Andrew Rothman wrote:Bullcrap. Nonsense. Poppycock.
No, no. Please. Don't hold back. Let us know how you really feel. It adds so much to the conversation
Andrew Rothman wrote:I am SICK of hearing people talk about negligent discharges as if they are inevitable. They are not!
I mean, would you say, "There are only two kinds of pilots: those that have crashed, and those that will"? Insane.
If a 1/2 second of inattentiveness was enough to crash a plane, then yes, you fly enough miles, and you will crash.
Andrew Rothman wrote:If you're not prepared to take as much care with a deadly weapon as you would with a flying machine, you shouldn't touch `em.
Where did I say that I'm unprepared to do everything right? I'll await your quote...
Andrew Rothman wrote:If fewer gun owners treated the rules as optional, there'd be fewer stupid-ass accidents with guns "going off" and we as a group would be -- and would thus be seen as -- more responsible.
Again, where did I say the rules were optional? Quit putting words into my mouth.
Andrew Rothman wrote:I have never had an ND, and I never will.
Uh huh...
Andrew Rothman wrote: That's not me with my head in the sand, that's me with my eyes wide open, and a single-minded determination to follow ALL of the safety rules, ALL the time.
If you don't have the same attitude, you don't belong anywhere near a gun.
You're a firearms instructor right? Then I'm sure you've had students in your class that you felt required an extra watchful eye because they treat their gun like a beercan, paying less than full attention to the muzzle direction rule. You obviously feel those people "don't belong anywhere near a gun". You being the responsible, safety conscious, firearms instructor, immediately boot them off the range, because they don't belong anywhere near a gun, right?
I thought so.