CatHedral
Well-Known Member
Not in my West Coast state. We went too far.its all part of the same failed system of gun laws that has turned this country into tombstone on cowboy payday...
Not in my West Coast state. We went too far.its all part of the same failed system of gun laws that has turned this country into tombstone on cowboy payday...
very few people are ever prosecuted for doing what you describe. Maybe that could change.We are talking about an individual who left a loaded 9mm, racked round and ready, safety off, in an unlocked truck that a 3 year old girl had access to. That’s criminal.
Its a solution; your gun, your problem, your crime.very few people are ever prosecuted for doing what you describe. Maybe that could change.
MAGAA 16-year-old boy was shot in the head working at a Wendy’s drive-thru in Phoenix Arizona a couple days ago. Because they didn’t have any barbecue sauce. Only in America.
Every person that I know well and owns a gun has a story about the time they mistook a family member for an intruder and pointed their gun at them. Most often its the wife who pointed her gun at her husband. But I know of a couple of families where the father pointed his gun at his son.Guns, they just make the home safer.
Ohio Teen Fatally Shot by Dad Who Mistook Her for Intruder, Police Say
Read in The Daily Beast: https://apple.news/AjvPHvwyzQTmnOMC1B4x8rw
i'm not arguing, i'm just curious, what changes would you implement to make them safer before you let them out of r&d?Every person that I know well and owns a gun has a story about the time they mistook a family member for an intruder and pointed their gun at them. Most often its the wife who pointed her gun at her husband. But I know of a couple of families where the father pointed his gun at his son.
This is called a near miss in safety statistics. A near-miss had the potential to be a problem, but it did not happen.
When there are many near misses, it's time to redesign the system. I treat them as failures in reliability analyis when failure can mean death or injury.
Seriously, a product as unsafe as modern guns should never make it out of the development lab without major changes.
My father woke up hearing noises in the kitchen. Grabbed his pistol, went out there, and pointed it before turning on the lights.Every person that I know well and owns a gun has a story about the time they mistook a family member for an intruder and pointed their gun at them. Most often its the wife who pointed her gun at her husband. But I know of a couple of families where the father pointed his gun at his son.
This is called a near miss in safety statistics. A near-miss had the potential to be a problem, but it did not happen.
When there are many near misses, it's time to redesign the system. I treat them as failures in reliability analyis when failure can mean death or injury.
Seriously, a product as unsafe as modern guns should never make it out of the development lab without major changes.
I'd leave that to the engineers who design those things. I'm not a gun owner, so I'm not one to put my ideas out there. What I'm certain of is guns are unreasonably unsafe for the average user to own. No product made today can be released with that kind of track record. Other than guns. Not even automobiles have the same poor safety record that guns have. Congress had to enact laws to protect gun manufacturers from civil lawsuits because they are so badly designed WRT safety.i'm not arguing, i'm just curious, what changes would you implement to make them safer before you let them out of r&d?
I believe every person who keeps a loaded gun at the ready "for safety" has a story like that. I'm sure I'll get replies telling me they never have. Yeah, so a very small number might be able to say so. But then again a I'd view them as the exception that proves the rule.My father woke up hearing noises in the kitchen. Grabbed his pistol, went out there, and pointed it before turning on the lights.
Light comes on, my mother is looking into the business end. After that all guns were disassembled and stored.
I grew up around guns, and respect them. Been witness to what happens with people that dont.I believe every person who keeps a loaded gun at the ready "for safety" has a story like that. I'm sure I'll get replies telling me they never have. Yeah, so a very small number might be able to say so. But then again a I'd view them as the exception that proves the rule.
So glad for your family that you father saw how close he came and took corrective action. Not everyone does. My dad, for example. He did that twice (that I know of) and never saw it as a big deal.