SciFiFisher wrote:What he said ^
It's also worth mentioning that the instructor broke several range safety rules.
Swift wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:What he said ^
It's also worth mentioning that the instructor broke several range safety rules.
I'm curious as to whether this comes under the juristriction of OHSA?
geonuc wrote:Negligent and tragic and are not mutually exclusive terms, so I don't have a problem with people referring to it as a tragedy.
I do have a problem with letting a 9 yo girl shoot an automatic weapon, exactly because of what happened. Many of us here are familiar with firearms. How many times have you seen a newbie fail to keep the muzzle pointed downrange because he or she got excited when the gun fired? And that's with a single-shot or semi-auto. Now add into the equation a fully automatic weapon with a short barrel.
This was an accident waiting to happen and I blame the owners of the gun range. And the instructor, of course, but he's already paid for his negligence. What if the girl had shot someone else too?
geonuc wrote:
I do have a problem with letting a 9 yo girl shoot an automatic weapon, exactly because of what happened. Many of us here are familiar with firearms. How many times have you seen a newbie fail to keep the muzzle pointed downrange because he or she got excited when the gun fired? And that's with a single-shot or semi-auto. Now add into the equation a fully automatic weapon with a short barrel.
This was an accident waiting to happen and I blame the owners of the gun range. And the instructor, of course, but he's already paid for his negligence. What if the girl had shot someone else too?
Rommie wrote:I found some of the commentary in the NYTimes article interesting. Mainly the part that everyone was referring to this incident as a "terrible tragedy."
I mean on the one hand yes, someone's life was lost, and that is tragic. On the other hand, c'mon, this wasn't some unpreventable thing- this was negligence. (I mean I am not a lawyer, but pretty sure that's the definition of it.)
SciFi Chick wrote:Rommie wrote:I found some of the commentary in the NYTimes article interesting. Mainly the part that everyone was referring to this incident as a "terrible tragedy."
I mean on the one hand yes, someone's life was lost, and that is tragic. On the other hand, c'mon, this wasn't some unpreventable thing- this was negligence. (I mean I am not a lawyer, but pretty sure that's the definition of it.)
English pet peeve time. This is the very definition of tragic. What's not tragic is when a bunch of people die in a tsunami or some other natural disaster.
Tragic is a result of a character flaw in which a human does something that is easily preventable due to hubris. This situation is highly tragic. Just probably not in the way the people you're referring to are incorrectly using the word.
Swift wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:Rommie wrote:I found some of the commentary in the NYTimes article interesting. Mainly the part that everyone was referring to this incident as a "terrible tragedy."
I mean on the one hand yes, someone's life was lost, and that is tragic. On the other hand, c'mon, this wasn't some unpreventable thing- this was negligence. (I mean I am not a lawyer, but pretty sure that's the definition of it.)
English pet peeve time. This is the very definition of tragic. What's not tragic is when a bunch of people die in a tsunami or some other natural disaster.
Tragic is a result of a character flaw in which a human does something that is easily preventable due to hubris. This situation is highly tragic. Just probably not in the way the people you're referring to are incorrectly using the word.
It is tragic what people have done to the English language.
Rommie wrote:Fair enough. But what can I say, language evolves.
FZR1KG wrote:It's tragic that as an English major she refuses to accept that English is a fluid language.
Ok, time for me to run now.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:From tragic to ridiculous in 60 seconds...
Idaho professor shoots himself in foot two months after state legalizes guns on campuses
Sigma_Orionis wrote:From tragic to ridiculous in 60 seconds...
Idaho professor shoots himself in foot two months after state legalizes guns on campuses
FZR1KG wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:From tragic to ridiculous in 60 seconds...
Idaho professor shoots himself in foot two months after state legalizes guns on campuses
Like I keep saying, the golden rules of firearm safety mandate that a weapon is always pointed in a safe direction.
As anyone that has more than two brain cells can figure out, this is impossible to do while carrying a concealed firearm.
So to allow conceal carry permits is basically flying in the face of safety even as the NRA define it.
To allow it, to encourage it on campus therefore is just reckless endangerment IMHO.
One of these days, a kid will be shot "accidentally" while hugging a person with a concealed carry permit.
Or a kid will be shot in a stairwell. Key here is that they be lower than the person with the concealed weapon.
Or a ricochet will get someone.
Then they will all say how tragic it is.
Morons.
brite wrote:I see that you are posting unsupervised again....
Not since they pinned that butter bar on you....SciFiFisher wrote:brite wrote:I see that you are posting unsupervised again....
I'm on lunch break.. I am allowed unsupervised lunches.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:So, no even a golden cluster saves him of that
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