[Vision2020] Nation Debates Extremely Complex Issue of Children Firing Military Weapons

Scott Dredge scooterd408 at hotmail.com
Thu Aug 28 09:15:07 PDT 2014


Paul - you're such a hypocrite.  You get all up in arms about a standup guy with a long military career being killed in a shooting, but you refuse to lift your trigger finger in protest of neighborhood watch captains and police who shoot thugs during altercations.

Date: Thu, 28 Aug 2014 09:03:25 -0700
From: paul.rumelhart at gmail.com
To: thansen at moscow.com
CC: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Nation Debates Extremely Complex Issue of Children Firing Military Weapons

Why do you hide Borowitz reports behind obfuscated urls?

Just for the record, I'm all for teaching kids how to fire weapons and, more to the point, how to be responsible around them.  That's typically where you learn to treat every weapon as if it's loaded and the safety is off.  You don't start them out on fully automatic weapons with a large kick, though.  That was irresponsible of the parents and doubly so of the instructor.


I would rather have children learn a) how to use and respect a firearm in order to reduce accidents and b) not to be afraid of them or (worse) to only be exposed to them through movies.

Paul



On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 8:51 AM, Tom Hansen <thansen at moscow.com> wrote:

Courtesy of the New Yorker at:
http://tinyurl.com/Children-and-Military-Weapons

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Nation Debates Extremely Complex Issue of Children Firing Military WeaponsWASHINGTON—Across the United States on Wednesday, a heated national debate began on the extremely complex issue of children firing military weapons.
“Every now and then, the nation debates an issue that is so complicated and tricky it defies easy answers,” says pollster Davis Logsdon. “Letting small children fire automatic weapons is such an issue.”


Logsdon says that the thorny controversy is reminiscent of another ongoing national debate, about whether it is a good idea to load a car with dynamite and drive it into a tree.
“Many Americans think it’s a terrible idea, but others believe that with the correct supervision, it’s perfectly fine,” he says. “Who’s to say who’s right?”
Similar, he says, is the national debate about using a flamethrower indoors. “There has been a long and contentious national conversation about this,” he says. “It’s another tough one.”
Much like the long-running national debates about jumping off a roof, licking electrical sockets, and gargling with thumbtacks, the vexing question of whether children should fire military weapons does not appear headed for a swift resolution.
“Like the issue of whether you should sneak up behind a bear and jab it with a hot poker, this won’t be settled any time soon,” he says.
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Seeya 'round town, Moscow, because . . .

"Moscow Cares"http://www.MoscowCares.com
  Tom HansenMoscow, Idaho
   
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