Heck you don't build/buy a house without consider the placement of the gun safe!
I've asked every new neighbor and every friend that my kids have had in the past 20 years. Guns don't kill people. People kill people.
Seriously?
DH has several guns/pistols, I really have no idea how many. He has a huge gun safe where they are stored, only he and I know the combination and he has even gone a step further and uses the key to lock it and he has the key so even if I want into the safe myself (we store valuables in it as well) I have to get him to open it.
Guns don't kill people. People kill people.
You say no guns in homes with small children, what about knives? If someone wants to kill someone they can use an ordinary steak knife to do it.
It's the mentality of people like yourself that is one of the main reasons my DH keeps buying guns. He carries one all the time, and I am thinking about getting my own permit to carry as well. So many crazies in the world now, it's good to have protection of your own. And we spend the better part of our summer in a wilderness area so it's good to have protection then too.
. This is why you don't keep guns in the house when you have children.
http://www.aolnews.com/2011/01/04/o...ree-at-21/?icid=main|aim|dl1|sec1_lnk1|193528
) doesn't mean the rest of us are idiots.Wow, this is a little harsh, don't you think? Because I may not agree with your gun ownership, you think your husband needs to continue to buy weapons because I'm crazy and need to be shot at? I'm sure I've taken that out of context, but the way you wrote it just left me.
Here are two things that bother me. (1) if you have guns for personal safety, and they are always locked up nice and tight, how will you get to them if someone breaks into your house? Make them a cup of coffee and ask them to hang on a minute while you open your gun safe? and (2) what if someone has gun permits and owns guns and doesn't store them safely? What is your recourse as a member of the household?
Finally, you may be teaching your children gun safety, but what about when a friend comes over who is being raised in an entirely different environment? It might not be so safe for your family when that child is around because he might be curious.
I don't refuse to let my kids visit the homes of responsible gun owners, heck if I did that they would have no one to visit.I am curious, though. Do those of you who refuse to let your kids visit a home where there are guns, do you actually question your friends and neighbors or pull surprise inspections? Most people I know who have guns keep them secure and you could know them for years without never knowing they have guns.
I grew up in a house with guns, my husband grew up in a house with guns, and my children have grown up in a house with guns.
We were all taught you don't touch the gun. And guess what, we didn't.
When I was growing up, my dad's guns were just sitting in his closet, and none of us ever even thought to touch them without his permission.
Takes me less than 30 seconds to get my gun out of my safe. This is second story master bedroom area I am talking about. We also have an alarm system so in my mind if someone sets off the alarm and continues to head up my stairs they have no intention of sitting down and drinking a cup of coffee with me.
No. This is why you don't keep unsecured guns in the house with children who have demonstrated that they have behavioral issues.
The mother is just as much at fault here as the child. To allow him access to a firearm and its ammunition was, IMO, more than just a little irresponsible on her part.
There has only been one incident where a child killed someone because a parent failed to apply adequate measure to prevent that? Only one? Are you sure? I'm confident that I've heard of other incidents. This is not an isolated circumstance, and I don't understand why you would think that it was.Oh please - one moron/disturbed child kills his mother with a gun and now we have folks preaching from the enlightened pedestal.

I agree, so what's necessary is a way of telling the two groups apart, one from another, and ensuring, on an ongoing basis, that people in the "responsible" remain in that group and don't drift into the other group.Just because someone made an idiotic decision (guardians allowing a 10 year old access to a shotgun and ammunition) doesn't mean the rest of us are idiots.
It's the mentality of people like yourself that is one of the main reasons my DH keeps buying guns. He carries one all the time, and I am thinking about getting my own permit to carry as well.
Just to throw a different perception on MIGrandma's statement.Wow, this is a little harsh, don't you think? Because I may not agree with your gun ownership, you think your husband needs to continue to buy weapons because I'm crazy and need to be shot at? I'm sure I've taken that out of context, but the way you wrote it just left me.
There has only been one incident where a child killed someone because a parent failed to apply adequate measure to prevent that? Only one? Are you sure? I'm confident that I've heard of other incidents. This is not an isolated circumstance, and I don't understand why you would think that it was.
I agree, so what's necessary is a way of telling the two groups apart, one from another, and ensuring, on an ongoing basis, that people in the "responsible" remain in that group and don't drift into the other group.