Yes , sitting in a car being driven by an adult and actually driving a car are different things aren't they?
Printable View
Yes , sitting in a car being driven by an adult and actually driving a car are different things aren't they?
I agree.
Guns have there place, but In my opinion it is not even in the hands of common people, let alone a 9 year old.
I agree with our laws in the UK, we have one of the lowest gun death rates in the world I believe.
I also never stated it was the guns fault. Its the country that lets people buy and own guns so easy thats the problem.
I admire the US in a lot of ways, but the laws on guns are crazy
Its any defence to protect the precious guns. Every home needs at least 3. :rolleyes:
Seriously it astounds me.
Why any non licensed professional needs a gun is beyond me. There is a hunting argument, but even that should be on a license basis and not for sport, but control of animal numbers or hunting for food.
My father started teaching me to fire a gun (namely a 38 Special and a .22 rifle) from when I was 6 years old. The practice and skills I learnt helped save my life a few years back.
Now I'm not advocating that all kids should be firing guns, but in a controlled environment with suitable guns it is perfectly safe. An Uzi, in auto mode, was a poor choice for a 9 year old to be firing.
That's the major difference in philosophy between most of Europe and the US. Here the government doesn't "let" the population do anything. It's the population which "lets" the government do things.
On a secondary note, approximately 45% of US citizens own guns. So you are saying that 38,475,000 of those who do own guns can't be trusted? (Based on an estimated 300 million population.) That's a pretty large number of folks you've throw under the bus. Be very careful when making large sweeping statements, hyperbola tends to creep in.