*EDUCATION* in, a specifically enumerated Constitutional Right, will make for a better society when they are old enough to assume their place in society.
We insist on teaching them how to safely do thingt they should not do at all.
Why not teach them how to safely defend themselves and their family with the best tools available.
Better to teach them how to handle them properly, and respect them, than to try to hide them, hoping they don't find them. . . They won't know how life changing guns can be if you don't teach them, they aren't toys!
Teaching safety is never a bad idea, sometimes you need to find the right age to teach that safety to them, but really teaching them safety is.... well, safe
A kid with no idea how to use a gun can get murdered just as quick as if they didn't have one at all.
Which one would you rather your kid be, dead kid A or dead kid B?
Personally, my kids would know how (and where and when) to shoot a gun just as soon as they could lift it.
To me it's a good idea I thinks they need to be a certain age I was thought how to us a gun at 4 and I use it for saftey when im alone and when u do other stuff
Takes the Mystery, and does away with secretiveness. They learn to respect the guns and understand what guns can do if used improperly. If they want to see the gun, all they must do is ask. That way it is not something to tease and tempt. I was raised around guns and I learned a healthy respect.
Wow, so I'm not sure if it was done out of 2nd Amendment humor or meme but the images here are certainly put in place to evoke the wrong sense about guns and gun ownership.
The only dangerous weapon is the one in the hands of an untrained person, it is my (and yours too if you are an American citizen) right and responsibility to own a gun. No one but you is responsible for the safety and welfare of your family but you and your family and if you are to own a gun it's your responsibility to train and ensure the proper handling, security, storage and maintenance of said equipment. This should include anyone who can, would or might come into contact with said weapon.
I was raised to never touch a gun unless I found one in a dangerous location (we didn't have gun trigger locks when I was a kid). I knew at 6 years old how to unload, check for and remove (if present) a clip, check and empty the chamber and hand all parts to an adult. An ounce of prevention is worth the potential of one life!
In states that allow children to hunt with their parents, I say yes, it is a very good idea but in a city like NY, unless one has reasons to own a gun and gets the license to keep it, children should not get near any gun at all but should be taught gun safety if their parents own guns.
Recently a 14 year old defended his siblings from two home invaders. Had he not been proficient, the story would have been of a robbery and the deaths of three kids in their home.
Gun safety should be taught at school along with sex education. For the same reasons.
An excellent idea in fact, the younger the better. I remember being taught to shoot at 9. My grandson was shooting at 6.
Teaching gun safety to children will probably save lives. The first two rules;
1. Treat every firearm as if it is loaded.
2. Keep the firearm pointed in a safe direction.
Two very simple rules but violating either of them can be fatal. Violating both of them is almost certainly a recipe for disaster.
Over the years I've on occasion read many a story in which a youngster found a gun and was handling it in a hazardous manner. Then, another well meaning but foolish kid tries to eliminate the hazard by taking it away from the first. Well we all know what happens then don't we? A tug of war begins with the gun being the "rope" and sooner or later discharges killing one of them. Notice that both of the rules were violated in the tug of war.
Had either of those kids been taught gun safety the hazard could have been eliminated in a safe manner. The one would have known to not get into a tug of war with the other with the gun being the rope.
Simple, every child should know how to behave in a safe manner with guns around with rules # 1 and 2 being first and foremost in their heads. Then, let them "practice" gun safety such as holding the firearm in a...
An excellent idea in fact, the younger the better. I remember being taught to shoot at 9. My grandson was shooting at 6.
Teaching gun safety to children will probably save lives. The first two rules;
1. Treat every firearm as if it is loaded.
2. Keep the firearm pointed in a safe direction.
Two very simple rules but violating either of them can be fatal. Violating both of them is almost certainly a recipe for disaster.
Over the years I've on occasion read many a story in which a youngster found a gun and was handling it in a hazardous manner. Then, another well meaning but foolish kid tries to eliminate the hazard by taking it away from the first. Well we all know what happens then don't we? A tug of war begins with the gun being the "rope" and sooner or later discharges killing one of them. Notice that both of the rules were violated in the tug of war.
Had either of those kids been taught gun safety the hazard could have been eliminated in a safe manner. The one would have known to not get into a tug of war with the other with the gun being the rope.
Simple, every child should know how to behave in a safe manner with guns around with rules # 1 and 2 being first and foremost in their heads. Then, let them "practice" gun safety such as holding the firearm in a safe direction. Then add on loading and when they are fully and safely following the safety rules of pointing and loading, let them fire them. As they grow up they will be confident and proficient and most of all, safety conscious when handling them.
Minutes ago I did a "search" for gun safety rules. Instead, Bing gave me a list of articles in which some adult shot themselves or somebody else in a gun safety class. Well that sure gives some confidence doesn't it? It makes me question their own gun safety training.
Teach them early, teach them properly. Hopefully they will grow up to be responsible, safety conscious adults around firearms rather than cringing in fear when they are around one.
I was/am raised in a house with no guns and my brother and I know better than to use a gun the wrong way. My other brother on the other hand, he decided he wanted to spend his life on the streets. As a teenager he had a couple guns too.
Personally I believe that if the child comes from a house with guns, then yes gun safety is neccesary. If not, I don't see the point in it, but it could still be a good idea.
The way I see it, it doesn't matter if they learn gun safety. There are always those few that go on to use them badly.Just because a child doesn't learn gun safety, doesn't mean if they do use one, they won't use them safely. It's called common sense. By the time they actually find out how to get a gun, they should have a good common sense base.
Oh, see now I understand. Those types of Safety lessons, I can understand and see how they can be neccesary and usefull. You wouldn't want little kids to have guns and shooting each other because they learned from t.v. how to do it.
Look up the NRA's Eddie Eagle Program for a better explanation of it.
It's the highest rated safety program of its type.
Mainly because the ones put out by other groups spend more time teaching how bad and scary guns and gun-owners are than they do what to do if you find one.
Oh, the vast majority develop common sense, even if it's to the lowest degree. Find one person that'll put their hand to a hot stove top, or put their arm in a blowing fire.
These day's, they want bureaucracies to assure that you *CAN'T* touch a hot stove. If I were dictator of the world, to put a warning on an obvious danger, would be a felony! My great-uncle told me: "Stupidity should be painful, thus to discourage repetition."
Its a good idea that they should know this but don't prolong it. Teach them safety then move onto something else like computer class. Better to teach them then to have the tv teach them. After that they should leave the gun alone.
Both my children learned to shoot when they were around 4 years old with a BB gun, then on to a pellet gun and by 7 a .22. They both passed hunter safety at 10 years old and started to hunt with me. Shooting and hunting is a fun family activity and the hunting fills the freezer too.
Why not teach them how to safely defend themselves and their family with the best tools available.
VERY WELL STATED!
Which one would you rather your kid be, dead kid A or dead kid B?
Personally, my kids would know how (and where and when) to shoot a gun just as soon as they could lift it.
The only dangerous weapon is the one in the hands of an untrained person, it is my (and yours too if you are an American citizen) right and responsibility to own a gun. No one but you is responsible for the safety and welfare of your family but you and your family and if you are to own a gun it's your responsibility to train and ensure the proper handling, security, storage and maintenance of said equipment. This should include anyone who can, would or might come into contact with said weapon.
I was raised to never touch a gun unless I found one in a dangerous location (we didn't have gun trigger locks when I was a kid). I knew at 6 years old how to unload, check for and remove (if present) a clip, check and empty the chamber and hand all parts to an adult. An ounce of prevention is worth the potential of one life!
Grace to you, Glory to God!
Kids are naturally curious and will want to look at a gun if they find it.
That's how people get shot.
Every kid should have at least the basic rules drilled into them.
Stop, Don't Touch, Leave the Area, Tell an Adult.
Gun safety should be taught at school along with sex education. For the same reasons.
Teaching gun safety to children will probably save lives. The first two rules;
1. Treat every firearm as if it is loaded.
2. Keep the firearm pointed in a safe direction.
Two very simple rules but violating either of them can be fatal. Violating both of them is almost certainly a recipe for disaster.
Over the years I've on occasion read many a story in which a youngster found a gun and was handling it in a hazardous manner. Then, another well meaning but foolish kid tries to eliminate the hazard by taking it away from the first. Well we all know what happens then don't we? A tug of war begins with the gun being the "rope" and sooner or later discharges killing one of them. Notice that both of the rules were violated in the tug of war.
Had either of those kids been taught gun safety the hazard could have been eliminated in a safe manner. The one would have known to not get into a tug of war with the other with the gun being the rope.
Simple, every child should know how to behave in a safe manner with guns around with rules # 1 and 2 being first and foremost in their heads. Then, let them "practice" gun safety such as holding the firearm in a...
Teaching gun safety to children will probably save lives. The first two rules;
1. Treat every firearm as if it is loaded.
2. Keep the firearm pointed in a safe direction.
Two very simple rules but violating either of them can be fatal. Violating both of them is almost certainly a recipe for disaster.
Over the years I've on occasion read many a story in which a youngster found a gun and was handling it in a hazardous manner. Then, another well meaning but foolish kid tries to eliminate the hazard by taking it away from the first. Well we all know what happens then don't we? A tug of war begins with the gun being the "rope" and sooner or later discharges killing one of them. Notice that both of the rules were violated in the tug of war.
Had either of those kids been taught gun safety the hazard could have been eliminated in a safe manner. The one would have known to not get into a tug of war with the other with the gun being the rope.
Simple, every child should know how to behave in a safe manner with guns around with rules # 1 and 2 being first and foremost in their heads. Then, let them "practice" gun safety such as holding the firearm in a safe direction. Then add on loading and when they are fully and safely following the safety rules of pointing and loading, let them fire them. As they grow up they will be confident and proficient and most of all, safety conscious when handling them.
Minutes ago I did a "search" for gun safety rules. Instead, Bing gave me a list of articles in which some adult shot themselves or somebody else in a gun safety class. Well that sure gives some confidence doesn't it? It makes me question their own gun safety training.
Teach them early, teach them properly. Hopefully they will grow up to be responsible, safety conscious adults around firearms rather than cringing in fear when they are around one.
Personally I believe that if the child comes from a house with guns, then yes gun safety is neccesary. If not, I don't see the point in it, but it could still be a good idea.
It's a good idea for every kid.
The safety lessons I'm talking about aren't to keep kids from misusing a gun.
It's to keep them from playing with one they find somewhere.
More than one kid has found a gun somewhere when they were playing and fired a round by accident.
Heck a Gang in London was caught hiding a machine gun on a playground last year.
It's the highest rated safety program of its type.
Mainly because the ones put out by other groups spend more time teaching how bad and scary guns and gun-owners are than they do what to do if you find one.
The Right to keep and bear arms is a Civil Right that they should be taught to correctly exercise.
If I were dictator of the world, to put a warning on an obvious danger, would be a felony!
My great-uncle told me: "Stupidity should be painful, thus to discourage repetition."