainers tell me from their experience. There's also ignorance that I think is safe to infer, when people lobby for laws banning "machineguns" and think that things such as bayonet lugs, carry slings, and other cosmetic changes made to guns will make them somehow less dangerous. I've met a lot of people who believe that full-auto fire makes it possible to mow down masses of people like wheat before a scythe, which is rarely true. A lot of the ignorance that crops up about guns corresponds closely with what people see guns doing in Hollywood movies, which says a lot right there.
Coyote wrote:Quite strawmanning me you dishonest bastard. I'm searching for examples of gradiated responsibility.
But against the idea of non-lethal training guns for kids.
Where did I say that? I'm perfectly happy with non-lethal training for kids, getting them started with things like BB guns, the difference is that that is where you want to stop the training, and I see it as a stepping stone to more advanced training with the real thing-- so, once again, you try to warp and distort what I'm saying. You are very dishonest.
Coyote wrote:A parent should know when a child is ready to graduate from one thing to another, more dangerous thing that requires more skill and responsibility. Unless you're going to tell me that there is no inherent danger whatsoever in children riding bicycles.
Classic black-white fallacy. There are degrees of danger, and I HOPE that, being the trained firearms expert that you are, you can see that a gun is more dangerous than a bicycle.
Is it? Let's face it, the percentage of kids learning guns is lower than the percentage of kids learning bicycles. Almost every kid, at some point, learns bicycles. And because of attitudes like yours, people relax about bicycle safety because they are ubiquitous among children. Drivers don't really "see" them much beyond part of the normal daily landscape and kids frequently don't pay attention to their surroundings or they try to do some silly stunt. This last week I saw two bicycle accidents that could have resulted in serious injury or death. People see bicycles every day and get lazy about them. A bicycle is a
mode of wheeled transportation that has to follow the same rules of the road as a car. People think nothing of putting their 10-year-old kid on a bicycle out on a road with one-ton cars full of people texting, eating Big Macs, putting on makeup in the rearview mirror or talking on cell phones. Even coutry roads, with little traffic, is no guarantee because people relax their alertness even more.
I think kids on bicycles exposes then to far, far more danger than an afternoon at a gun range under an adult's close supervision.
Coyote wrote:They may not need to, but they may want to, and if that's the case, they'll need to know how and what to do safely and develop good habits early. Again, even people who have no interest or need for firearms probably would not have their lives destroyed by knowing basic safety tips and what to do and how/why not to freak out.
I see. Unless you're trained with real guns when you are 11, you cannot ever gain any firearms training ever. Not when you're 15, not when you're 18, not when you're 21, not when you're 90, not ever.
Where did I say that? Did I say that? Show me where I said that. I'm not interested in playing semantic games with you; either you're going to start being honest about this or it's over.
Knowing how to handle firearms safely and responsibly is a good skill to know, and if someone has a chance to learn it early, and develop good habits earlier, is better off than someone who has not. A lot of our ease with handling any device or procedure comes with experience. When I was first learning how to drive, I was very nervous. Someone passing me, or a big truck, would be intimidating. Now it is very ordinary and I am very much at ease; I suspect the same is true for many people. Experience helps with ease of use and good habits become instinctive. From traffic to guns to piloting... the more you know and experience, the better you are. Do you think Captain Sullenberger could have landed his plane in the Hudson if he'd just graduated flight school a month prior?
You keep on using the word "need" but I don't think you know what it means.
Need for a firearm can mean a lot of things: a policeman or soldier needs a firearm as part of his daily job. He may never "need" to use it to kill a criminal/enemy. A private citizen may feel he needs a firearm to protect himself from anything from criminals to dangerous animals if he lives in the country. He may never "need" to actually fire it, though.
But it doesn't matter whether any of these people need them or "need" them; they do all
need to have safety training, and that is what I am arguing in favor of right here.