No, none of that is okay. But making it so having a kid and a gun in the same room gets you into trouble is not okay. That's clearly what they are going for.
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No, none of that is okay. But making it so having a kid and a gun in the same room gets you into trouble is not okay. That's clearly what they are going for.
We are right to call out ABC for such a biased "study". But I think we should do more and politically attack these anti-gun idiots. They claim that we need more laws to keep the children safe. As we all know, the laws they propose do nothing to keep anyone safe. Why don't we point fingers at the anti-gunners and say something like "if you really cared about safety, you would enroll every child in a proper safety class such as the NRA Eddie-Eagle program. Where they are taught guns are not toys to be played with and you don't point them at yourself or anyone". Or something to that effect.
It's time we take charge of this fight and point out the failures of the anti's.
Food for thought.
So how many of our kids would have dropped the mag, cleared the weapon, and turned it over to an adult?
Pretty confident mine would.
Saw that at the gym. I ended up watching the whole thing and didn't realize I had ridden 10 miles on the bike. It must be because I was angry, confused, and annoyed. What an awful program with some real bone heads.
One of the few times in 28 years of being married that I have head my Wife cursing, was when she was watching that show. She turned it off and was still sputtering in anger at it. Warmed my heart it did.
58 minutes of negative, 2 minutes of positive.
"This show is not about the debate of whether people should or should not have guns." - Dianne Sawyer
I believe her.
ps- the education facility used was a private daycare not a school.
People watch ABC? Is there anyone who believes that anything broadcast on television can remotely pass as news? Just as newspapers published once each day have become irrelevant when it comes to informing large audiences to breaking news, the nightly television news or the weekly television journalism program is anything but NEWs.
When was the last time you saw something for the very first time, you had never read or heard anything before about the issue, till you saw it on the television news?
In 2014, most of us get the information we are looking for, and then some, here on the interwebz or listening to a radio while we are spending hours in our vehicles. We might see thirty seconds of video or a few images which fill out a picture for us if we watch television, but for most people who have been a few places in the world or seen a few things in their lifetime, I don't need to see another helicopter shot of heavily armed law enforcement and lots of fire and rescue personnel to provide me with a mental image of another tragedy somewhere in America.
Television is infotainment. A dab of information with lots of colors, lights, and pretty faces to drone you into numbness. Save your money and don't justify their advertising prices.
Be safe.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014...dren-and-guns/
Quote:
ABC’s “20/20” waded into the never-ending gun debate on Friday with a new special titled, “Young Guns.” While some pro-gun advocates, including TheBlaze TV’s Dana Loesch, are already panning the report, TheBlaze also took a closer look at the statistics cited by ABC and found a few noteworthy details.
In the report, ABC producers strategically place unloaded firearms in play areas and allow children to find them so their behavior can be observed. The objective of the experiment is seemingly to determine if parents’ children are safe at the homes of neighbors who own firearms.
While previewing her new special on Friday, Sawyer and ABC’s George Stephanopoulos claimed that “every hour a child is hospitalized because of gunshots” and “every other day a child [is] killed” by a gun.
A review of ABC’s statistics reveal that its numbers on “child” gun deaths include all “kids under age 18.” Citing the CDC, ABC reports that 1,337 people under age 18 died from gunshot wounds in 2010, which is actually trending down from 1,544 in 2000. When looking at ages 1-14, which the CDC actually classifies as children, there were 369 gun deaths in 2010 (including suicides, homicides and unintentional deaths).
Further, the network uses “kids and teens under age 20″ to calculate the number of “children” hospitalized from firearms injuries. ABC’s data source is based on a study done by Yale School of Medicine researchers rather than the CDC — and the numbers only include 2009. Some might also argue that people as old as 18 and 19-years-old aren’t children or kids. The report says 7,391 people under the age of 20 were hospitalized from gun-related injuries.
It is likely that a detailed breakdown of the Yale data would show the majority of gun injuries involved individuals older than the young children featured in the “20/20″ report. The vague presentation of the data on both deaths and injuries leaves a number of questions unanswered: Do the numbers include suspects shot by police officers? What about 18-year-olds who are shot while serving in the military? How many of the injuries and/or deaths are crime-related? Do they include suicides?
(Story continues at the link above)