J
Jose
I'm with Nickle on this one.
Some of you guys have bought the "unlocked guns are evil.....mmk" thing hook, line, and sinker.
Some of you guys have bought the "unlocked guns are evil.....mmk" thing hook, line, and sinker.
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What about those of us (the overwhelming majority) who live in places where there is no such thing as being licensed to own a firearm?They should pay...especially if they are not licensed gun owners. It is people like them that ruin this world. I wonder if they were or not.
I'm with Nickle on this one.
Some of you guys have bought the "unlocked guns are evil.....mmk" thing hook, line, and sinker.
I'm with Nickle on this one.
Some of you guys have bought the "unlocked guns are evil.....mmk" thing hook, line, and sinker.
I don't think most folks here are suggesting that. Part of gun ownership carries some level of responsibility- and that responsibility can take more than one form- It doesn't always involve disabling and locking up a perfectly good firearm. It involves risk management, which can be accomplished quite a few different ways.
If I had a 3 year old around, the protocol I would follow would be to have any loaded gun on my person at all times or to have it locked up. (preferably the former!) At that age, children need some level of protection from household dangers. Supervision is obviously the best practice regardless.
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For the record, I live in MA and I think that the MA safe storage regs are insanely, moronically dumb, but I obey them anyways while still being able to keep a loaded gun available for my use. Would I change the way I do things if I lived in a free state? Probably.... but only ever so slightly, and mostly with regards to convenience.
The level of supposed "safety" wouldn't go down in the process, either.
-Mike
Wow, you were a well behaved little kid.---jdubios
What a "special child" you must have been. ---theGringo
I’m a bit surprised, is it unusual to have respected your parents privacy?
Perhaps I'm just not remembering my early childhood correctly. But I can't for the life of me remember not respecting my parents privacy or property.In young children? Yes, it's almost unheard of.
So I would never expect a child, of say, six years old, to respect a parent's privacy.---jdubois
Perhaps I'm just not remembering my early childhood correctly. But I can't for the life of me remember not respecting my parents privacy or property.
Respectfully,
jkelly
childhood morality is typically based upon the questions of 'will I be punished?' and 'what is in it for me?'
Perhaps I'm just not remembering my early childhood correctly. But I can't for the life of me remember not respecting my parents privacy or property.
Perhaps I'm just not remembering my early childhood correctly. But I can't for the life of me remember not respecting my parents privacy or property.
Not to worry. There is sometimes a solitary Fruit Loop among the Cheerios. This is the diversity that makes life worth living.
One ND story I ran into was a fellow on another forum was getting ready to go to the range, and he had a bunch of guns on his bed. One of them was a loaded browning BHP. This ditzy broad that was visiting his house wandered into his bedroom, picked it up and said "bang bang" and pulled the trigger sending a JHP into the side of his computer.
It all comes down to not being the stupid parents of a dead kid, whether its firearms or swimming pools or anything else.
It all comes down to not being the stupid parents of a dead kid, whether its firearms or swimming pools or anything else.