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Why Kids Should Never Play With Water Guns. Period.
popsugar.com ^ | May 17, 2017 | LAUREN LEVY

Posted on 05/20/2017 9:19:17 AM PDT by PROCON


My mom was pretty relaxed during our childhood and only had a few nonnegotiable, never ever going to change, concrete rules. Her biggest: no water guns.

This water gun ban had nothing to do with water shooting toys in general (though with four kids running around it would've made sense that she didn't want the water wars) and everything to do with her firm belief that guns are not toys. We still had all of the same Summer fun, but with water squirters that didn't look like deadly weapons and never trivialized this important topic. We didn't make childhood memories with an object inspired by something that kills kids daily.

We didn't have a gun in our home, but I think my mom's passionate stance on water guns is even more important for those who do. A gun is a serious and powerful object that can permanently destroy lives. The sooner people start taking this topic seriously, the safer our children will be.

Error loading media: File could not be played Even if they're colorful and super cool, kids shouldn't be playing with water guns because it normalizes the real thing. Kids need to learn that guns aren't toys. There's nothing fun or playful about this serious topic and it doesn't matter if it's a water pistol or a semi-automatic rifle — a firearm isn't a laughing matter.

(Excerpt) Read more at popsugar.com ...


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: banglist; gungrabbers; liberalism; squirtguns; toyguns
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To: PROCON

So ban

Toy cars
Dolls
Toy trains
Teddy bears

Better idea ban stupid


21 posted on 05/20/2017 9:31:17 AM PDT by old curmudgeon (There is no situation so terrible, so disgraceful, that the federal government can not make worse)
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To: PROCON
I agree.

They should play with real guns instead.


22 posted on 05/20/2017 9:32:11 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: PROCON

Her irrational fear of guns, real or harmless toys, will only mystify guns in the eyes of her children. This is a dangerous mindset,because kids will be unable to appreciate the lethal qualities of real gun.

What she should do is train her kids in the safe handling of firearms,and make them practice with them until they’re bored with them. This will remove the mystery of firearms and instill a healthy respect for them in her kids.


23 posted on 05/20/2017 9:36:49 AM PDT by Nachoman (My guns and my ammo, they comfort me.)
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To: dfwgator
That is great.

The gun shot his eye out

24 posted on 05/20/2017 9:38:49 AM PDT by FatherofFive (Islam is EVIL and needs to be eradicated)
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To: PROCON

Lauren is a WUSS!


25 posted on 05/20/2017 9:40:19 AM PDT by spel_grammer_an_punct_polise (Note to all foreigners: Please.....GET OUT and STAY OUT!)
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To: PROCON
I'm old enough to remember cap guns. The ones with the rolls of caps that made a pretty impressive "bang". And some of the guns themselves looked like the real deal. Made out of metal and some even had wood-plated grips. I remember having one that came with a leather holster so that I could strap it to my waist and practice my draw.

Nobody batted an eye in those days if a kid was walking around with one.

I did learn some bad habits at that early age. Such as pointing that gun directly at another person. I think kids should be taught at an early age never to point a real looking gun at another person. Water guns are a different story however as they are obviously just toys and pointing at people is the whole point.

When I got to Marine boot camp, they straightened me out real quick about how to properly handle guns.


26 posted on 05/20/2017 9:40:35 AM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: Dilbert San Diego

We played cowboys and native americans......


27 posted on 05/20/2017 9:43:56 AM PDT by Hot Tabasco (If a cow ever got the chance, heÂ’d eat you and everyone you ever cared about.)
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To: PROCON
My mom was pretty relaxed during our childhood and only had a few nonnegotiable, never ever going to change, concrete rules. Her biggest: no water guns.

Total bullshit.
A complete denial and deflection from other, more serious lapses in parenting.

Denial.
Denial.
We raised three children, currently very independent professional and successful sober adults. Not a snowflake among them. But excellent hand eye coordination and reactions among them all.

That would include the most successful of the bunch, a daughter, who not only owned several water "guns" (that dreaded word again) a Red Ryder bb rifle and pistol, and another pistol which fired plastic "bullets" for indoor use.

And not a single anger-issues loser or mass murderer among them.

Only one son owns a firearm, which he mastered for a few years, in the sport of recreational shooting competition.

Parental, serious introspection is a sorely missed and lost parental skill... eschewed by the clueless ignorant.

28 posted on 05/20/2017 9:44:23 AM PDT by publius911 (I SUPPORT MY PRESIDENT?)
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To: PROCON

Did she let her kids fill small balloons with water and throw them (water grenade, water bomb)?

She’s probably great at summer parties.


29 posted on 05/20/2017 9:58:02 AM PDT by wastedyears (Prophecy of sky Gods, the sun and moon)
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To: PROCON
We didn't have a gun in our home...

We did have a sign outside of our home...

My mother was only raped and murdered one time.

30 posted on 05/20/2017 9:58:27 AM PDT by USS Alaska (Kill all mooselimb, terrorist savages, with extreme prejudice! Deus Vult!)
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To: publius911

I grew up with just about every type of “cap” pistol ever made or sold, got my first .22 rifle when I was 7 years old, shot everything from squirrels to moose, caribou, elk, deer, bear, you name it and I have to this day (I’m 4 months short of being 80 years old) NEVER shot anyone. How is that even possible some liberal might ask. Well, up front, I was taught from an early age the difference between toys and real “tools” meaning guns. My dad and mother BOTH hunted wild game and they never shot anyone either BECAUSE they too were taught what REAL guns are for. The problem is liberals need educating and I see that as a VERY DAUNTING task for anyone, the dummies will never understand because they refuse to learn. Personally, I think firearm training SHOULD BE taught in ever school.


31 posted on 05/20/2017 9:58:39 AM PDT by DaveA37
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To: Maceman
"This is All I Ask" -- Tony Bennett

My favorite version is by John Gary. The guy had a three-octave range.

In saner times, why would literally dozens of the most loved singers of the last 60 years record such disgusting lyrics?

Different versions of the awful lyrics

Mentally balanced adults would deem this a sad non-issue.

32 posted on 05/20/2017 9:59:23 AM PDT by publius911 (I SUPPORT MY PRESIDENT?)
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To: PROCON

I couldn’t have survived childhood without my trusty six-gun cap pistols and the holsters my Dad handmade for them. Same for water, rubber band, and BB guns. We did so much target practice that I’m convinced it’s why I qualified Expert in pistol and rifle in the service (plus the great training of our instructors).

In HS, the Rifle Team would carry their firearms with them from class to class on practice and competition days. The cases were too big to fit in the lockers, and the range was off campus. Nobody thought a thing about it.

Oh, and every self-respecting male had a pocket knife on his person when he left the house.

It’s the individual, not the inanimate object, that is the problem...but Stalinist knotheads don’t understand that...or maybe they do.


33 posted on 05/20/2017 10:00:01 AM PDT by nickedknack
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To: PROCON

My Mom bought me squirt-guns, cap-guns, toy hand-gernades and once a machine gun that looked like a M-1919 tripod and all. But her generation had just finished fighting WWII and Korea. She had lost a brother and a brother in-law in the Pacific and my oldest brother was in Korea. She knew we had to learn how to fight and learn early.


34 posted on 05/20/2017 10:01:50 AM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again,")
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To: dirtboy

Geez, back in the late 50s when I was 10 we made what would be called IEDs out of whiskey pint bottles left by Bowery derelicts, dry ice from the Good Humor guy in Stuyvesant Square Park and water from the park fountain. Guess we would be doing 18 months in juvie at least, in this day and age.


35 posted on 05/20/2017 10:09:08 AM PDT by xkaydet65
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To: PROCON

Let’s send her kids some yard darts.


36 posted on 05/20/2017 10:09:15 AM PDT by bgill (CDC site, "We don't know how people are infected with Ebola.")
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To: SamAdams76
Yeah, I grew up in the 50's-60's, had cap guns, BB guns, .22 rifles.

Great memories and I still have that cap smell in my head.

37 posted on 05/20/2017 10:10:09 AM PDT by PROCON
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To: Dilbert San Diego

We were so adept at playing war around Gramercy Park that by the time we were 12 we could probably have taught a course on urban warfare.


38 posted on 05/20/2017 10:11:28 AM PDT by xkaydet65
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To: dsrtsage
Ha, ha. In the 1980s, I was serving at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego. We worked six days a week. Saturdays were work days, but pretty much no one was there unless they were on duty or were directly involved in training the recruits.

A local flea market was selling battery operated water guns that looked just like UZIs and MAC10s. Needless to say a bunch of us officers and DIs bought them.

For the next several Saturdays, there were "drive-bys" and "hits." On one occasion, I was standing by the pull-up bars watching the recruits do pull-ups when a couple of DIs did a "drive-by" on me. Unknowing to us, a MP in a car was one road over and only saw the UZI. Lights and siren blazing he roared over. After he saw what were were doing, he asked for where we got them from, so he and his friends could buy some.

Even our battalion commander thought they were fun (He borrowed mine and did a "hit" on the battalion executive officer). Yes, the world has turned upside down.

39 posted on 05/20/2017 10:17:17 AM PDT by fini
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To: KC Burke

My father was a NRA instructor and formed a high school rifle team. He and a couple of fathers would take the team on weekend camping trips coupled with some serious range work with the rifles. My first and only snipe hunt. nuf said.


40 posted on 05/20/2017 10:19:38 AM PDT by OregonRancher (Some days, it's not even worth chewing through the restraints)
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