Uh yeah, that’s not a parenting “Fail”, that’s a win. The kid is being taught respect for firearms, gun safety, and that he has the Constitutional right to bear arms.
I can recall a father letting his young son fire off an Uzi at a firing range and the child end up killing himself with a fatal shoot to the head, right in front of the dad! Is it a good idea to allow toddler and young children handler firearms? In my opinion, no!
Ah, yes. When someone makes a comment that you don’t agree with, just tell them to shut up! That takes care of it. People you don’t agree with have no right to talk, anyway.
That child isn’t more than two, so what your dad did when you were four is irrelevant. It’s just that you, like the moron in the video, value guns more than children’s safety, so it’s more important to defend the gun-owner than care about the safety of the child.
Dear Tara,
Shut up. Kids need to learn danger at young ages. My dad took me out to the range since I was 4 and I’m not a mass murderer. He is teaching his son how to shoot and care for a gun. By the way, handling a gun isn’t necessarily a bad habit in itself. Get your **** straight. (:
Love, Rae
That guy isn’t TEACHING the kid anything but bad habits. The kid is too young to comprehend cause and effect or death, that means he’s too young to touch a gun. Not only that, he’s not teaching proper handling skills (you have to aim at something before you start pulling the trigger).
I agree with those who have posted before me. If the dad owns guns and is starting young showing his son how to use them and work them, its a lot safer than the kid not knowing what it is and playing with it. Good job Dad!
My dad took us to the shooting range at a very early age to teach us how powerful a gun is. He then talked about how to never touch them without asking an adult first. We respected guns. So, non-fail. Go dad!
Uh yeah, that’s not a parenting “Fail”, that’s a win. The kid is being taught respect for firearms, gun safety, and that he has the Constitutional right to bear arms.
Middle America at its finest. A toddler has no reason to use a gun and a parent has no right to put their child in unnecessary danger like that.
I can recall a father letting his young son fire off an Uzi at a firing range and the child end up killing himself with a fatal shoot to the head, right in front of the dad! Is it a good idea to allow toddler and young children handler firearms? In my opinion, no!
Ah, yes. When someone makes a comment that you don’t agree with, just tell them to shut up! That takes care of it. People you don’t agree with have no right to talk, anyway.
That child isn’t more than two, so what your dad did when you were four is irrelevant. It’s just that you, like the moron in the video, value guns more than children’s safety, so it’s more important to defend the gun-owner than care about the safety of the child.
Dear Tara,
Shut up. Kids need to learn danger at young ages. My dad took me out to the range since I was 4 and I’m not a mass murderer. He is teaching his son how to shoot and care for a gun. By the way, handling a gun isn’t necessarily a bad habit in itself. Get your **** straight. (:
Love, Rae
That guy isn’t TEACHING the kid anything but bad habits. The kid is too young to comprehend cause and effect or death, that means he’s too young to touch a gun. Not only that, he’s not teaching proper handling skills (you have to aim at something before you start pulling the trigger).
I agree with those who have posted before me. If the dad owns guns and is starting young showing his son how to use them and work them, its a lot safer than the kid not knowing what it is and playing with it. Good job Dad!
posting that video here is a fail! Dad is showing his son how use and respect a firearm, good for both of em.
Dad did this with us. We never played with guns or shot anybody. I don’t own a gun or believe in violence either. Perhaps my dad did us a favor.
My dad took us to the shooting range at a very early age to teach us how powerful a gun is. He then talked about how to never touch them without asking an adult first. We respected guns. So, non-fail. Go dad!