As is the "Eddie Eagle" program, the NRA just supplies the materials.
Prop guns and videos apparently.
Well, maybe I just have aversion to having to impose this upon pre-schoolers simply so that a society can indulge it's desire for virtually unregulated gun ownership.
We don't have that problem here.
Nothing about the program is pro-gun. And it beats the hell out of suspending kids because they
bit a pastry into the shape of a gun.
ermmm...I ... ummmm .... ahem... I don't... even... wtf?!
How does it let the parents off the hook? That doesn't even make sense. And you can't complain that the NRA has no gun safety programs, then say it's just a publicity stunt when you discover that they do.
Of course it makes sense.
They're basically saying, yeah we know gun owners are gonna leave loaded weapons laying around where kids can get to them (the program was started because of such incidents) but instead of grabbing every new gun owner by the scruff of the neck and forcing them to take a course in safe gun ownership, we'll just try to get to the children instead. Make it
their responsibility for not touching a loaded weapon.
And we can look good in the process.
Isn't one of the things repeatedly cited by anti-gun people the problem of accidental shootings by kids who find guns? I have no idea what the relevance is of the year the NRA was founded to this.
Yeah, so teach adults to keep the damned guns away from kids.
The relevance was in highlighting how long the NRA had been in existence before they decided it was time to teach the kiddies not to mess with dad's revolver
(to be fair, the NRA probably considered it to be common sense.... but what with all those irresponsible gun owners out there...)
Many states require safety courses prior to issuing a hunting license. It gets dicey Constitutionally to require it of gun owners.
Yeah. Once again some states try to implement some kind of regulation of gun use because it's needed, but they have to go by the back door because otherwise it gets a bit iffy.
Perhaps if people got off the kick that ownership can have no more restrictions than it already does (background checks, licences etc) and agreed to a proper form of regulation similar to the hunting licences, there wouldn't be anyone calling for mandatory public liability insurance.
It's already been pointed out that accidents aren't what would drive up this proposed insurance, but rather that it requires it to cover intentional harm and criminal use.
Just like drink driving. An intentional criminal act which can cause harm to a third party.
Or even speeding, for that matter.
Sounds like insurance in the US only covers people when they are acting within the law.
Which makes it no less effective than "stranger danger" education, or "assault weapon" bans.
So, if kids are taught 'stranger danger' and then secretly filmed afterwards we'd see them happily getting in to stranger's cars?
Not sure what the relevance of 'assault weapon bans' is.