• @NOT_RICK
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    10810 months ago

    I don’t find it weird for hunting, but giving a child unrestricted access to firearms is insane to me given children are not able to assess risk the same way adults do.

    • tim-clark
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      7910 months ago

      A lot of “adults” don’t seem to assess the risks either.

    • @MotoAsh
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      10 months ago

      Oh, I don’t mean temporary custody under controlled and hopefully educated circumstances, but those who hand it over completely. A kid simply does not need that power nor have the responsibility for full time custody.

      Hell, the government wants people 18+ before they’ll hand someone a gun and let them go die for something…

      • 🖖USS-Ethernet
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        910 months ago

        Smoking and drinking age is 21. Maybe gun ownership age should be bumped up too.

            • @FontMasterFlex
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              -410 months ago

              if you can’t make the decision to drink, buy a gun, or whatever else because you’re supposedly not “mature” enough to do, why the fuck should you be trusted with choosing who makes those laws? while you’re at it, raise the age to enroll in the military. if you can go die for your country at 18 you should be able to buy a beer, vote, and buy the gun they’ll hand you at boot.

              conversely if you want to lower the voting age, as some democrats suggest, then so should the drinking age, gun purchasing age etc.

              there’s simply no logic in being ‘mature’ enough for one and not the other.

              • @Zirconium
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                410 months ago

                It’s not about principle of freedom or maturity. The legal age of drinking is where it is because of young adults drinking and driving. You can have layers of maturity that isn’t give/take all responsibilities. An 18 year old should be allowed to vote because they’re just as responsible as any adult to provide themselves their own food and shelter. Unless you think it should be illegal to kick someone out until they’re 21.

                • @FontMasterFlex
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                  -310 months ago

                  drinking and driving.

                  prob not the best example

      • EinatYahav
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        310 months ago

        Hell, the government wants people 18+

        No, I’m pretty sure that was some ancient Christian pro-lifers who came up with that rule. Government would take people younger if they could.

        • @MotoAsh
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          10 months ago

          “… if they could.”

          Yea that’s kinda’ EXACTLY the point… they CAN make it that way, but haven’t. The entire point is that modern Republicans are far more despicable than most any kind of politician from history. Yes, that includes slavers.

          It takes an entire additional level of evil to step BACK IN TO social problems, and that’s 100% of the modern GOP platform: bring back problems that were already solved.

      • BeardedBlaze
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        210 months ago

        They’ll take you at 17 with parent’s permission.

    • @devnull406
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      1610 months ago

      Before he passed away, my kids’ grandfather bought all his grandkids their first 22 rifle. Some of the cousins were still infants but he wanted to buy them something. He was a prolific hunter and marksman. My kids guns all lived in the safe until they were old enough to shoot them, and now they live in the safe when not in use. You can give guns to kids all day long, that’s not the problem and the gun is not the problem.

      • @III
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        710 months ago

        You can give guns to kids all day long, that’s not the problem and the gun is not the problem.

        The problem is not appropriately assessing whether the child in question she be allowed the gun. Are they responsible, are they going to use it for valid purposes. This holds true for, well, everyone always. A lack of reasonable regulation is the actual problem. I am glad you have responsibly managed the distribution and use of firearms for your children. We should do that for everyone.

        • @FontMasterFlex
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          -310 months ago

          A lack of reasonable regulation There are hundreds of firearms laws on the books. What new law is both reasonable and would accomplish anything?

          • @Maggoty
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            010 months ago

            Mandatory psych eval and home inspection every 5 years.

            • @FontMasterFlex
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              410 months ago

              lol. how? the logistics of personnel alone is never going to happen.

              • @Maggoty
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                610 months ago

                It’s almost like we should be getting something for our tax dollars other than a pittance at retirement and a genocide in the middle east.

            • @RaoulDook
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              210 months ago

              Fuck that, no way in hell people would allow authorities to inspect their private property inside their homes as a prerequisite to exercising a constitutional right.

              • @Maggoty
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                10 months ago

                The “Constitutional” right to have weapons on you 24/7 and use them the second you are afeared is brand new. The actual text has a whole other half making clear that it’s for a well regulated militia. I had my room and weapon inspected in the military. So can you if you want that gun. If you have a problem with order and discipline then you don’t get a gun.

                • @RaoulDook
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                  -110 months ago

                  Nope, that’s all bullshit and you’re lame for spouting it.

                  Fortunately, what I said is fact and there’s never going to be a goddamn thing you can ever do about it. Our gun rights are extremely well protected.

                  • @Maggoty
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                    010 months ago

                    Your idea of gun rights are one SCOTUS decision away from going back to the way they were in the late 1700’s. Kept at home and regularly inspected by the local militia. They’ve even set the historical standard as precedent. Now it’s just a game of judges willing to actually use that standard instead of making shit up to create a new right from whole cloth.

                    It could go the other way though, most people don’t know the court isn’t capped at a certain number. But everyone knows you can repeal an amendment. And the rubber band effect is coming. How many kids will it take before people demand the entire amendment be scrapped? I don’t know, but the idea grows every year. With every high profile shooting. You can compromise now or have all guns banned down the road. That’s the outlook.

                • @Narauko
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                  -210 months ago

                  A well regulated militia made up of people who were supposed to bring their own guns and ammunition that they were proficient in using. The Militia Acts make this pretty clear, along with the Federalist Papers. The intent was that an armed population could be called on by the States to resist an invading army, be that army foreign or the standing Federal army. It also was an evolution of English law enshrining rights to self defense.

                  If we change the sentence slightly and say “The free flow of goods and services being essential to the safety and functionality of the economy, the right is the people to keep money and travel freely shall not be infringed”, would not imply that you are only free to leave your house and have cash if you are engaged in business.

                  • @Maggoty
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                    210 months ago

                    People in good standing, registered with their town/county/state militia, and subject to the regulations thereof.

                    The idea that every farmer was a minutemen and that was our defense plan is a Hollywood level simplification of history. The Federalist and Anti Federalist papers make this very clear. Furthermore the founding fathers wanted a standing Army eventually. They knew a militia would not work forever. The idea was always for a standing Army to take over in the future, with the State militias to balance out any shenanigans by the federal army.

                    And again the state militias were not every Tom, Dick, and Harry. They were regulated affairs much closer to a national guard unit than a shooting club.

      • @raoulraoul
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        -510 months ago

        If this heartwarming story of responsible gun ownership is actually true, Mr/Ms Anonymous Voice On The Internet — y’know, because I believe every anecdote I read on social media — you are probably one of <1000 people in 336,000,099 (the 2024 population of the United States).

        [email protected]
        [email protected]

        • @devnull406
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          610 months ago

          Less than 1000 responsible gun owners? We’re just making up numbers now?

          • @raoulraoul
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            -610 months ago

            Oh, absolutely. Where would you put that impossibly quantifiable number? 10? 10,000,000? More? Less?

            My point being that every gun-owning household in the United States isn’t like yours and with almost weekly occurrences like the Oxford school shooting, the Michigan State University shootings of 2023, the Perry, Iowa school shooting, even the Detroit five-year-old who shot himself in the face among his playmates while their parents were out of the home, or the Lansing toddler who did the same with his father’s gun…

            …it’s hard to believe that your family is anywhere near the norm. You are 0.1% of 0.1% (yes, I made that up too).

            • @SoleInvictus
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              410 months ago

              This, friends, is a great demonstration of why math and science courses are so important. Science teaches critical thinking skills. A lack of critical thinking skills often leads people to make things up to explain phenomena instead of questioning their assumptions and seeking factual information.

              Mathematics, especially statistics, provides a framework by which people can critically evaluate the validity and significance of numerical values as well as generate realistic, informed estimates. A lack of basic math skills causes many people to be unable to evaluate relative proportions and effect sizes of event drivers.

      • @AFaithfulNihilist
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        2310 months ago

        That is when your brain stops really growing and developing, it’s not some threshold of social or intellectual maturity.

        If anything, people become less adaptable, less open-minded, and less cooperative after that. It’s not something we get to lord over young people, it’s a mark against us olds for being less capable of growth.

        • UltraMagnus0001
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          10 months ago

          Decision Making and Reward in Frontal Cortex

          https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3129331/

          Your frontal lobe contains brain areas that manage who you are — especially your personality — and how you behave. Your ability to think, solve problems and build social relationships, sense of ethics and right vs. wrong all rely on parts of your frontal lobe.

          Experts know this because of a railroad foreman named Phineas Gage. In 1848, an accidental explosion at a railroad construction site propelled an iron rod through Gage’s head, destroying the left side of his frontal lobe. Before the accident, Gage was a calm, respected leader among his coworkers. Gage survived, but after the accident, his personality changed. He would lose his temper, act disrespectfully and constantly use profanity.

          However, Gage’s personality changes weren’t permanent. Four years after his accident, Gage moved to Chile in South America and became a stagecoach driver. Somewhere in late 1858 or early 1859, a doctor who examined Gage said he was physically healthy and showed “no impairment whatever of his mental faculties.”

          While Gage mostly recovered from the accident, he died from seizures in San Francisco in 1860. The seizures were very likely the result of damage from the accident. However, his case remains one of the most useful in modern medicine’s understanding of what the frontal lobe does, especially when it comes to your personality.

          The Pre-Frontal Cortex

          One of the biggest differences researchers have found between adults and adolescents is the pre-frontal cortex. This part of the brain is still developing in teens and doesn’t complete its growth until approximately early to mid 20’s. The prefrontal cortex performs reasoning, planning, judgment, and impulse control, necessities for being an adult. Without the fully development prefrontal cortex, a teen might make poor decisions and lack the inability to discern whether a situation is safe. Teens tend to experiment with risky behavior and don’t fully recognize the consequences of their choices.

    • queermunist she/her
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      -510 months ago

      I find it weird they don’t just lend a gun to their child for hunting. Why give them their own personal gun? What’s the point?

      • @NOT_RICK
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        110 months ago

        Hunting is a cultural thing for many, and you often start with a smaller caliber while you’re young and learning. I guess I would compare it to a parent buying their kid their first baseball/softball glove. Parents often pass down a love for sport, most just don’t involve killing stuff.

        • queermunist she/her
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          -510 months ago

          There’s literally nothing stopping them from passing down their cultural love for hunting while only lending their children guns.

          • @NOT_RICK
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            110 months ago

            You’re not wrong, but it’s still why they do it as far as I can tell from having friends that hunt and were taught by their fathers.

            • queermunist she/her
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              10 months ago

              Well I grew up with a dad that hunted and took me hunting, I was even an Eagle Scout, but I didn’t actually own a gun until later in my 20s. There’s just no good reason for kids to have their own guns and it needs to stop.

              Also, gotta be honest, now that I’m older I think hunting is kinda fucked up in itself. I’m not gonna try to fight that battle tho lol

    • @[email protected]
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      -4110 months ago

      “Hey son, here’s a firearm, let’s go kill something, systematically eviscerate and skin it, and then consume its flesh while taking joy and pride in each step of the process. Oh, don’t ever do this to humans or dogs.” I dunno, seems pretty weird to me.

      • BraveSirZaphod
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        4110 months ago

        You’re loosely describing most of human history.

        “Let’s take these plant babies and grind them into a pulp, drown it, let it be eaten by a bunch of tiny monsters until they fart enough gas, and then burn it” also sounds kinda weird. Welcome to the universe; shit’s a little whack.

        • @aesthelete
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          410 months ago

          Yeah Nathan Pyle has made a whole living out of doing this with Strange Planet.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          You’re loosely describing most of human history.

          To play devils advocate, you’re arguing an appeal to tradition, which is a logical fallacy.

          Just because we’ve historically operated in a certain way, it does not mean it is morally permissible behavior.

          The appeal to tradition has been used to argue in favor of slavery, racism, and a lot of other horrendous human behavior.

          • @rambaroo
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            1010 months ago

            So? It’s patently obvious that millions of people go hunting every year without turning into mass murderers. Pointing out logical fallacies isn’t an argument.

            • @[email protected]
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              10 months ago

              It’s patently obvious that millions of people go hunting every year without turning into mass murderers.

              I never said they do.

              Pointing out logical fallacies isn’t an argument.

              I wasn’t staking any claims in this argument. Just pointing out how yours is invalid.

              I did so because it’s constructive criticism to promote better reasoning. But of course you’re too immature to receive constructive criticism, so you defensively deflect it instead.

              Edit: oh wait you’re not even the user I was speaking to…

              • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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                110 months ago

                I think it was an appeal to natural order, not tradition.

                One time after GPS became pretty well available a court somewhere was called upon to decide whether, now that we have this cheaply available magical system of maritime navigation, is it negligent to crash into the rocks and destroy the vessel because you were still using a sextant and navigating by the stars? I mean, that’s the way we’ve always done it. That’s an appeal to tradition.

                • @[email protected]
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                  210 months ago

                  I disagree. It was clearly an appeal to tradition, given his specific reference to human history (traditional human hunting behavior). But the appeal to nature is also a logical fallacy anyway.

                  I’m not even condemning hunting, btw. It’s necessary in some cases for healthy animal populations.

                  • BraveSirZaphod
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                    110 months ago

                    This is far past the point of mattering, but the actual thing I was targeting was the statement “seems pretty weird” by stating that in the context of human history, hunting is objectively not weird, that is to say, unusual or abnormal, at all.

                    And I mean, if we’re trying to entertain logical rigor, I don’t think the original “appeal to vibes” is exactly a good start.

        • @[email protected]
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          610 months ago

          I’m guessing that user would probably find CAFO/factory farm supplied nuggets just as “weird”/bad. If not worse. Certainly more cruelty there vs hunting.

          • @[email protected]
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            1310 months ago

            Not my point. The comment I replied to was highlighting that killing and preparing your own food is perverse, as compared to normal food shopping practices. They made no claim of veganism, so I didn’t go there.

            Veganism is great for a lot of folks, but before that, I think meat eaters should be fully aware, accepting and ready to see how meat is prepared. And they should be ready to do it themselves if they are willing to eat meat.

            • @sizzler
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              -510 months ago

              Turning people away lol, like there’s a gate. Go vegan or die trying.

        • @[email protected]
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          -610 months ago

          I’m pretty sure they didn’t use firearms millenia[sic] ago. They had dysentery, though, maybe try that instead. That’s more authentic if you really want to connect.

          • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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            210 months ago

            You’re right. Probably won’t try dysentery. There is something intimate and connective in how we choose to procure and prepare food, and in being alone and quiet in remote wilderness, relying on our senses and wit, strength, respect for nature and its fruits. I don’t want to do exactly as the indigenous people did, or even as the colonists did. Going hunting once or twice a year is enough for me. Part of a tradition.

            • @[email protected]
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              -210 months ago

              “Intimate” snuff, skinning, eviscerating, and consumption is not making this any less weird.

              • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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                10 months ago

                Well no, not when you make it weird. That’s a you thing.

                Could be harvesting watercress from a drainage ditch or going somewhere remote to forage whatever. Obtaining, preparing, and eating food, is intimate.

                intimate adjective in·​ti·​mate ˈin-tə-mət 2 : of a very personal or private nature

                Doesn’t get much more personal than eating, lest we’re talking about eating people. See, now it’s me that’s making it weird.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -310 months ago

                  None of what you said is clever or addressed that killing animals, ripping off their skin, tearing out their viscera, and eating their flesh is creepy, especially given the amount of planning, tools, etc, that is requires. Don’t conflate that with foraging watercress. It’s a bad, lazy argument.

                  You kill for pleasure. I don’t care if it’s tradition, religion, or whatever other excuse you tell yourself, you kill for pleasure. And that’s creepy. And I’m not interested in continuing his or any further conversation with you.

                  • @Chee_Koala
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                    10 months ago

                    I don’t think hunting animals is creepy at all and i have never fired a weapon in my life. I eat animal meats every day, is that somehow less creepy? Because someone else did all those ‘creepy’ steps?

                  • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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                    10 months ago

                    You’re so cool and smart the best word you can come up with is “creepy.” Bud, you’re a straight up joke. Is fishing creepy too?

      • @agitatedpotato
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        110 months ago

        Oh boy, wait until you hear about this type of animal called omnivores. They can survive off vegtable but they still hunt and eat meat because obviously they’re evil strange and un-natural.

        • @[email protected]
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          -210 months ago

          Exactly. They don’t have to kill, but they do so for pleasure. But miss me with that argument from nature bs.

          • @agitatedpotato
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            110 months ago

            You’re calling something that happens in nature all the time un natural then asking that I don’t bring up nature. Okay buddy, want me to not bring up everything that makes tour argument ridiculous too? Or just the ones you don’t have a canned response for?