I have no problem with young people learning to shoot.
My father took me out for target practice when I was eight, all of us had that experience in my family. As soon as we expressed interest we went out.
I am not sure why a kid needs to OWN a firearm, though.
I am concerned as well about the removal of a need to identify who is buying a firearm. Why would the state not want to know?
And I am not sure how it is extra work to store the paperwork for six years.
http://legiscan.com/AL/text/HB328/id/1176953
jelun wrote:
I have no problem with young people learning to shoot.
My father took me out for target practice when I was eight, all of us had that experience in my family. As soon as we expressed interest we went out.
I am not sure why a kid needs to OWN a firearm, though.
I am concerned as well about the removal of a need to identify who is buying a firearm. Why would the state not want to know?
And I am not sure how it is extra work to store the paperwork for six years.
http://legiscan.com/AL/text/HB328/id/1176953I have no problem with young people learning to sh... (
show quote)
That picture of a fat, red-faced angry juvenile gives me a creepy feeling.
MCMLX
mcmlx wrote:
That picture of a fat, red-faced angry juvenile gives me a creepy feeling.
MCMLX
That is one of the major problems with letting kids have unrestricted access for me.
Teens can be so volatile, and it only takes a few minutes to ruin a whole family.
mcmlx wrote:
That picture of a fat, red-faced angry juvenile gives me a creepy feeling.
MCMLX
Just look at the tribes of fatherless Muslim children being trained, [now in Jihadist American schools] practically from birth, to use many types of explosives and firearms, MCMLX, and encouraged by ANY of the [10?] mothers involved with the [30?] sibling children, to martyr themselves for Allah. Whip, stone, bury-alive, crucify, shoot, hang, burn-alive, Kill infidels and less radical Muslims wherever they are!!! Hummmm. That "fat angry" white kid is not quite so scary to the radical Islamic tribes now saturating America, now is he???
jelun wrote:
That is one of the major problems with letting kids have unrestricted access for me.
Teens can be so volatile, and it only takes a few minutes to ruin a whole family.
Who in their right mind would allow children unrestricted access?
J Anthony wrote:
Who in their right mind would allow children unrestricted access?
Apparently you, J A..., don't read comments on OPP; or you wouldn't ask "WHO." And "right mind" just depends on what side of the earth you are from.
J Anthony wrote:
Who in their right mind would allow children unrestricted access?
Robmull got so excited by your question, I think that we may know the answer.
I grew up in the 50's. my dad had an arsenal in the house, because there were 6 boys, four of them considerably older than me, and all of them could USE the guns any time they wanted. they ranged from my dad's first gun, a 30-40 krag, down to a little short .22 that my kid brother and I used to hunt ducks after dark. Our oldest brother took it
upon himself to claim those guns as his, and every time he would visit,
a gun would be missing, until all of them were gone except dads 12 gauge Long Tom full choke, which, for some reason he broke down and
had it in a drawer. My younger brother and I would hang him, if he was
still alive.
We didn't get to touch a gun, till we were fourteen, and Dad would show us how to properly handle a gun. That was our Right Of Passage.
jelun wrote:
I have no problem with young people learning to shoot.
My father took me out for target practice when I was eight, all of us had that experience in my family. As soon as we expressed interest we went out.
I am not sure why a kid needs to OWN a firearm, though.
I am concerned as well about the removal of a need to identify who is buying a firearm. Why would the state not want to know?
And I am not sure how it is extra work to store the paperwork for six years.
http://legiscan.com/AL/text/HB328/id/1176953I have no problem with young people learning to sh... (
show quote)
robmull wrote:
Just look at the tribes of fatherless Muslim children being trained, [now in Jihadist American schools] practically from birth, to use many types of explosives and firearms, MCMLX, and encouraged by ANY of the [10?] mothers involved with the [30?] sibling children, to martyr themselves for Allah. Whip, stone, bury-alive, crucify, shoot, hang, burn-alive, Kill infidels and less radical Muslims wherever they are!!! Hummmm. That "fat angry" white kid is not quite so scary to the radical Islamic tribes now saturating America, now is he???
Just look at the tribes of fatherless Muslim child... (
show quote)
In American schools? Hardly, when a kid is suspended for gnawing a pop tart into the shape of a gun, cops are called when a first grader points his finger at another kid and goes bang, or draws a stick figure picture of a gun? Yeah, right.
Besides the gun in the picture isn't even real.
robmull wrote:
Apparently you, J A..., don't read comments on OPP; or you wouldn't ask "WHO." And "right mind" just depends on what side of the earth you are from.
Ok, fellow Earthman, explain to me why it's a good idea to let kids play with guns.
buffalo wrote:
In American schools? Hardly, when a kid is suspended for gnawing a pop tart into the shape of a gun, cops are called when a first grader points his finger at another kid and goes bang, or draws a stick figure picture of a gun? Yeah, right.
Besides the gun in the picture isn't even real.
LOL, I am not sure that the gun being real or not is the point, I doubt that the kid in the pic is really angry either.
I would imagine the braces are for real.
larrypuckett1939 wrote:
I grew up in the 50's. my dad had an arsenal in the house, because there were 6 boys, four of them considerably older than me, and all of them could USE the guns any time they wanted. they ranged from my dad's first gun, a 30-40 krag, down to a little short .22 that my kid brother and I used to hunt ducks after dark. Our oldest brother took it
upon himself to claim those guns as his, and every time he would visit,
a gun would be missing, until all of them were gone except dads 12 gauge Long Tom full choke, which, for some reason he broke down and
had it in a drawer. My younger brother and I would hang him, if he was
still alive.
We didn't get to touch a gun, till we were fourteen, and Dad would show us how to properly handle a gun. That was our Right Of Passage.
I grew up in the 50's. my dad had an arsenal in th... (
show quote)
And that's all well and good. knowing how to use them, ok.But no way should kids have unrestricted access to them.
Real hand guns don't have seams on the trigger guard and barrel..
jelun wrote:
I have no problem with young people learning to shoot.
My father took me out for target practice when I was eight, all of us had that experience in my family. As soon as we expressed interest we went out.
I am not sure why a kid needs to OWN a firearm, though.
I am concerned as well about the removal of a need to identify who is buying a firearm. Why would the state not want to know?
And I am not sure how it is extra work to store the paperwork for six years.
http://legiscan.com/AL/text/HB328/id/1176953I have no problem with young people learning to sh... (
show quote)
If you want to reply, then
register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.