aacx22
Tested Selected Initiated
Isn't the subject of the OP....
The 5 Most Dangerous Guns in America Pictures - Pistols | Rolling Stone
The 5 Most Dangerous Guns in America
These are the firearms causing the most harm
-snip-
Ah, gotcha... no, I'm not on board with the Rolling Stone peeps at all.
Please note the part of your post I put in bold .... did you just say that a squirt gun is less dangerous than a hammer, a bottle of chlorine, or a gun but still saying that the squirt gun, the hammer, the bottle of chlorine, and the gun... are dangerous?
Yeah... I know I might be quibbling about the use of words but it is the use of words and how those words can be spun to demonize inanimate objects that the anti gunners use as their primary weapon against the right to bear arms. Once we buy into the idea that guns are "dangerous" then we must also buy into the idea that in order to protect people from those dangerous guns we need "reasonable", "appropriate", and "acceptable", restrictions placed upon those guns. And that line of reasoning(?) is how we ended up with the fuster cluck of gun control we have now. Sadly we have many gun owners who buy right into that never realizing that no matter what laws are passed hoping to control those "dangerous" guns none of those laws control the dangerous human beings who misuse those inert, inanimate, incapable of independent action, and therefor not dangerous unless a human touches them... guns.
Bottom line... no matter what wording is used guns are not dangerous in and of themselves. There has never been a gun that walked into a store and shot someone all by itself. There ALWAYS has to be a human being somewhere in the equation whether that be an irresponsible parent so a child has access, someone who drank too much, a fool, or a bad guy, who's use of the gun caused harm.
Will the result of being shot by a squirt gun hurt less than being shot by a firearm? Well hell yes! But without the human pulling the trigger the firearm is no more "dangerous" than the squirt gun.
I did say that the squirt gun is less dangerous... I can add the word "Potential" if that makes you more comfortable. The point is, if you simply dismiss any sort of difference between a real firearm and a squirt gun, then you're making a big mistake in my opinion because they have very important differences. Minimizing that difference can certainly lead to the sort of cavalier treatment of firearms that ultimately results in more mishaps.
Link Removed
Awesome to see the huge drops in unintentional deaths. Still, 75 kids got ahold of a gun, one way or the other, and fired it killing themselves or someone else. The kid's partially to blame for his mistake. The parent is mostly to blame for his mistake. Their actions caused the deaths, absolutely. But the nature of a firearm made it possible. If you don't like the word dangerous, feel free to pick one, but there should be a word to define the nature of objects who's potential for harm is pretty serious.Injury and death rates:
The number of unintentional deaths from firearms declined 80 percent from 1997 to 2002.
In 2005, 75 children ages 14 and under died from unintentional firearm-related injuries; more than half of those children were between the ages of 10 and 14.