johnlv6
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Radford, VA
riverfever said:Pretty crazy stuff really. Seems like the world is changing so drastically. I see so many angry kids in school.
I just can't imagine hanging onto it for 20 years like that guy.
riverfever said:Pretty crazy stuff really. Seems like the world is changing so drastically. I see so many angry kids in school.
johnlv6 said:I just can't imagine hanging onto it for 20 years like that guy.
ehh were not friends and i read a whole post about you and people making fun of you for about 8 pages so i am not gonna make fun of you in fear u may shoot me:looser: except for that cuase that is just funnydzolcali said:w/e I was making fun with zach see we are friends now tell him zach
riverfever said:I'm going to guess that there's a high likelihood that there was some mental illness involved. If he was sexually abused...it was haunting him each and every day.
dzolcali said:haha, right....
I blame all this on the parents and the upbringings of these little bastards. I mean who teaches a kid or gives a kid a gun or even shows them what a gun looks like at that age.
ECKSJAY said:Responsibility is showing the children what firearms are and that they should respect them. If you don't shroud it in mystery there will be no dangerous curiousity. Children who are educated are less likely to be involved in negligent discharges or intentional, malicious acts. Plenty of cases where a kid 'in the know' averted danger by doing the right thing. My 5 year old daughter watches me shoot at the range and has a profound respect for firearms. She has been watching me shoot shotgun, rifle, and pistol since before she could even walk. I've got a modified Crosman pump pellet gun, stock shortened to her length of pull, that she has been learning with. In a couple of weeks we'll be taking a bird-hunting trip together. She won't be doing any shooting, but will be carrying her own unloaded pellet gun. I'm teaching her the safety of firearms handling and tradition of hunting. That, IMHO, is the best way to open doors for a child and get them involved. Television is SO overrated and is for those who aren't capable of imagination.
riverfever said:Absolutely. It makes zero sense to give a kid a video game where he/she can shoot and kill people and NOT explain that what they are doing isn't reality. I was exposed to guns (first an air gun) at probably the 5th grade and then was gradually showed "real" guns as I earned it through responsibility. I still feel education is key.
DaJudge said:X2...I grew up with guns. Rifles, shotguns, hand guns. We were taught the responsible use of firearms and more importantly to respect others and respect life. All of us new there was a loaded handgun in my dads dresser. None of us ever thought of touching it. Of course as River brought out things are different. My parents didn't worry that if they slapped us in public the state would arrest them and take us away from them.
That is quite a good point.ECKSJAY said:I always make it a point to remember the roots and to educate the uneducated. I also advocate personal responsibility. Nobody should be there to hold your hand. Seek your own answers. Those asked these questions should give the answers to the best of their knowledge/ability. If they don't know the answers, seek out the answers together.
IcedXJ said:That is quite a good point.
On a side note, I am gonna make it my sig...muhahaha
He's blushing, I will make my move :laugh2:ECKSJAY said:Flattered, thanks.![]()
ECKSJAY said:Responsibility is showing the children what firearms are and that they should respect them. If you don't shroud it in mystery there will be no dangerous curiousity. Children who are educated are less likely to be involved in negligent discharges or intentional, malicious acts. Plenty of cases where a kid 'in the know' averted danger by doing the right thing. My 5 year old daughter watches me shoot at the range and has a profound respect for firearms. She has been watching me shoot shotgun, rifle, and pistol since before she could even walk. I've got a modified Crosman pump pellet gun, stock shortened to her length of pull, that she has been learning with. In a couple of weeks we'll be taking a bird-hunting trip together. She won't be doing any shooting, but will be carrying her own unloaded pellet gun. I'm teaching her the safety of firearms handling and tradition of hunting. That, IMHO, is the best way to open doors for a child and get them involved. Television is SO overrated and is for those who aren't capable of imagination.
dzolcali said:I have to disagree, I never had a father figure or guns in the house. Never had access to a gun, never knew how to shoot one, and never had respect or lack of respect for a gun. But I gaurantee if there was a gun in the house, whether I respected it or not, if it came down to some moment in my 5 6 or 13 year old brain that i needed to shoot someone, respect or not, I would know where to locate the gun, and how to operate it. I agree with the right to bear arms but it is a double edged sword...
8Mud said:I'd actually feel safer, if the fairly stable 63% of the population, all had firearms and were self policing.
If guns never existed and/or ceased to exist, the numbers of homicides, would likely still be fairly constant. Maybe then they would try to outlaw any sharp edged tool, then all flamable liquids etc. ad nausium.
Actually, if you take away guns, you get a lot less murders in general. Look at pretty much every other first world country in the world...dzolcali said:agreed except maybe the number of homicides I think they would be lower still, but you would have to admit those who are intending on killing someone regardless of weapon, if you took away the guns there would be a lot messier murders and so forth. i.e. stabbing is bloodier than shooting in most cases, and chopping heads off or w/e also.
Then we gotta pay more janitors and crime scene clean up guys and things just get hairy after that.